A Grove City woman who went to Mount Carmel West hospital was the
last intensive-care patient to receive an excessive and potentially
fatal dose of pain medication from Dr. William Husel, and the case
triggered the hospital's investigation, attorneys said Wednesday.
Husel
apparently was escorted out of the hospital sometime after 82-year-old
Melissa Penix died shortly before 11 p.m. on Nov. 20. She had received a
2,000-microgram dose of the opioid fentanyl, said attorney Craig Tuttle
of the Columbus firm Leeseberg & Valentine.
The dose is the
highest reported by attorneys representing more than 15 families of
Mount Carmel Health System patients who died under Husel's care. The
highest previously reported dosage was 1,000 micrograms.
Tuttle called the dose given Penix "absurd and unfathomable."
"It was just stunning. ... And the family was appalled and shocked at learning the truth," he said.
Health care professionals have told The Dispatch that a 250-microgram dose would be enough to raise questions.
Husel
has been accused of ordering excessive doses of painkiller from 2015 to
2018 for 33 near-death patients at Mount Carmel West in Franklinton and
one such patient at Mount Carmel St. Ann's in Westerville. All the
patients died, and Mount Carmel has said the doses potentially caused
the deaths of 28 of them.
Attorneys said a wrongful-death lawsuit
probably will be filed on behalf of Penix's husband in Franklin County
Common Pleas Court on Thursday. A copy of the suit decries the health
system for failing to act on formal complaints filed on Oct. 25 and Nov.
19 about Husel's care, and it says that hospital representatives told
Penix's family that her death triggered their investigation.
Mount Carmel has said Husel was removed from patient care on Nov. 21,
and it has acknowledged that three patients died after the Oct. 25
complaint. A public apology was issued in January. All patient families
also have been notified about the dosing issues, the system has said.
"Our
family is immensely disappointed in the tragic choices of Dr. William
Husel, the nurses, pharmacists, and leadership of Mount Carmel Health
System," Penix's family said in a statement. "Melissa, affectionately
known as Mel or Meemaw, was a devoted Christian, a wife of more than 65
years, a mother to all who graced her home, a loving and laughing
grandmother and cookie-giving, color-right-along-with-you
great-grandmother."
The
Penix suit will name as defendants Mount Carmel, Husel, a pharmacist
believed to have approved the order, and a nurse believed to have
administered it. It also will list unnamed administrators and managers
who were aware of the Oct. 25 report and/or the Nov. 19 report.
Penix, the law firm said in a statement, had been taken to the
hospital with stomach pain on Nov. 15 and subsequently was diagnosed
with pneumonia. On Nov. 19, she was admitted to the ICU with increasing
difficulty breathing and was placed on a ventilator to allow her body to
rest and heal, the statement said.
Penix was able to smile, make
gestures and interact with family members, according to the firm. Then,
on the afternoon of Nov. 20, she complained of stomach pain. A few hours
later, Husel told her family that she had a severe stomach infection
and was brain-dead, and that her organs were failing, the firm said.
They were encouraged to remove care, which they did.
Penix, the firm said, died within five minutes of being administered the fentanyl.
Also
on Tuesday, attorney David Shroyer, who has filed three wrongful-death
lawsuits in Franklin County Common Pleas Court on behalf of patient
families, said he submitted a motion agreeing to postpone questioning
Husel under oath but asking a judge to allow the civil cases and
evidence-gathering to proceed.
The motion is in response to one filed Tuesday by Husel's attorney,
Gregory Foliano, who argued that the civil cases should be put on hold
until after the completion of a related criminal investigation and any
potential prosecution so that Husel does not have to respond to
questions that could be used as evidence in any criminal matter.
The
Ohio Department of Health said Mount Carmel submitted a correction plan
Wednesday for St. Ann's hospital in response to a warning from the
federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services that the hospital
could be terminated from the Medicare program over serious
pharmaceutical-service deficiencies. A plan for Mount Carmel West was
submitted Tuesday.
Full Article & Source:
Lawsuit: November death of Mount Carmel patient triggered investigation
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