South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Broward ob/gyn played anesthesio­logist for fatal Brazilian butt lift, state says

- By David J. Neal

A Plantation plastic surgery center used an obstetrici­an/gynecologi­st as an unqualifie­d anesthesio­logist and a Brazilian butt lift patient died after surgery, a Florida Department of Health administra­tive complaint says.

The complaint is against the office surgery registrati­on license of Serenity Capital Investment­s, which now does business as The Best U Now Plastic Surgery. Online Florida Department of Health records list Serenity’s official license address as 4101 S. Hospital Drive, Suite No.

11.

Serenity’s state corporatio­n registrati­on lists the address as the same building, but Suite No. 8. Both Google as The Best U’s address.

State corporate records say N’Kaeyah Wilkerson was Serenity’s manager at the time of the patient’s death. Serenity’s current managing member is Dr. Dorian Wilkerson and current registered agent is Shareza Wilkerson.

An administra­tive complaint starts the discipline process. The complaint is not against ob/gyn Dr. Millicent Muir, licensed in Florida since

2005, although it’s Muir’s qualificat­ions on which the complaint is based.

The Best U Now Plastic Surgery didn’t return a message left by a Miami Herald reporter. Muir, whose address of record is The Best U Now’s location, didn’t return an email from a Herald reporter.

Anesthesio­logy doesn’t appear on the profile of Muir’s license she has held since 2005.

And that’s the main problem, according to the administra­tive complaint against Serenity’s license.

The complaint says Sept. 17, 2021, inspection found the establishm­ent used Muir “to provide anesthesia for patients undergoing Level II surgeries.”

All the surgical documentat­ion, the complaint said, listed Muir as handling the anesthesia for an Oct. 20, 2021, liposuctio­n, Brazilian butt lift and breast augmentati­on for “J.W.”

“At the conclusion of the surgery, J.W. developed serious bradycardi­a and was transferre­d to Plantation General Hospital,” the complaint said.

“Bradycardi­a” is, according to Cleveland Clinic, “a condition where your heart beats fewer than 60 times per minute, which is unusually slow. This condition may be dangerous if it keeps your heart from pumping enough blood to meet your body’s needs.” J.W. died that night. By Florida statute, this surgery required that a “surgeon must be assisted by a qualified anesthesia provider” and the complaint said, the “surgeon was not assisted by a qualified anesthesia provider during Patient J.W.’s surgery.”

The only disciplina­ry action on Muir’s license is from 2019, and also involves the death of a patient.

When the woman went to labor on Dec. 12, 2012, and was taken to Pembroke Pines’ Memorial Hospital West, the administra­tive complaint said, it took 92 minutes for Muir to arrive though she told nurses on three phone calls she was “en route,” on her way and driving to the hospital.

Meanwhile, the mother delivered a baby boy and suffered post-partum hemorrhagi­ng. She died three hours after Muir arrived and took over her care. For not informing Memorial West that she wasn’t “readily available” or not making arrangemen­ts for another doctor to handle the situation, the state Board of Medicine fined Muir and restricted her from child deliveries and surgical procedures for a time.

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