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Dr. Pamela Wibble, regarding Dr. Leigh Sundem there's Dr. Christopher Duntsch

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Dr. Pamela Wibble, regarding Dr. Leigh Sundem there's Dr. Christopher Duntsch Empty Dr. Pamela Wibble, regarding Dr. Leigh Sundem there's Dr. Christopher Duntsch

Post by redpill Tue Aug 03, 2021 12:53 pm

Tue Aug 03, 2021 12:28 pm

Dr. Pamela Wibble,

this is Dr. Leigh Sundem


Dr. Pamela Wibble, regarding Dr. Leigh Sundem there's Dr. Christopher Duntsch Scree252


this is what Pam Wibble said


Doctor’s suicide note asks us to end discrimination in medicine
Posted on May 11, 2020 by Pamela Wible MD

https://www.idealmedicalcare.org/doctors-suicide-note-asks-us-to-end-discrimination-in-medicine/

Dr. Leigh Sundem dies by suicide due to discrimination
Posted on May 1, 2020 by Pamela Wible MD


Dr. Leigh Sundem died by suicide when she was obstructed from practicing medicine due to discrimination related to her drug addiction as a teen. Clean & sober 15 years, she was an advocate for others in recovery, even testifying to congress. With countless awards in med school, Leigh was a phenomenal physician, yet (after 3 years of applying) was never accepted into required residency training. Leigh did not want to die. Unmatched to residency, unemployed with student loans due, she saw no way out. In her suicide note, she asked her family to contact me & gave us instructions to share the truth so her story “goes viral” and starts a REAL conversation about ending the stigma of addiction in medicine. So Please . .


ref https://www.idealmedicalcare.org/dr-leigh-sundem-dies-by-suicide-due-to-discrimination/


Pam Wibble's article is dated May 1, 2020 by Pamela Wibble

Dr. Leigh Sundem used cocaine, and that was her own free choice, resulting in a felony conviction.

apparently, Dr. Wibble has not heard of Dr. Christopher Duntsch nor had I prior to watching this


here's a screen grab

Dr. Pamela Wibble, regarding Dr. Leigh Sundem there's Dr. Christopher Duntsch Vlcsn703
Dr. Pamela Wibble, regarding Dr. Leigh Sundem there's Dr. Christopher Duntsch Vlcsn702

Dr. Christopher Duntsch , like Dr. Leigh Sundem used cocaine,

here's his record

Baylor Plano

Early in his tenure at Baylor Plano, Duntsch made a poor impression on his fellow surgeons. Veteran vascular surgeon Randall Kirby recalled that Duntsch frequently boasted about his abilities despite being so new to the area.[15] Kirby also recalled that Duntsch's skills in the operating room left much to be desired: as Kirby put it, "he could not wield a scalpel".[4]

Several of Duntsch's surgeries at Baylor Plano resulted in severely maimed patients:

Kenneth Fennell, the first patient Duntsch operated on at Baylor Plano, was left with chronic pain after Duntsch operated on the wrong part of his back. Due to the debilitating pain, Fennell later had a second operation by Duntsch to relieve it, and was left paralyzed from the legs down after Duntsch removed a part of his femoral nerve. Fennell required months of rehabilitation to be able to walk with a cane. He was left unable to walk for more than 30 feet or stand for more than a few minutes without having to sit down again.[16]
Lee Passmore, a Collin County medical investigator, experienced chronic pain and limited mobility after Duntsch cut a ligament which was not normally touched during that particular procedure, misplaced hardware in his spine, placed a screw which kept the hardware in place in an incorrect location in his spine and also stripped the screw's threads so it could not be moved. Vascular surgeon Mark Hoyle, who assisted with the operation, became so disturbed by Duntsch's actions that at one point he physically restrained him.[17][8]
Barry Morguloff, the owner of a pool service company, was left with bone fragments in his spinal canal after Duntsch tried to pull a damaged disc out of his back with a grabbing tool. Mongoloff eventually lost most of the function on his left side and required a wheelchair.[8]
Jerry Summers, a longtime friend of Duntsch's, came to Plano to have two neck vertebrae fused. During the operation, Duntsch removed large amounts of muscle tissue, rendering Summers a quadriplegic. Summers later claimed that he and Duntsch had used cocaine the night before his surgery. Despite passing a drug test, Baylor Plano officials were concerned enough to ask Duntsch to limit himself to minor surgeries.[8][18][4] Summers remained a quadriplegic for the rest of his life; he died in 2021 of an infection related to complications from the botched operation.[19]
During his next surgery, Duntsch severed a major artery in patient Kelli Martin's spine during a minor back operation. Duntsch continued operating despite clear signs that Martin was losing massive amounts of blood. He refused to abort the surgery even after a trauma surgeon colleague warned him about the blood loss. Martin ultimately bled to death.[4][20]

