22 Oct 2011

Weird News/Compensation after wrong side of heart removed

Steve Edwards said he learned the procedure had gone wrong 10 weeks after the operation
A man who had the wrong side of his heart removed in surgery has received a six-figure sum in compensation.
Steve Edwards, 51, from Weston-Super-Mare, North Somerset, was operated on at the Bristol Royal Infirmary (BRI) in 2008 for an irregular heartbeat.
But during the operation a piece of equipment slipped causing the wrong side of his heart to be burned away.
BRI has apologised and said changes had been made to "policies and procedures as a direct result".
Mr Edwards, a practice manager at St George's and Worle GP surgeries, was awarded the undisclosed sum after the third attempt at corrective surgery went wrong.
"I could hear some commotion, I was under heavy local anaesthetic and I was shaken awake by the consultant to tell me there was a problem and they needed to put a pacemaker in," he said.
'Technical errors'
"I wasn't really clear what was going on, it was only some weeks afterwards that I realised."
Mr Edwards said he learned the procedure had gone wrong 10 weeks after the operation during an outpatient's appointment.
"I was really concerned that the mistake hadn't been admitted to me from the start...," he said.
Mr Edwards added that as a result of having a pacemaker fitted he would have to undergo surgery every seven years to replace the battery "which as I get older carries more and more risks".
In a statement, the BRI said: "Technical errors during Mr Edwards cardiac ablation procedure resulted in the catheter moving and radio frequency energy being delivered to the wrong side of his heart.
"Further checks have been introduced to ensure that the catheter is perfectly placed before radio frequency energy is delivered."
BBC NEWS

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