The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Hospital: 5 patients given overdoses may have been treatable

- By Kantele Franko Follow Franko on Twitter at http://www.twitter. com/kantele10 . Have a tip? Contact the author securely at https://www.ap.org/tips

COLUMBUS >> Five hospital patients who died after getting potentiall­y fatal doses of pain medication may have been given those drugs when there still was a chance to improve their conditions with treatment, an Ohio health system said Friday as its investigat­ion continued. The Columbus-area Mount Carmel Health System said it is notifying families of those five people, who were among dozens of patients that received excessive doses ordered by one of its doctors. It also found one more patient who received a potentiall­y fatal dose, bringing that total to at least 29 patients over several years, mostly at Mount Carmel West Hospital in Columbus. It has said six other patients received doses but that the medication wasn’t likely the cause of those deaths. The findings have raised questions about whether hospital staff wrongly used drugs to hasten deaths intentiona­lly or possibly illegally without the patients’ families knowing. “These events are heartbreak­ing, unacceptab­le and inconsiste­nt with the values and care processes of Mount Carmel,” CEO Ed Lamb said in a statement Friday that echoed the hospital’s previous apologies and pledges to ensure the situation doesn’t occur again. The hospital said the overdoses were ordered by critical-care doctor William Husel, who was fired in December after Mount Carmel received reports of concerns and began investigat­ing. Husel and the hospital now face at least 19 related wrongful-death lawsuits alleging patients were negligentl­y or intentiona­lly killed. Some families also question whether they were misled by hospital employees about the graveness of the patients’ conditions. Mount Carmel said it put 23 other employees on leave , including nurses and pharmacist­s who administer­ed and approved medication­s. It also said it has changed its medication protocols to prevent similar situations. Husel had worked at Mount Carmel for five years. His lawyers have declined to comment on the allegation­s, and they’re seeking to halt proceeding­s in some of the lawsuits against him pending the ongoing investigat­ion by local authoritie­s. The State Medical Board has suspended his license , but no criminal charges have been announced. Records show the board hasn’t previously discipline­d Husel. He invoked his right against self-incriminat­ion when he was questioned for the board, including when asked if he purposeful­ly ordered excessive doses to end patients’ lives, according to a board notificati­on. The affected patients identified by relatives or in litigation so far include men and women who were treated for various ailments. They ranged in age from 39 to 85.

 ?? ANDREW WELSH HUGGINS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? The main entrance to Mount Carmel West Hospital is shown in Columbus.
ANDREW WELSH HUGGINS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE The main entrance to Mount Carmel West Hospital is shown in Columbus.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States