Kaiser Permanente Fresno STATEMENT OF DEFICIENCIES AND PLAN OF CORRECTION
Patient
Dumping Stories (19)
Kaiser
Transplant
Issues (27)
Kaiser
Children Stories (18)
Medical
Board and DMHC and other State Regulatory Agency Stories
Hospital/Medication
Excuse of Error
Corporate
Cost Saving which resulted
in patient death or injury stories
Hospitalization
Cutting Stories
Medical
Record Stories
Patient
Disease related to unclean practices at hospitals or unsterilized
equipment
Sarah
Nome Stories -
Elderly patient evicted
from hospital stories
Kaiser
employee molester
stories
Arbitration
Stories (6)
Kaiser
Lost Bodies Stories
Kaiser
and DHS/HHS/CMS Stories (9)
Kaiser
Profits and Price Gouging Stories
Kaiser employee perjury
stories
Patients
and employees that got
a tad bit upset with
Kaiser Stories (4)
Kaiser
Income Tax Stories
Tales
of
Corruption
KaiserPharmacist/Pharmaceutical
Stories
Physician
Financial Incentive Stories
Patient
Opinion Polls
Stories
Sham
Peer
Review Stories
Kaiser
Ad Campaign
Stories
Kaiser
trying to convince
the country that they
must provide national health care stories
Kaiser
Casualty
of The Day from CNA
Patient
Confidentiality and IT stories at the National Page
Kaiser
Computers
Striking
Employees
Equipment
malfunctions that harmed patients
All
Others |
KAISER INCOME
TAX STORIES
Nonprofits'
tax breaks
questioned - State probes Kaiser, Sutter The state is investigating 15
nonprofit healthcare organizations for
excess profits, as legislators question whether they deserve
to keep the
tax-exempt status that saves them millions of dollars a year.
The list includes
Kaiser Foundation Hospitals, which potentially means
closer scrutiny of the healthcare giant's 30 California
hospitals, even
though a legislative hearing on the matter in Oakland last week put the
heat on Sacramento-based Sutter Health instead.
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/10527697/ mirrored at:
http://californianews.kaiserpapers.info/stateprobe.html
HOSPITAL
ERROR STORIES Sham
Peer
Review Stories
Kaiser
Santa Clara Death
of infant from hospital error probed
Victoria
Colliver, Chronicle Staff Writer
Saturday, March 10, 2007
State
and federal authorities are investigating a medication error at Kaiser
Permanente's Santa Clara hospital that led
to the death of an infant, Kaiser officials confirmed Friday. http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/03/10/BAGILOJ3D11.DTL
mirrored for
historical
purposes at: http://www.kaiserpapers.info/news/ca/march10.html
From: http://www.kcra.com/news/9765692/detail.html
Legislation
Targets Hospital Errors
Goal
Is To Increase Public Awareness Of Medical Mistakes
POSTED:
4:33
pm PDT August 30, 2006 SACRAMENTO, Calif. -- State
lawmakers are
working on legislation to improve hospital safety in response
to recent
patient deaths in Northern California. State
Sen. Elaine Alquist, D-San Jose, said she wants to pull back
what she
sees as a veil of secrecy over hospital errors.
mirrored for historical purposes at: http://www.kaiserpapers.info/news/ca/aretheyreallyerrors.html
Former
Kaiser Doctor Talks To ABC7 Claims Many
Medical Mistakes
By Debora
Villalon From: http://abclocal.go.com/kgo/story?section=local&id=3626588 Nov. 11 -
KGO - A doctor who once worked at Kaiser Permanente in South
San Francisco claims preventable medical mistakes
happened too often at
that hospital. He says cost-cutting moves put patients'
lives in
danger,
and when he tried to warn Kaiser, he was fired. mirrored for
public information at: http://www.kaiserpapers.info/news/ca/abc7.html
Department
of Health Services
Sanction Against Kaiser Permanente Santa
Clara
http://www.kaiserpapers.info/pdfs/kaiserDHSReport.pdf
21 pages
Nov
10, 2005 5:37 pm US/Pacific Kaiser
Inspection Records Show Signs Of Danger Tony
Russomanno Reporting from:
http://cbs5.com/health/local_story_314204226.html
mirrored at: http://www.kaiserpapers.info/news/ca/dangerouskaiser.html
Thu, Nov.
