'Dead' woman wakes up on operating table before organs removed
13 July Daily Telegraph
A woman in New York state was pronounced dead and about to have her
organs removed for transplant when she awoke and opened her eyes.Colleen
Burns had been taken to St. Joseph's Hospital Health Centre in Syracuse
after taking a drug overdose in 2009. She was thought to have passed
away, a victim of "cardiac death", and so her family agreed to turn off
the 41-year-old's life support machine and donate her organs.
It was not until she was wheeled into the operating theatre and
opened her eyes in response to the lights that doctors called off the
procedure.Lucille Kuss, Ms Burns' mother, told Syracuse's The
Post-Standard newspaper that the doctors never explained what went
wrong.They were just kind of shocked themselves," she said.
"It came as a surprise to them as well.Ms Burns, a mother of three,
was discharged from the hospital a fortnight after the operation, but
committed suicide less than two years later.
"She was so depressed that it really didn't make any difference to
her," said her mother.The family did not sue but the hospital was fined
$6,000 (£4,000) by the state health department in September the case
only came to light after the newspaper made requests through the Freedom
of Information Act.
These sorts of things do happen," said Lisa McGiffert, director of
Consumers Union Safe Patient Project. "It's pretty disturbing."Mrs
McGiffert said there is no way of knowing how often near-catastrophes
like the Burns case happen because in the US there is no system in place
to collect information from hospitals about medical errors.
The state started investigating the case in March 2010 in response to
an inquiry from The Post-Standard.The investigation revealed a catalogue
of errors in the handling of Ms Burns' case.
The drugs overdose had sent her into a deep coma, the state health
department found, and hospital personnel misread that as irreversible
brain damage without doing enough to evaluate her condition.Furthermore,
the day before her organs were to be removed, a nurse had performed a
reflex test scraping a finger on the bottom of her foot.
The toes curled downward not the expected reaction of someone who's
supposed to be dead.Outside the operating theatre, her nostrils appeared
to show signs of breathing, and her lips and tongue moved.Dead people
don't curl their toes," said Dr Charles Wetli, a forensic pathologist
from New Jersey. "And they don't fight against the respirator and want
to breathe on their own."
Twenty minutes after those observations were made, a nurse gave Burns
an injection of the sedative Ativan, according to records. |