Baylor Plano officials found that Duntsch failed to meet their standards of care, and he resigned rather than face certain termination. Had Duntsch been fired, Baylor Plano would have been required to report him to the National Practitioner Data Bank (NPDB), which is intended to flag problematic physicians.[2][4]
Dallas Medical Center

Duntsch moved to Dallas Medical Center in Farmers Branch, where he was granted temporary privileges until hospital officials could obtain his records from Baylor Plano. However, red flags surfaced early on, as nurses wondered if Duntsch was under the influence while on duty. He lasted for less than a week before administrators pulled his privileges after the death of a patient, Floella Brown, and the maiming of another, Mary Efurd.[8][9]

Duntsch had severed Brown's vertebral artery, then packed it with too much of a substance intended to stop the bleeding. She suffered a stroke as a result. Duntsch did not respond to messages from the hospital for a few hours, then the next day postponed caring for Brown to perform an elective surgery on Efurd. Hospital officials were exasperated when Duntsch refused to delay Efurd's surgery, and asked him multiple times to care for Brown or transfer her out of his care. Duntsch suggested drilling a hole in Brown's head to relieve the pressure, but was refused permission. Not only was he not qualified for and held no privileges to perform brain surgery, but Dallas Medical did not have the proper equipment or personnel for such an operation. Brown was left in a coma for hours before Duntsch finally acquiesced to her transfer. Brown ultimately died.[20][21]

While operating on Efurd, Duntsch severed one of her nerve roots during spinal fusion surgery while operating on the wrong portion of her back, twisted a screw into another nerve, left screw holes on the opposite side of her spine, and left surgical hardware in her soft muscle tissue so loose that it moved when touched. Efurd was left paralyzed.[21][22] She later recalled waking up feeling "excruciating pain", a "ten-plus" on a scale of 1 to 10. Several people who were in the operating room for Efurd's surgery suspected that Duntsch might have been intoxicated, recalling that his pupils were dilated.[4]

Longtime spine surgeon Robert Henderson performed the salvage surgery on Efurd, and likened Duntsch's work on her to a child playing with Tinkertoys or an erector set.[15][23] Henderson later recalled that he wondered if Duntsch was an impostor, as he could not believe that a real surgeon would botch Efurd's surgery so badly. He felt that anyone with a basic knowledge of human anatomy would know that he was operating in the wrong area of Efurd's back. Henderson sent Duntsch's picture to UT to determine whether he had actually graduated from the institution and received confirmation that Duntsch, in fact, had a medical degree from the university. He called Duntsch's fellowship supervisor in Memphis, as well as the supervisor of Duntsch's residency; it was then that he learned about the incident that led him to be referred to the impaired physician program.[4] [21]

Despite both of his surgeries at Dallas Medical Center going catastrophically awry, hospital officials were not required to report him to the NPDB. At the time, hospitals were not required to report doctors who only had temporary privileges.[24][4]
Other hospitals

