I-Team Blotter

Kaiser Report: CT Medicare Costs Sixth Highest In Nation

Barbara Nagy reports

Little Progress Made On Health Disparities, New Report Shows

Lisa Chedekel reports

Settlement: Depakote Maker Injects $6 Million Into State Coffers

C-HIT Staff reports

Nursing Homes Fined For Patient Death, Failure To Administer Drugs

C-HIT Staff reports

Two Connecticut Doctors Lose Licenses in New York State

LIsa Chedekel reports

Over 500 Docs And Nurses Providing Care In Medical Homes

Leonard Felson reports

Medical Board Reprimands Doctor, Physician Assistant

C-HIT Staff reports

Smaller Hospitals Struggle With Deficits

Lisa Chedekel reports

Nursing Homes Fined For Choking Death, Weight Loss

C-HIT Staff reports

Breast Cancer Gene Patent Case Heads Back To Appeals Court

Barbara Puffer reports

Medical Board Revokes Doctor’s License

Theresa Sullivan Barger reports

Three CT Nursing Homes Make 2012 ‘Honor Roll’

Lisa Chedekel reports

Yale, St. Raphael’s Detail Plans For Merger

Lisa Chedekel reports

Three Nursing Homes Face Fines For Patient Injuries

C-HIT Staff reports

Medical Board Fines, Restricts Doc’s Surgical License

Theresa Sullivan Barger reports

Westport Plastic Surgeon Fined $25,000

by Kate Farrish | Dec 20, 2011 7:05 pm

(0) Comments | Commenting has expired | E-mail the Author

A Westport plastic surgeon was fined $25,000 by the Connecticut Medical Examining Board on Tuesday for operating a clinic that inspectors found had sloppy record-keeping and rusty and dirty equipment.

In addition, the board fined two other doctors $5,000 each for patient care lapses.

The plastic surgeon, Dr. Joel B. Singer, was also placed on probation for two years for the conditions at his Center for Ambulatory Surgery. Singer did not dispute the Department of Public Health findings and earlier this year he paid a $4,000 fine under a separate consent order with the board.

In May, DPH inspectors found that the center failed to keep records showing that nurses monitored patients for allergies or infections or kept track of sponges or needles used during operations.  The DPH report said that the center had dirty floors and rusty tweezers, an IV pole and scissors.  Singer declined to comment Tuesday.

The board also fined Dr. Tom Bell of Norwich $5,000 for removing a patient’s benign bowel lesion, while leaving a malignant lesion. The surgery took place in 2009.  In 2000, the board fined Bell $8,000 for a patient care lapse following an appendectomy, according to Matthew Antonetti, an attorney for DPH.  Bell’s lawyer, Don Leone, declined to comment on the consent order approved Tuesday but did say that Bell has retired as a surgeon.

Dr. David Kloth of Danbury was fined $5,000 for giving a patient an epidural shot on the wrong side.  Kloth’s attorney, Jason Prueher, declined comment.

In separate actions, the board approved consent orders that:

• Reprimanded Dr. Ellen Mascoli-Lanza of Waterbury for giving her husband 29 prescriptions for the painkiller Hydrocodone without maintaining medical records. Mascoli-Lanza declined to comment.

• Reprimanded Dr. Ross A. Glasmann of Burlington for giving 10 prescriptions of Vicodin, Percocet and a thyroid drug to a friend over 11 months without maintaining the patient’s medical records.

• Reprimanded Dr. John. A. Hallberg of Mystic for failing to disclose disciplinary action taken against him by Westerly Hospital in Rhode Island to regulators in that state.  In 2008, Rhode Island officials fined Hallberg $500 and placed him on probation for three years. The issue arose in Connecticut in March when Hallberg asked to have his Connecticut medical license reinstated.  A new state law gives the medical board the authority to discipline doctors based on actions by regulators in other states.

• Placed Dr. George Northrup of New Milford on probation for five years related to abuse of alcohol and painkillers. Northrup agreed to continue therapy and submit to random drug tests. He told the board that he became addicted to painkillers that were prescribed for back pain and spent six months in residential treatment for depression and addiction.

• Placed physician assistant Robert Lucas of Palm Desert, California on probation for four years related to disciplinary action taken against him by California regulators for a DUI conviction in 2009. His lawyer, Albert Danker, said outside the meeting that Lucas is now “clean and sober” and that “the board did the right thing.”  Lucas is licensed to practice as a physician assistant in Connecticut.

Tags: , ,

Share this story with others.

Share |

Post a Comment

Commenting has closed for this entry

Comments

There were no comments

Sign-Up for High School Summer Program

Eye on Veterans

VA Program Designed To Help Vets And Their Caregivers

Brianna and Andrew Pavlak go grocery shopping on weeknights when there are fewer shoppers because Andrew, a National Guard veteran, gets nervous in crowds. Peggy McCarthy reports.

New Report: Hundreds More Veterans Discharged Illegally

The Department of Defense has illegally discharged hundreds of veterans since 2008 for alleged personality disorder, skirting requirements intended to reduce such diagnoses and depriving veterans of benefits, according to an analysis of data by the Vietnam Veterans of America (VVA).Lisa Chedekel reports.

VA Seeing Spike In Homeless Vets With Families

Andy and Miriam Miranda don’t fit the historical profile of homeless veterans. Former teachers with master’s degrees who have a six-year-old son, they have lost a house to foreclosure and were evicted from an apartment for falling behind on rent.Peggy McCarthy reports.

New Report Cites Rise In Army Suicide Rate, Sex Crimes

Troops who have deployed to war zones two or more times have a higher risk of committing suicide than those who have deployed once or never deployed, a new Army report shows. Lisa Chedekel reports.

Help For Military Kids: New Programs, Outreach

Government, business, social service and military leaders are working together on strategies to ensure that the nearly 10,000 children of active-duty military in Connecticut get help and support when they need it, particularly children of members of the National Guard and Reserves. Peggy McCarthy reports.

Health Reform Watch