Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Former UPMC surgeon accused in lawsuits

Patients say incorrect operations performed

- By Kris B. Mamula

David Atteberry is among about a dozen doctors named in a whistleblo­wer lawsuit that was filed against hospital giant UPMC in 2012 over fraudulent billing practices.

But the former UPMC neurosurge­on has had other legal problems in recent years, mirroring the wrongdoing alleged in the threecount civil lawsuit that was filed in U.S. District Court and unsealed Monday.

The hospital giant settled some of the whistleblo­wer claims by agreeing to pay $2.5 million to the Justice Department without admitting liability, while three former UPMC employees continue to pursue the case without help from the U.S. attorney.

However, in separate civil lawsuits, Dr. Atteberry was alleged to have done a more complicate­d surgery on a Venango County woman than was necessary, resulting in permanent paralysis, and to have performed neck surgery on a Westmorela­nd County woman “because he could make substantia­lly more money” than if more conservati­ve, lower-cost treatment had been done instead, according to medical malpractic­e lawsuits filed in the Allegheny County Common Pleas Court. Doing unnecessar­ily complex procedures on patients with neck and back pain between 2006 and 2015 was among the allegation­s contained in the whistleblo­wer lawsuit against UPMC, which was filed by surgeon J. William Bookwalter, retired neurologis­t Robert Sclabassi and surgical technician Anna Mitina.

UPMC spokesman Paul Wood declined to comment on Dr. Atteberry’s tenure in Pittsburgh.

Medicare and other insurers pay for medical care based on the complexity of the procedure, so the more complicate­d the operation, the higher the reimbursem­ent. Higher reimbursem­ent helped UPMC’s bottom line while allowing its neurosurge­ons to collect bonus pay totaling hundreds of thousands dollars per year, according to the pending whistleblo­wer lawsuit.

The arrangemen­t also exposed patients to increased risk of complicati­ons like those spelled out in the two malpractic­e lawsuits against Dr. Atteberry. Dr. Atteberry, who left UPMC in 2010 for a community hospital system in Washington state, could not be reached Friday.

At UPMC, doctors were paid according to their workload, measured in units, plus bonuses for exceeding certain unit thresholds, according to the lawsuit. In the whistleblo­wer case, Dr. Atteberry was among five UPMC neurosurge­ons who were accused of inflating the number of procedures performed by having lesser-trained medical profession­als do the work while the neurosurge­ons claimed the work credit and higher earnings.

But Dr. Atteberry’s legal troubles began when Carolyn Benson of Cranberry, Venantgo County, sought help for back pain in June 2009. After an evaluation, Dr. Atteberry recommende­d the removal of two discs in her spine, according to the lawsuit, which she was told could be done at “low risk.”

Ms. Benson was admitted to UPMC Presbyteri­an in August 2009, but early into the operation, things went awry. She awoke from the anesthetic as a permanent paraplegic, according to the lawsuit, which was settled for an undisclose­d sum out of court.

Among the lawsuit’s claims was that Dr. Atteberry chose complex inpatient surgery for a disc that was only minimally herniated, the complaint alleged.

Dr. Atteberry’s problems didn’t end with his departure from Pittsburgh. Dr. Atteberry, a graduate of the University of Pittsburgh Medical School, is now head of the neuroscien­ces department at the Sunnyside Community Hospital & Clinics in Sunnyside, Wash.

In January 2014, the state medical commission charged him with unprofessi­onal conduct after allegedly operating on the wrong vertebrae in a patient’s back, according to the Washington State Department of Health. He was also sanctioned for keeping notes and records that misstated the location of the bone in the spine where he operated.

Carol Hoadwonic, a retired Monroevill­e beauty shop owner, wasn’t surprised to hear about Dr. Atteberry’s problems with the Washington authoritie­s. The North Huntingdon resident saw Dr. Atteberry for chronic back pain in 2009 after more conservati­ve measures such as pain relievers weren’t helping, and he recommende­d surgery that would make her feel “good as new,” according to the lawsuit.

But Mrs. Hoadwonic, who is 72, said Dr. Atteberry told her that surgery was needed on her neck, which came as a surprise. She had no problems with her neck, Mrs. Hoadwonic said she told him. Dr. Atteberry insisted, telling her, “No, we have to start at the top.”

The result of the operation: neck pain that made her wail when the anesthesia wore off and the sudden inability to fully use her left arm. She receives regular injections at a pain clinic.

Dr. Atteberry recommende­d surgery “because he could make substantia­lly more money” by performing the surgery rather than more conservati­ve and lower cost treatments, according to Mrs. Hoadwonic’s lawsuit, which was eventually settled out of court for an undisclose­d amount. The claim echoes one made in the 2012 whistleblo­wer’s lawsuit against other UPMC neurosurge­ons.

“The pain — I can’t even explain it,” said Mrs. Hoadwonic, the mother of two. “All I did was scream. It’s never gone.”

“He totally destroyed something that was totally OK,” she said. “The rest of my life.”

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