Things Doctors Should Not Do

— ... like attacking their nurses, for example

MedicalToday

Do not [allegedly] assault the nurses. A former nurse at a surgery center affiliated with Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles is suing an ophthalmologist who, she alleges, pushed her out of an operating room. Surveillance shows what happened.

An in Modern Healthcare says the doctor then grabbed the nurse's arm and told her he could do it because he knew she liked abuse.

The nurse's lawyer said his client was punished with a transfer and a decrease in her work hours leading to her eventual resignation. Cedars-Sinai declined to say whether the doctor had been disciplined.

A surgeon at a Long Island, N.Y., hospital, angry because a nurse gave one of his patients a dose of medicine at the wrong time, allegedly took a drawstring from his sweatshirt and wrapped it around her neck. As reported by , the complaint says the surgeon, while choking the nurse, told her he should kill her for what she did.

He was arrested and charged with strangulation and assault.

Do not carve your initials in the organs of patients you are operating on. Simon Bramhall, a liver transplant surgeon in Birmingham, England was fined £10,000 for using an argon beam coagulator to carve his initials on the organs of two different patients while they were undergoing surgery. He pleaded guilty to one of the two charges and said he did it to relieve stress in the operating room (not an accepted method of relieving stress).

The offenses were discovered when the patients were re-operated on by other surgeons. While the carving did no physical harm to the patients, the prosecution maintained "it was done with the disregard to the patients' feelings while they were under general anesthetic."

Bramhall is awaiting a decision by the General Medical Council about whether he will lose his medical license.

Do not help a man sell his wife's kidney without her knowledge. A man in India was upset about what he thought was an inadequate wedding dowry given to him by his wife's family 12 years ago. When his wife complained of abdominal pain, he took her to a hospital where she was told she needed an emergency appendectomy. She underwent surgery the next day.

Her husband told her not to tell anyone about the operation and kept her at home for several months. Her abdominal pain worsened and moved to her lower back, but her husband would not let her see a doctor. Finally, some of her relatives took her to a medical center where doctors discovered her left kidney was infected, and her right kidney was missing.

She complained to the police, who arrested her husband and his brother and charged them with "commercially trading human organs and detaining a woman with criminal intent." The woman says her husband sold her kidney because of the dowry issue. He confessed to selling the kidney but said she had consented to the procedure. She says she was drugged and does not recall signing anything.

The , published in the Washington Post and other , does not say whether the surgeons or the hospital involved in this bizarre incident have been charged. They should be.

"Skeptical Scalpel" is a surgeon who blogs at his self-titled site, . This appeared on Physician's Weekly.