National Post

Medical instrument left inside woman

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MONTREAL• Quebec’ s health minister is blaming human error after a medical instrument 33 centimetre­s long was forgotten inside a woman who had a hysterecto­my at a Montreal hospital last March.

But Gaetan Barrette urged patients Wednesday not to lose confidence in the province’s health system and the surgery performed in its operating rooms.

“There will never be zero mistakes and here you have a situation which proves there are never zero mistakes,” he told reporters in Quebec City.

But Barrette pointed out there’s a standard procedure that’s followed when it comes to an operation.

“When the surgery starts, everything that’s used is counted — everything — and at the end, there’s another count to make sure nothing is left inside a patient,” he said.

But in the operation involving Sylvie Dubé, the team that did the checking “clearly made a mistake,” he said.

Dubé told Radio- Canada she was diagnosed with ovarian cancer last October and underwent chemothera­py over the winter before the March 14 hysterecto­my.

Dubé complained of pain the day after the operation — not in the abdomen but in a shoulder.

“It was like being stabbed with a knife,” she said.

Her doctor and nurses at Notre- Dame Hospital told her it was normal a hysterecto­my would cause pain elsewhere in her body.

She began taking antiinflam­matory medication but the pain increased.

Discourage­d, she went to the hospital’s emergency room on May 22 and had a scan that revealed a metal object in her body.

“They told me, ‘ We see a 30- centimetre metal plate in your stomach ’," Dubé said. “I said, ‘ I don’t have a metal plate in my abdo men .’”

The medical report indicated a “flexible blade,” 33 centimetre­s long, had been left inside her abdomen during her surgery in March.

The instrument was removed May 25.

“It’ s an unfortunat­e event and no one is happy with that, but it’s impossible to have zero complicati­ons,” Barrette said.

The network that oversees Notre- Dame Hospital, the Centre hospitalie­r de l ’ Université de Montréal ( CHUM), has launched an investigat­ion.

“It’s something that remains exceptiona­l,” Dr. Charles Bellavance, director of medical and university affairs at the CHUM, told the CBC.

EVERYTHING THAT’S USED IS COUNTED — EVERYTHING.

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