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Board files medical malpractice complaint against another doctor from endoscopy

center

By ANNETTE WELLS

LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL

A third physician who practiced out of the Endoscopy Center of Southern Nevada

has been hit with a medical malpractice complaint by the Nevada Board of Medical

Examiners.

Dr. Clifford Carrol, a Las Vegas gastroenterologist, faces four allegations

relating to the care he provided to patients, one of whom has been identified as

the source — or " index " — patient whose disease officials say was transmitted to

seven others on Sept. 21, 2007.

The board filed the complaint on Nov. 24 and made it public Tuesday. Malpractice

complaints have already been filed against the clinic's majority owner, Dr.

Dipak Desai, and Dr. Eladio Carrera. Both have had their licenses suspended

pending an investigation.

" The allegation is that he (Carrol) was the physician treating the source

patient that led to other patients acquiring hepatitis C later that day, " said

Louis Ling, the medical board's executive director and special counsel. " This

was Dr. Carrol's first patient of the day and he (the patient) was a known

carrier of hepatitis C. "

Claims of malpractice against Carrol focused on treatment of not only that first

patient, who underwent a colonoscopy, but on a patient Carrol treated later in

the day.

" This patient wasn't discovered until much later and was not part of the

original group, " Ling said, referring to a joint investigation by local, federal

and state health officials that originally identified six people who had

contracted hepatitis C at the Shadow Lane facility. Desai and Carrera performed

procedures on those six.

The medical board's complaint also said Carrol failed to exercise proper skill

and diligence and that he brought the reputation of the medical profession into

disrepute.

It is believed that unsafe injection practices — the reuse of syringes in a

manner that contaminated multiple vials of anesthesia used for more than one

patient — by nurse anesthetists at the Endoscopy Center's Shadow Lane clinic led

to transmission of hepatitis C.

To date, the Southern Nevada Health District has definitively linked eight

hepatitis C transmissions to the Shadow Lane facility and one case to a sister

facility — the Desert Shadow Endoscopy Center on Burnham Avenue.

One person is believed to have contracted hepatitis C on July 25 at the Shadow

Lane facility, and the Burnham facility's case is believed to have occurred

during a 2006 procedure.

The wife of the hepatitis C patient who believes he is the Sept. 21, 2007 source

said she was pleased attention was finally being brought to Carrol. She said

Carrol had treated her husband for three years prior to him undergoing a

colonoscopy that day.

" It just blows my mind that this has happened. He (Carrol) knew my husband had

hepatitis C. ...You just can't trust him, " she said. " It really hurts our family

knowing what happened. "

The woman, who didn't want to her or her husband's name published out of fear

the public might try to harm them, said her husband received a letter from

health officials indicating he was the source of the Sept. 21 infections.

Carrol could not be reached for comment Tuesday.

Rexford, a 46-year-old pharmacist who says Carrol missed his colon cancer

in 2005 during a rushed colonoscopy, is also pleased that the board is taking

some action.

" It's deplorable that he's still allowed to work on people, " he said.

In March, nearly two weeks after the hepatitis C outbreak announcement, Rexford

settled a malpractice case with Carrol for $2 million, which under state law

requires a probe of the doctor by the board. Though the complaint filed by the

board against Carrol does not mention Rexford's case, he believes his experience

should be added to the complaint because it may expose another are of concern at

Desai clinics — whether cancers were missed in screenings.

" I just wish Dr. Carrol had been more diligent in his work, " Rexford said. " It

would have saved me and him a lot of grief. "

Carrol, who has been licensed in Nevada since April 1997, is one of more than a

dozen physicians who had practiced medicine under the Gastroenterology Center of

Nevada. The center was the umbrella company for several Desai-owned endoscopy

centers throughout Las Vegas, all of which have closed.

Since the outbreak was discovered, health officials have urged more than 53,000

former patients of the Shadow Lane and Burnham Avenue facilities to get tested

for hepatitis B and C, and HIV.

Health officials say that 105 hepatitis cases are " possibly associated " with

those facilities and another 35 have been classified as " indeterminate, " meaning

those patients had other risk factors for the disease; 136 were found to have

contracted hepatitis C elsewhere.

The outbreak is the largest ever in Nevada and led to the nation's largest

patient notification. Hundreds of former patients have filed civil lawsuits

against the clinics and physicians.

