In 2013, Dr. Tiffany Ingram, an anesthesiologist in Virginia,
was caught on a patient’s phone recorder, which the man had set for pre-op
instructions as he underwent a colonoscopy.
Dr. Ingram had made several inappropriate comments about the patient during
the procedure, even making jokes about him and laughing. She was ordered to pay the anonymous patient
$500,000 in a malpractice suit - primarily because she was recorded saying that
she would make a diagnosis of hemorrhoids found, even though there wouldn’t be
any.
She lied about hemorrhoids.
How many years in prison should Dr. Dorigo, (et al.) get for lying about
cancer?
I just received in the mail from the Loyola Marymount
Department of Health and Human Services, a survey questionnaire for me to fill
out as a cancer patient. Those who receive
these surveys are listed on the National Registry as patients who have been diagnosed
with cancer, as required by law.
However, the survey was addressed to Janet Winston, and not to me as my
legal name (as defined by my driver's license, voter's registration and Medicare ID card). It is intended for the other
woman that this applies to, who had the cancer surgery at UCLA, and did have
cancer. I did not, and this is the absolute evidence that proves it.
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