Edmonton Journal

Star-struck doctors put patients at risk

When celebritie­s seek medical care, they become vulnerable to ‘VIP Syndrome’

- CARLA K. JOHNSON

One doctor delivered test results to Prince’s home. Another sent his son, who wasn’t a physician, on a cross-country flight to bring medication to the music star.

It’s not clear if any doctor could have averted the fentanyl overdose that killed the singer in April. But his death may offer evidence for how the special treatment often afforded the rich and famous can result in worse health care than ordinary Americans receive. It’s a pattern identified in medical literature as early as 1964 and it has a name: VIP Syndrome.

Experts agree that doctors treating Michael Jackson and Joan Rivers lost their bearings and made fatal mistakes in the glare of their patients’ fame. Eleanor Roosevelt is another example.

“There are a number of red flags that go up,” said Dr. Robert Klitzman, who directs Columbia University’s bioethics master’s program. “Prince was one of the wealthiest musicians alive. Did he get appropriat­e care? VIP Syndrome may have been involved.”

First described by Dr. Walter Weintraub of the University of Maryland School of Medicine in a 1964 paper, VIP Syndrome is shorthand for how the influence of wealth and the allure of fame can cause doctors to veer into risky territory when they cater to the demands of a star or his entourage.

Stars may reject medical advice or demand ineffectiv­e or harmful treatments. Star-struck doctors may order unnecessar­y tests or not enough tests. Hospital administra­tors may meddle in decisions if the patient is a potential financial donor.

Jackson’s personal doctor, Conrad Murray, spent two years in prison after his involuntar­y manslaught­er conviction in the King of Pop’s 2009 death. Jackson had requested a surgical anesthetic, propofol, to help him sleep, calling it his “milk,” according to trial testimony.

Prosecutor­s said Murray supplied the drug and didn’t notice when Jackson stopped breathing.

Eagerness to please apparently pushed Murray far beyond the boundaries of reasonable treatment, said Dr. Stephen Dinwiddie of Northweste­rn University Feinberg School of Medicine.

Another doctor took a cellphone photo of Joan Rivers on the operating table, a recently settled malpractic­e lawsuit revealed. That’s a clear sign of clouded judgment, Dinwiddie said.

The comedian’s family accepted an undisclose­d amount to settle the complaint in her 2014 death following a routine endoscopy. The family alleged doctors performed an unauthoriz­ed medical procedure and failed to act as Rivers’ vital signs deteriorat­ed.

Eleanor Roosevelt may have been misdiagnos­ed because of VIP Syndrome, said New York University School of Medicine’s Dr. Barron Lerner, who published a paper based on his review of her medical record.

The first lady died in 1962 of tuberculos­is, which could have been caught earlier if she’d had a bone marrow biopsy in time, Lerner said. Instead, she was misdiagnos­ed with aplastic anemia and treated with steroids, which may have reduced her body’s ability to fight infection.

The timeline of events surroundin­g Prince suggests missed opportunit­ies, experts said, including a close call less than a week before he died on April 21.

On April 15, Prince’s private plane made an emergency stop in Illinois on a flight from Atlanta back to Minnesota. Media, citing anonymous sources, reported that first responders gave him an antidote commonly used to reverse suspected opioid overdoses.

“You’d think someone would say, ‘Let’s get him into treatment,’” Klitzman said.

Instead, a week passed before Prince’s associates called a California addiction and pain specialist, Dr. Howard Kornfeld.

Kornfeld sent his son Andrew, in an effort to persuade Prince to seek long-term care at his Recovery Without Walls centre in Mill Valley, California, according to William Mauzy, the Kornfelds’ attorney. Andrew Kornfeld carried a small dose of buprenorph­ine, which is used to ease withdrawal symptoms and cravings, Mauzy has said.

The younger Kornfeld arrived too late. He was among those who discovered Prince’s body.

Mauzy did not respond to questions regarding Kornfeld’s approach to celebrity care.

The actions of Dr. Michael Todd Schulenber­g, a Minnesota family physician, are also under scrutiny.

Schulenber­g saw Prince on April 7 and 20, the day before he died. He told investigat­ors he prescribed medication­s for him, but a search warrant did not specify which drugs. Schulenber­g arrived “on the death scene” at some point, according to the warrant. He told a detective he was there to drop off test results.

That house call suggests VIP Syndrome, Klitzman said.

To guard against VIP Syndrome, the Cleveland Clinic published nine principles of caring for VIPs in 2011. The document warns doctors against bending the rules.

In the end, doctors must monitor a tendency toward any unusual practices, said Lerner.

“When you’re contemplat­ing superhuman or very heroic, unorthodox behaviour in your zeal to help a famous patient,” he said, “that’s where you’ve got to take a deep breath and reassess.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A fentanyl overdose killed Prince in April, and his death may illustrate how the special treatment often afforded celebritie­s can result in poor care.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A fentanyl overdose killed Prince in April, and his death may illustrate how the special treatment often afforded celebritie­s can result in poor care.
 ??  ?? Joan Rivers
Joan Rivers

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