Through temporary restraining orders in District Court, the medical board

earlier this year obtained suspensions on Desai's and Carrera's medical

licenses. Hearings on their cases are scheduled for early next year.

Ling said it hasn't been determined whether the medical board will pursue a

similar temporary restraining order against Carrol.

A medical board hearing for Carrol is scheduled for June 22.

Ling said if the doctors are found to have committed malpractice they face

disciplinary actions that range from license revocation or suspensions to

probation for a period of time. They also face a fine of up to $5,000 plus any

attorneys' and investigation fees and costs.

" It's very well deserving, " Billie-Marie on, an attorney who represents

several endoscopy patients, said about the medical board's complaint against

Carrol. " He holds a medical license and he knows he has to take precaution if he

is treating a patient with hepatitis C or some other disease that can be spread

to another patient. I think a lot more doctors should be held accountable. "

Review-Journal writer Harasim contributed to this report.

Contact reporter Annette Wells at awells@... or 702-383-0283.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

http://www.lvrj.com/news/breaking_news/35391204.html

Board files medical malpractice complaint against another doctor from endoscopy

center

By ANNETTE WELLS

LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL

A third physician who practiced out of the Endoscopy Center of Southern Nevada

has been hit with a medical malpractice complaint by the Nevada Board of Medical

Examiners.

Dr. Clifford Carrol, a Las Vegas gastroenterologist, faces four allegations

relating to the care he provided to patients, one of whom has been identified as

the source — or " index " — patient whose disease officials say was transmitted to

seven others on Sept. 21, 2007.

The board filed the complaint on Nov. 24 and made it public Tuesday. Malpractice

complaints have already been filed against the clinic's majority owner, Dr.

Dipak Desai, and Dr. Eladio Carrera. Both have had their licenses suspended

pending an investigation.

" The allegation is that he (Carrol) was the physician treating the source

patient that led to other patients acquiring hepatitis C later that day, " said

Louis Ling, the medical board's executive director and special counsel. " This

was Dr. Carrol's first patient of the day and he (the patient) was a known

carrier of hepatitis C. "

Claims of malpractice against Carrol focused on treatment of not only that first

patient, who underwent a colonoscopy, but on a patient Carrol treated later in

the day.

" This patient wasn't discovered until much later and was not part of the

original group, " Ling said, referring to a joint investigation by local, federal

and state health officials that originally identified six people who had

contracted hepatitis C at the Shadow Lane facility. Desai and Carrera performed

procedures on those six.

The medical board's complaint also said Carrol failed to exercise proper skill

and diligence and that he brought the reputation of the medical profession into

disrepute.

It is believed that unsafe injection practices — the reuse of syringes in a

manner that contaminated multiple vials of anesthesia used for more than one

patient — by nurse anesthetists at the Endoscopy Center's Shadow Lane clinic led

to transmission of hepatitis C.

To date, the Southern Nevada Health District has definitively linked eight

hepatitis C transmissions to the Shadow Lane facility and one case to a sister

facility — the Desert Shadow Endoscopy Center on Burnham Avenue.

One person is believed to have contracted hepatitis C on July 25 at the Shadow

Lane facility, and the Burnham facility's case is believed to have occurred

during a 2006 procedure.

The wife of the hepatitis C patient who believes he is the Sept. 21, 2007 source

said she was pleased attention was finally being brought to Carrol. She said

Carrol had treated her husband for three years prior to him undergoing a

colonoscopy that day.

" It just blows my mind that this has happened. He (Carrol) knew my husband had

hepatitis C. ...You just can't trust him, " she said. " It really hurts our family

knowing what happened. "

The woman, who didn't want to her or her husband's name published out of fear

the public might try to harm them, said her husband received a letter from

health officials indicating he was the source of the Sept. 21 infections.

Carrol could not be reached for comment Tuesday.

Rexford, a 46-year-old pharmacist who says Carrol missed his colon cancer

in 2005 during a rushed colonoscopy, is also pleased that the board is taking

some action.

" It's deplorable that he's still allowed to work on people, " he said.

