A few days before I wrote this, a patient had a complication in my office. I have discussed on this blog the distinction between a complication , which is a blameless event, and a negligent act. In my experience, most lawsuits are initiated against complications or adverse medical outcomes, neither of which are the result of medical negligence. This is the basis for my strong belief that the current medical malpractice system is unfair. It ensnares the innocent much more often that it targets the negligent. I performed a scope examination through one of the two orifices that gastroenterologists routinely probe. In this instance, the scope was destined to travel inside a patient’s esophagus on route to her stomach and into the first portion of the small intestine. Sedation was expertly administered by our nurse anesthetist (CRNA). The procedure was quickly and successfully performed. The patient’s breathing became very impaired and her oxygen level decreased markedly, a k
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