Posted on 09/21/2020 5:10:42 AM PDT by Gamecock
A surgeon and a hospital system executive stepped down from a Tennessee hospital last week after the executive -- not a licensed physician -- participated in a patient's surgery, according to statements issued by both the CEO and the hospital system.
Greg Neal, MBA, was CEO of Bristol Regional Medical Center near the Virginia border when he was invited to observe a live surgery last week, according to his statement. A surgeon then asked Neal if he wanted to make the initial incision, which he did.
A surgeon and a hospital system executive stepped down from a Tennessee hospital last week after the executive -- not a licensed physician -- participated in a patient's surgery, according to statements issued by both the CEO and the hospital system.
Greg Neal, MBA, was CEO of Bristol Regional Medical Center near the Virginia border when he was invited to observe a live surgery last week, according to his statement. A surgeon then asked Neal if he wanted to make the initial incision, which he did.
"I regret I did so," Neal said in his statement.
Local media reported that the surgeon, who was not named, had also left the hospital's employ.
Ballad Health, which owns Bristol Regional, asked Neal to resign after Ballad executives were notified of Neal's actions via a compliance hotline.
"We applaud the team member who used the Ballad Health Compliance process to report the issue. This underscores the importance of our compliance program, and makes clear that all team members, including senior leaders, are expected to comply with our policies designed to protect patients," according to the Ballad statement. "When it comes to an environment of patient safety, there cannot be exceptions, regardless of whether you are the Chairman of the Board or a newly hired team member."
"While there was no harm to the patient, my involvement was a clear violation of Ballad Health policy," Neal acknowledged in his statement. "I fell short of meeting the expectations reasonably expected of me."
He added: "I accept accountability and believe this is the right thing for Ballad Health's patients, its team members and for the community."
Neal, who also was Ballad's Northeast (Tennessee) market president, worked for the Ballad system for nearly 30 years, he said. His LinkedIn profile shows that he had served as market president since February 2018 and Bristol Regional's leader since May 2013. Prior to that he was an executive or director with Wellmont Health System dating to 1996. He earned an MBA and MSHA in healthcare administration from the University of Alabama at Birmingham in 1991.
Neal's presence on Ballad's and Bristol's leadership web pages had been scrubbed as of Wednesday.
Chad Couch, MD, is the new interim CEO, according to Becker's Hospital Review; Couch is also Bristol Regional's chief medical officer.
Bristol Regional counts more than 270 physicians and some 1,615 other healthcare workers, according to its website.
Ballad declined to answer questions, sending the statement instead. Neal could not be reached for comment.
Marian Hollingsworth, who co-founded the Patient Safety League, told MedPage Today that she was shocked that nobody in the operating room stopped the CEO in the moment. Somebody on the surgical team should have, she said.
"It's just a terrible patient safety violation," Hollingsworth said. "It's alarming on so many different levels."
Hollingsworth credited Ballad for swiftly removing the surgeon and CEO. This violation demonstrated why patients should always ask who will be involved in their surgeries, she said, adding: "You have every right to know."
Extremely intelligent and educated does not equal wise.
I was astonished when someone told me about a dentist who extracted a tooth while standing on a hoverboard. See below.
Maybe next we’ll have someone defusing a bomb while doing shots. Of course, that would be someone risking themselves instead of others. So, maybe that won’t happen.
Wow...
I’m baffled.
Junior Mints...
Why isn’t the surgeon’s name not included? What kind of relationship did he/she have with the CEO?
The idiot surgeon, who even suggested this, should be named, as well.
They were both (rightly) fires, but only the CEO was named??
Nope.
Id want to know this Dts name, so he doesnt ever operate on anyone I know.
The doctor will likely be disciplined by the state medical association and could lose his license I imagine. The CEO can probably also be criminally charged with practicing medicine without a license or even assault.
The doctor should face same charges.
If it looks like a duck,walks like a duck is it a quack?
The surgeon’s name was in other articles.
I went with this one because of the snappy title.
But he did stay at a Holiday Inn Express.
Many opportunities for someone to question whether this was a good idea. How does this happen? Does anyone believe that this is the only time it has? Completely insane.
You might be surprised how often medical supply salesmen associates go into surgery with the doctors to demonstrate the operation or use of a new device.
ah yes a rockfod files episode, a hip replacement salesman inserts it in operation on mafia boss and bada boom, sudenly the doctor is dead...
Here’s the name of the surgeon....
Kingsport, Tenn.-based Ballad Health’s Bristol Regional Medical Center fired
cardiothoracic surgeon Nathan Smith, MD,
after he offered and let the CEO of Bristol Regional make the first cut in a surgery, local NBC affiliate WCYB reports.
Abe Vigoda was the guy operated on.
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