In March, nearly two weeks after the hepatitis C outbreak announcement, Rexford

settled a malpractice case with Carrol for $2 million, which under state law

requires a probe of the doctor by the board. Though the complaint filed by the

board against Carrol does not mention Rexford's case, he believes his experience

should be added to the complaint because it may expose another are of concern at

Desai clinics — whether cancers were missed in screenings.

" I just wish Dr. Carrol had been more diligent in his work, " Rexford said. " It

would have saved me and him a lot of grief. "

Carrol, who has been licensed in Nevada since April 1997, is one of more than a

dozen physicians who had practiced medicine under the Gastroenterology Center of

Nevada. The center was the umbrella company for several Desai-owned endoscopy

centers throughout Las Vegas, all of which have closed.

Since the outbreak was discovered, health officials have urged more than 53,000

former patients of the Shadow Lane and Burnham Avenue facilities to get tested

for hepatitis B and C, and HIV.

Health officials say that 105 hepatitis cases are " possibly associated " with

those facilities and another 35 have been classified as " indeterminate, " meaning

those patients had other risk factors for the disease; 136 were found to have

contracted hepatitis C elsewhere.

The outbreak is the largest ever in Nevada and led to the nation's largest

patient notification. Hundreds of former patients have filed civil lawsuits

against the clinics and physicians.

Through temporary restraining orders in District Court, the medical board

earlier this year obtained suspensions on Desai's and Carrera's medical

licenses. Hearings on their cases are scheduled for early next year.

Ling said it hasn't been determined whether the medical board will pursue a

similar temporary restraining order against Carrol.

A medical board hearing for Carrol is scheduled for June 22.

Ling said if the doctors are found to have committed malpractice they face

disciplinary actions that range from license revocation or suspensions to

probation for a period of time. They also face a fine of up to $5,000 plus any

attorneys' and investigation fees and costs.

" It's very well deserving, " Billie-Marie on, an attorney who represents

several endoscopy patients, said about the medical board's complaint against

Carrol. " He holds a medical license and he knows he has to take precaution if he

is treating a patient with hepatitis C or some other disease that can be spread

to another patient. I think a lot more doctors should be held accountable. "

Review-Journal writer Harasim contributed to this report.

Contact reporter Annette Wells at awells@... or 702-383-0283.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

http://www.lvrj.com/news/breaking_news/35391204.html

Board files medical malpractice complaint against another doctor from endoscopy

center

By ANNETTE WELLS

LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL

A third physician who practiced out of the Endoscopy Center of Southern Nevada

has been hit with a medical malpractice complaint by the Nevada Board of Medical

Examiners.

Dr. Clifford Carrol, a Las Vegas gastroenterologist, faces four allegations

relating to the care he provided to patients, one of whom has been identified as

the source — or " index " — patient whose disease officials say was transmitted to

seven others on Sept. 21, 2007.

The board filed the complaint on Nov. 24 and made it public Tuesday. Malpractice

complaints have already been filed against the clinic's majority owner, Dr.

Dipak Desai, and Dr. Eladio Carrera. Both have had their licenses suspended

pending an investigation.

" The allegation is that he (Carrol) was the physician treating the source

patient that led to other patients acquiring hepatitis C later that day, " said

Louis Ling, the medical board's executive director and special counsel. " This

was Dr. Carrol's first patient of the day and he (the patient) was a known

carrier of hepatitis C. "

Claims of malpractice against Carrol focused on treatment of not only that first

patient, who underwent a colonoscopy, but on a patient Carrol treated later in

the day.

" This patient wasn't discovered until much later and was not part of the

original group, " Ling said, referring to a joint investigation by local, federal

and state health officials that originally identified six people who had

contracted hepatitis C at the Shadow Lane facility. Desai and Carrera performed

procedures on those six.

The medical board's complaint also said Carrol failed to exercise proper skill

and diligence and that he brought the reputation of the medical profession into

disrepute.

It is believed that unsafe injection practices — the reuse of syringes in a

manner that contaminated multiple vials of anesthesia used for more than one

patient — by nurse anesthetists at the Endoscopy Center's Shadow Lane clinic led

to transmission of hepatitis C.

To date, the Southern Nevada Health District has definitively linked eight

hepatitis C transmissions to the Shadow Lane facility and one case to a sister

facility — the Desert Shadow Endoscopy Center on Burnham Avenue.

One person is believed to have contracted hepatitis C on July 25 at the Shadow

Lane facility, and the Burnham facility's case is believed to have occurred

during a 2006 procedure.

