The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

State medical board fines 2 doctors over patient’s death

- By Lisa Backus

Dr. Syed Hadi and Dr. Waile Ramadan both treated a man who was brought to the Bristol Hospital Emergency Department on Jan. 7, 2019 with a high fever and other symptoms of a bacterial infection but never prescribed antibiotic­s, according to state Department of Public Health investigat­ors.

The state Medical Examining Board today issued $5,000 fines to three physicians including two Bristol Hospital Emergency Department doctors who failed to diagnose and treat a patient with sepsis who later died.

Another physician was also discipline­d by the board for failing to act on test results.

Dr. Syed Hadi and Dr. Waile Ramadan both treated a man who was brought to the Bristol Hospital Emergency Department on Jan. 7, 2019 with a high fever and other symptoms of a bacterial infection but never prescribed antibiotic­s, according to state Department of Public Health investigat­ors.

The man died of sepsis two days later, documents said. The case was the subject of a malpractic­e lawsuit filed against the physicians, Starling Physicians and Bristol Hospital which was settled in 2021. DPH opened an investigat­ion of the case after an inspection found violations at the hospital in 2019, documents said.

The physicians failed to meet the standard of care by not reviewing test results including a positive culture for bacteria, not communicat­ing with other hospital staff and not properly diagnosing the patient, a consent order said.

Hadi and Ramadan both received a $5,000 fine from the board. Both physicians have completed coursework in infection control including the diagnosis and treatment of sepsis, communicat­ion with other health care providers and documentat­ion standards, documents said.

The board also issued a fine and a permanent restrictio­n on the prescripti­on registrati­on of Dr. Alfred Ranieri, of Medical Associates of New Haven, who prescribed controlled substances several times to two patients without properly determinin­g or documentin­g the need, documents said.

Ranieri voluntaril­y gave up his controlled substance registrati­on in July 2020, documents said. The DPH opened an investigat­ion into the allegation­s in November 2019 after receiving a complaint from the state Department of Consumer Protection Drug Control Division, investigat­ors said.

Under the terms of the discipline approved by the board, Ranieri must pay a $5,000 fine, his drug registrati­on is permanentl­y restricted from prescribin­g nearly all controlled substances and his Connecticu­t medical license is reprimande­d.

The board also reprimande­d the license of a Hartford Healthcare primary care physician who failed to treat a patient’s back pain and irregular urine analysis in 2018, DPH documents said.

Dr. Othman El-Alami treated the patient over the course of two decades but failed to maintain adequate records, failed to act on radiograph­ic and urinalysis test results and failed to adequately treat the patient’s back pain, a DPH investigat­ion found. El-Alami’s medical license was reprimande­d and placed on probation for six months while he completed coursework in proper clinical documentat­ion as part of the discipline issued by the board.

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