a kidney to his sick, older sister at the University of Toledo Medical Centre in Ohio.
“Human error rendered the kidney unusable,” University of Toledo Medical Centre spokesman Toby Klinger said on Saturday, but he declined to give more details, citing the hospital’s investigation into what happened and its respect for the privacy of the patients involved.
But one of the doctors involved told Dr David Grossman, a Toledo-Lucas County health commissioner, that a nurse disposed of the kidney improperly.
Two nurses have been placed on paid administrative leave while the hospital reviews what happened, Klinger said.
Grossman told the Blade newspaper in Toledo that both the donor and the intended recipient have been released from the hospital. The hospital has voluntarily suspended the live kidney donor program while they review what happened and determine how to prevent errors in the future, according to Dr Jeffrey Gold, the medical centre’s chancellor and vice president for biosciences and health affairs.
Humans do not need two kidneys to live; the body can support life with only one. If one functional kidney is missing from birth, the other kidney can grow to reach a size similar to the combined weight of two kidneys
He said that doctors tried to save the kidney, but “the physician in consultation with the family decided to not take the risk knowing there was a good chance for another highly compatible donor.”
Grossman’s office is not involved in the investigation or connected to the medical centre, Klinger said. Grossman could not be reached for comment on Saturday.
The Toledo-Lucas County Health Department was closed, and Grossman’s home telephone number was not available.
“This is unfortunately what medicine is like — it is not perfect”
This kind of accident is unheard of in organ transplant centres and it was a good decision not to use the kidney, Dr William Harmon, director of kidney transplantation at Boston Children’s Hospital, told the Blade.
“This is unfortunately what medicine is like — it is not perfect, and there have been far worse cases where the donor has died,” Harmon said.
Officials at the United Network for Organ Sharing, an agency that oversees the nation’s transplant programs, could not be reached for comment on Saturday.
There were 16 816-kidney transplants nationwide last year from live donors and from those who consented to organ donation through state registries should they die from an illness or accident, the newspaper reported.
Last year, 136 people in Ohio died waiting for a kidney, and 4 711 people died nationally waiting for a kidney, the newspaper reported. — Daily Mail
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