The wife of the hepatitis C patient who believes he is the Sept. 21, 2007 source

said she was pleased attention was finally being brought to Carrol. She said

Carrol had treated her husband for three years prior to him undergoing a

colonoscopy that day.

" It just blows my mind that this has happened. He (Carrol) knew my husband had

hepatitis C. ...You just can't trust him, " she said. " It really hurts our family

knowing what happened. "

The woman, who didn't want to her or her husband's name published out of fear

the public might try to harm them, said her husband received a letter from

health officials indicating he was the source of the Sept. 21 infections.

Carrol could not be reached for comment Tuesday.

Rexford, a 46-year-old pharmacist who says Carrol missed his colon cancer

in 2005 during a rushed colonoscopy, is also pleased that the board is taking

some action.

" It's deplorable that he's still allowed to work on people, " he said.

In March, nearly two weeks after the hepatitis C outbreak announcement, Rexford

settled a malpractice case with Carrol for $2 million, which under state law

requires a probe of the doctor by the board. Though the complaint filed by the

board against Carrol does not mention Rexford's case, he believes his experience

should be added to the complaint because it may expose another are of concern at

Desai clinics — whether cancers were missed in screenings.

" I just wish Dr. Carrol had been more diligent in his work, " Rexford said. " It

would have saved me and him a lot of grief. "

Carrol, who has been licensed in Nevada since April 1997, is one of more than a

dozen physicians who had practiced medicine under the Gastroenterology Center of

Nevada. The center was the umbrella company for several Desai-owned endoscopy

centers throughout Las Vegas, all of which have closed.

Since the outbreak was discovered, health officials have urged more than 53,000

former patients of the Shadow Lane and Burnham Avenue facilities to get tested

for hepatitis B and C, and HIV.

Health officials say that 105 hepatitis cases are " possibly associated " with

those facilities and another 35 have been classified as " indeterminate, " meaning

those patients had other risk factors for the disease; 136 were found to have

contracted hepatitis C elsewhere.

The outbreak is the largest ever in Nevada and led to the nation's largest

patient notification. Hundreds of former patients have filed civil lawsuits

against the clinics and physicians.

Through temporary restraining orders in District Court, the medical board

earlier this year obtained suspensions on Desai's and Carrera's medical

licenses. Hearings on their cases are scheduled for early next year.

Ling said it hasn't been determined whether the medical board will pursue a

similar temporary restraining order against Carrol.

A medical board hearing for Carrol is scheduled for June 22.

Ling said if the doctors are found to have committed malpractice they face

disciplinary actions that range from license revocation or suspensions to

probation for a period of time. They also face a fine of up to $5,000 plus any

attorneys' and investigation fees and costs.

" It's very well deserving, " Billie-Marie on, an attorney who represents

several endoscopy patients, said about the medical board's complaint against

Carrol. " He holds a medical license and he knows he has to take precaution if he

is treating a patient with hepatitis C or some other disease that can be spread

to another patient. I think a lot more doctors should be held accountable. "

Review-Journal writer Harasim contributed to this report.

Contact reporter Annette Wells at awells@... or 702-383-0283.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

http://www.lvrj.com/news/breaking_news/35391204.html

Board files medical malpractice complaint against another doctor from endoscopy

center

By ANNETTE WELLS

LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL

A third physician who practiced out of the Endoscopy Center of Southern Nevada

has been hit with a medical malpractice complaint by the Nevada Board of Medical

Examiners.

Dr. Clifford Carrol, a Las Vegas gastroenterologist, faces four allegations

relating to the care he provided to patients, one of whom has been identified as

the source — or " index " — patient whose disease officials say was transmitted to

seven others on Sept. 21, 2007.

The board filed the complaint on Nov. 24 and made it public Tuesday. Malpractice

complaints have already been filed against the clinic's majority owner, Dr.

Dipak Desai, and Dr. Eladio Carrera. Both have had their licenses suspended

pending an investigation.

" The allegation is that he (Carrol) was the physician treating the source

patient that led to other patients acquiring hepatitis C later that day, " said

Louis Ling, the medical board's executive director and special counsel. " This

was Dr. Carrol's first patient of the day and he (the patient) was a known

carrier of hepatitis C. "

Claims of malpractice against Carrol focused on treatment of not only that first

patient, who underwent a colonoscopy, but on a patient Carrol treated later in

the day.

