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Showing Original Post only (View all)Student Dies When Hospital Has No ICU Doctors, Calls One on Videochat Who Pronounces Him Dead Remotely, Lawsuit Claims [View all]
https://futurism.com/health-medicine/student-dies-in-telehealth-hospital-no-icu-doctorsThe parents of a 26-year-old dental student named Conor Hylton are suing a Connecticut hospital after their son died in its telehealth intensive care unit where no critical care doctors were actually present, they allege in the lawsuit.
According to the wrongful death complaint filed against Yale New Haven Health, the largest healthcare provider in the state, Hylton visited the emergency room at its Bridgeport Hospital Milford Campus because of abdominal pain and vomiting on the morning of August 14, 2024. When his condition worsened, he was admitted to the hospital ICU and diagnosed with pancreatitis, dehydration, metabolic acidosis, and alcohol withdrawal, per a medical analysis cited in the suit.
Rather than receiving traditional care, however, Hylton was unwittingly plunged into a cold experiment in using remote work to offset hospital staffing shortages, which could be a grim portent in an age of AI automation. During the late hours he was admitted to the ICU, there were no on-hand ICU intensivists the term for doctors that specialize in providing critical care the suit alleges. Instead, the wing outsourced this to a tele-ICU service, which relies on off-site intensivists.
No on-site physician assessed Hylton for hours, despite his rapidly deteriorating condition. A hospitalist a doctor that provides general medical care for in-patients but doesnt specialize in critical care was assigned to Hylton, but allegedly never saw him.
-snip-
According to the wrongful death complaint filed against Yale New Haven Health, the largest healthcare provider in the state, Hylton visited the emergency room at its Bridgeport Hospital Milford Campus because of abdominal pain and vomiting on the morning of August 14, 2024. When his condition worsened, he was admitted to the hospital ICU and diagnosed with pancreatitis, dehydration, metabolic acidosis, and alcohol withdrawal, per a medical analysis cited in the suit.
Rather than receiving traditional care, however, Hylton was unwittingly plunged into a cold experiment in using remote work to offset hospital staffing shortages, which could be a grim portent in an age of AI automation. During the late hours he was admitted to the ICU, there were no on-hand ICU intensivists the term for doctors that specialize in providing critical care the suit alleges. Instead, the wing outsourced this to a tele-ICU service, which relies on off-site intensivists.
No on-site physician assessed Hylton for hours, despite his rapidly deteriorating condition. A hospitalist a doctor that provides general medical care for in-patients but doesnt specialize in critical care was assigned to Hylton, but allegedly never saw him.
-snip-
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Student Dies When Hospital Has No ICU Doctors, Calls One on Videochat Who Pronounces Him Dead Remotely, Lawsuit Claims [View all]
highplainsdem
Thursday
OP
Wow 😳 our health care is deteriorating. How awful for the family. So unnecessary
TommieMommy
Thursday
#4
Darned right! We need to get rid of the billionaires, change the rules of corporate governance
PatrickforB
Thursday
#13
That's a terrifying story. Tele-health in the ICU???? I imagine the financial penalties will bring that to a halt.
Vinca
Thursday
#9
What did his University Insurance cover? He was a medical student. That's all he gets?
ChicagoTeamster
Thursday
#12
Nice Try? What was I Trying? Insurance Companies and Hospital Groups are fighting a race to the bottom
ChicagoTeamster
Thursday
#21
Glossing over what point? I've offered some of the many points you've detailed none.
ChicagoTeamster
Thursday
#28
I agree with you on this but the initial post didn't cover all of this. It was about a specific problem in healthcare.
ChicagoTeamster
Thursday
#30
Uggh, thanks for the share. Understaffing and its consequences have been going on for many years sadly
blue_jay
Thursday
#16