After leaving Dallas Medical Center, Duntsch received a job at an outpatient clinic named Legacy Surgery Center (now Frisco Ambulatory Surgery Center) in Frisco. While there, he damaged patient Philip Mayfield's spinal cord while drilling into it, leaving him temporarily paralyzed from the neck down. After undergoing physical rehabilitation, Mayfield was able to walk with a cane but continued to experience paralysis on the right side of his body and in his left arm. He also experienced shooting pain all over his body.[4] Mayfield died of COVID-19 in February 2021; according to his wife, he had been vulnerable to the virus due to complications caused by Duntsch's botched surgeries.[25] While operating on Jacqueline Troy, Duntsch cut all but one of her vocal cords and one of her arteries and poked holes through her trachea. Troy was left barely able to speak above a whisper, had to be sedated for weeks, and had to be fed through a feeding tube for some time as food was getting into her lungs.[17]

When Duntsch applied for a job at Methodist Hospital in Dallas, the hospital reported him to the NPDB. Even after this report, Duntsch was hired by University General Hospital in Dallas in the spring of 2013. Soon afterward, he severely maimed Jeff Glidewell after mistaking part of his neck muscle for a tumor during a routine cervical fusion, severing one of his vocal cords, cutting a hole in his esophagus, slicing an artery and leaving a surgical sponge embedded in his throat.[8] Kirby was rushed in to repair the damage, and later described what he found after opening Glidewell back up as the work of a "crazed maniac". He later told Glidewell that it was clear Duntsch had tried to kill him. Glidewell was left with only one vocal cord and was partially paralyzed on his left side.[15] Kirby claimed that it looked as if Duntsch had tried to decapitate him. Glidewell was reportedly still suffering the effects of Duntsch's botched operation five years later; and was only able to eat small bites of food at a time. He proved to be Duntsch's last surgery; University General pushed him out soon afterward.[26][15]
Medical license revoked

Kirby wrote a detailed complaint to the Texas Medical Board, calling Duntsch a "sociopath" who was "a clear and present danger to the citizens of Texas."[18][4] Under heavy lobbying from Kirby and Henderson, the Texas Medical Board suspended Duntsch's license on June 26, 2013. The lead investigator on the case later revealed that she wanted Duntsch's license suspended while the ten-month probe was underway, but board attorneys were not willing to go along. Board chairman Irwin Zeitzler later said that complications in neurosurgery were more common than most laymen believe, and it took until June 2013 to find the "pattern of patient injury" required to justify suspending Duntsch's license. He added that many board members found it hard to believe that a trained surgeon could be as incompetent as Duntsch appeared.[8]

Dr. Christopher Duntsch repeatedly lied about his cocaine drug use, and falsely claimed he was clean and sober.

He pleaded the fifth when asked if he was using cocaine prior to surgery.

I think if you want to talk about Dr. Leigh Sundem who was a cocaine addict, you should also mention Dr. Christopher Duntsch who when asked by colleagues, Texas board of health and investigative reporters, falsely claimed he was clean and sober, resulting in total disasters.


Dr. Pam Wibble, how do you know Dr. Leigh Sundem was clean and sober, as Dr. Duntsch also claimed to be clean and sober?

How do you know if at some future time, Dr. Sundem might not be tempted to go back to using drugs or alcohol and become an impaired physician.

Dr. Christopher Duntsch

CV

Memphis State University (BS)
University of Tennessee Health Science Center (MD-PhD)


Having exhausted his football eligibility, Duntsch decided to switch to a career in medicine.[8] In 2010 he completed the MD–PhD and neurosurgery residency programs at the University of Tennessee Health Science Center,[3] and subsequently completed a spine fellowship program there as well.[9]

Duntsch completed his residency having participated in fewer than 100 surgeries. Typically, neurosurgery residents participate in over 1,000 surgeries during residency.[8] He was suspected of being under the influence of cocaine while operating during his fourth year of residency, upon which he was sent to an impaired physicians program before being allowed to return to his residency program.[10]



how can a residency program prevent Dr. Christopher Duntsch?

by excluding cocaine drug addicts with felony convictions (although apparently Univ Tennessee did not know of his drug addiction)


Dr. Pam Wibble's claim that Dr. Leigh Sundam was discriminated against due to her FELONY conviction, seems a bit hard to swallow in light of fellow cocaine user Dr. Duntsch.

if I want a surgeon operating on me, he'd better not be a cocaine user. No

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