" This patient wasn't discovered until much later and was not part of the

original group, " Ling said, referring to a joint investigation by local, federal

and state health officials that originally identified six people who had

contracted hepatitis C at the Shadow Lane facility. Desai and Carrera performed

procedures on those six.

The medical board's complaint also said Carrol failed to exercise proper skill

and diligence and that he brought the reputation of the medical profession into

disrepute.

It is believed that unsafe injection practices — the reuse of syringes in a

manner that contaminated multiple vials of anesthesia used for more than one

patient — by nurse anesthetists at the Endoscopy Center's Shadow Lane clinic led

to transmission of hepatitis C.

To date, the Southern Nevada Health District has definitively linked eight

hepatitis C transmissions to the Shadow Lane facility and one case to a sister

facility — the Desert Shadow Endoscopy Center on Burnham Avenue.

One person is believed to have contracted hepatitis C on July 25 at the Shadow

Lane facility, and the Burnham facility's case is believed to have occurred

during a 2006 procedure.

The wife of the hepatitis C patient who believes he is the Sept. 21, 2007 source

said she was pleased attention was finally being brought to Carrol. She said

Carrol had treated her husband for three years prior to him undergoing a

colonoscopy that day.

" It just blows my mind that this has happened. He (Carrol) knew my husband had

hepatitis C. ...You just can't trust him, " she said. " It really hurts our family

knowing what happened. "

The woman, who didn't want to her or her husband's name published out of fear

the public might try to harm them, said her husband received a letter from

health officials indicating he was the source of the Sept. 21 infections.

Carrol could not be reached for comment Tuesday.

Rexford, a 46-year-old pharmacist who says Carrol missed his colon cancer

in 2005 during a rushed colonoscopy, is also pleased that the board is taking

some action.

" It's deplorable that he's still allowed to work on people, " he said.

In March, nearly two weeks after the hepatitis C outbreak announcement, Rexford

settled a malpractice case with Carrol for $2 million, which under state law

requires a probe of the doctor by the board. Though the complaint filed by the

board against Carrol does not mention Rexford's case, he believes his experience

should be added to the complaint because it may expose another are of concern at

Desai clinics — whether cancers were missed in screenings.

" I just wish Dr. Carrol had been more diligent in his work, " Rexford said. " It

would have saved me and him a lot of grief. "

Carrol, who has been licensed in Nevada since April 1997, is one of more than a

dozen physicians who had practiced medicine under the Gastroenterology Center of

Nevada. The center was the umbrella company for several Desai-owned endoscopy

centers throughout Las Vegas, all of which have closed.

Since the outbreak was discovered, health officials have urged more than 53,000

former patients of the Shadow Lane and Burnham Avenue facilities to get tested

for hepatitis B and C, and HIV.

Health officials say that 105 hepatitis cases are " possibly associated " with

those facilities and another 35 have been classified as " indeterminate, " meaning

those patients had other risk factors for the disease; 136 were found to have

contracted hepatitis C elsewhere.

The outbreak is the largest ever in Nevada and led to the nation's largest

patient notification. Hundreds of former patients have filed civil lawsuits

against the clinics and physicians.

Through temporary restraining orders in District Court, the medical board

earlier this year obtained suspensions on Desai's and Carrera's medical

licenses. Hearings on their cases are scheduled for early next year.

Ling said it hasn't been determined whether the medical board will pursue a

similar temporary restraining order against Carrol.

A medical board hearing for Carrol is scheduled for June 22.

Ling said if the doctors are found to have committed malpractice they face

disciplinary actions that range from license revocation or suspensions to

probation for a period of time. They also face a fine of up to $5,000 plus any

attorneys' and investigation fees and costs.

" It's very well deserving, " Billie-Marie on, an attorney who represents

several endoscopy patients, said about the medical board's complaint against

Carrol. " He holds a medical license and he knows he has to take precaution if he

is treating a patient with hepatitis C or some other disease that can be spread

to another patient. I think a lot more doctors should be held accountable. "

Review-Journal writer Harasim contributed to this report.

Contact reporter Annette Wells at awells@... or 702-383-0283.

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