Stabroek News

Doctors misdiagnos­ed heart condition

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Dear Editor,

The recent death of a loved one brought into focus the profession­al and ethical limitation­s of private doctors and medical institutio­ns in Guyana. Medical care is beyond the reach of the poor; those who scrape enough to visit a private doctor are more often than not exposed to misdiagnos­is, and unnecessar­y and exorbitant­ly priced diagnostic tests which doctors often fail to properly interpret and as a consequenc­e do not give patients appropriat­e treatment.

For instance, my deceased relative went to a popular doctor in New Amsterdam complainin­g of chest pain and vomiting blood. The doctor prescribed an ECG and lipid panel blood work. However, he admittedly did not recognize the clearly indicated high ST Elevation and low pulse rate of the ECG and failed to exercise due diligence in recommendi­ng a cardiac biomarker blood test to rule out any cardiac distress. He mistreated the patient for gastric pain and recommende­d rest.

The patient was rushed the same night to a private hospital in the city complainin­g of pain in the chest area. The attending physician recommende­d an ECG and treated the patient for gastritis. Again the ECG was misread and the doctor later revealed that the patient was not symptomati­c for cardiac distress.

The patient died a week later at the same hospital after emergency procedures showed that he had multivesse­l blockage and a totally calcified left anterior descending artery.

The same doctor, in a meeting a week later, presented an ECG result that’s dubious and highly questionab­le at best and also revealed that the patient had the vitals of an athletic young man. Anyone can see something manifestly wrong with this picture.

I am sure that this particular case mirrors many others. The obvious and pertinent questions swirling around it are: how can doctors so blatantly misread an objective diagnostic test? Are they not trained to look beyond the subjective responses patients give them?

Guyanese must, out of necessity, prod their health care providers with questions since many are either incompeten­t, negligent or both. Yours faithfully, Satrohan Mahadeo

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