10, 2005
Hospitals
blamed in more
deaths By David L.
Beck Mercury News Kaiser
Permanente
officials have confirmed the deaths of two more
patients
caused by staff errors at its South Bay hospitals. The
deaths bring to
at least four the number of fatal incidents at Kaiser
facilities during
the past 13 months.
http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/13129841.htm mirrored at: http://www.kaiserpapers.info/news/ca/avoidkaiser.html
Wed,
Nov. 09, 2005 Kaiser
patient dies after getting wrong medication Associated
Press SAN
JOSE, Calif. -
A Kaiser Permanente patient
died after receiving
the wrong medication at one of the company's hospitals,
the second
patient
recently reported to have died under similar circumstances at the
facility,
state health regulators said.
from:http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/breaking_news/13124008.htm
mirrored at: http://www.kaiserpapers.info/news/ca/kpabovethelaw.html
Nov.
08, 2005
Kaiser
confirms third
patient death
By Julie
Sevrens Lyons -
Mercury News
Kaiser Permanente
officials on Tuesday confirmed a third case in which
a patient at a South Bay hospital died after a medication
error. http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/13117889.htm text
mirrored at:
http://www.kaiserpapers.info/news/ca/thethirdone.html
November
4, 2005 ‘Psyche’
patient escapes
By Bill
Silverfarb A Kaiser
Medical Center
patient is in custody following a bizarre
incident
that left a security guard hospitalized and a pregnant woman
traumatized.
.....“If he is mentally ill I’m more angry at the
people that allowed it
to happen,” Singh said.
“If he was on a suicide
watch they weren’t doing
a very good job of watching him.” http://www.smdailyjournal.com/article_preview.php?id=49612 text
mirrored at:
http://www.kaiserpapers.info/news/ca/poorsecurity.html
Please
notice the years of repeat
patterns of inappropriate behavior.
Nov.
04, 2005
In July, a
12-year-old
girl hospitalized at Kaiser Permanente Medical
Center-Santa Clara was mistakenly given a double dose of
epinephrine,
which
speeds up the heart rate, state records show. Josephine
Frances Hart, a San
Jose resident who
loved to play with marbles,
died July 26, the same day of the error.
Her official cause of death is
still being investigated by the county coroner's office,
but state
health
investigators determined that a nurse failed to check the
medication
label. See: http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/living/health/13079133.htm text
mirrored at:
http://www.kaiserpapers.info/news/ca/josephinehart.html
Wed,
Nov. 02, 2005
Medical
mistake may have
killed man By Julie Sevrens Lyons Mercury
News A
21-year-old San Jose man underwent chemotherapy in August hoping
it might cure his lymphoma. Instead, it may have killed him
-- as human
error at Kaiser Permanente's Santa Teresa Medical Center led
to the man
being injected with the wrong medication, state investigators have
found. Originally
Posted at: http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/living/health/13058936.htm and mirrored
at: http://www.kaiserpapers.info/news/ca/chemogoof.html
Widow
sues Kaiser in delivery
room tragedy - A widowed mother of two
sued the Kaiser hospital system alleging her husband fainted
while
helping
her give birth and fatally struck his head when he
fell......The first
attempt to inject her failed. During the second, Passalaqua saw the
needle
enter his wife's spine, said "here we go again," released his
wife,
lost
consciousness and fell backwards, hitting his head on an
aluminum cap
molding
at the base of a wall, according to the suit.
Passalaqua
suffered a fractured skull and bleeding
on the brain that
worsened and he died two days later, the suit said. See story
at: http://www.kaiserpapers.info/news/ca/bumphead.html
3.3
million dollar award against Kaiser for performing heart surgery
on the
wrong patient! A Berkeley
man who was left nearly blind following heart bypass surgery
he did not need has been awarded $3.3 million in one of the
largest
malpractice
decisions against Kaiser Permanente in recent years. http://www.kaiserpapers.info/news/ca/azari.html
Oceanside
man died after appendectomy in 2003 -
A 54-year-old Oceanside
man bled to death after a routine appendectomy at Kaiser
Permanente Hospital
in San Diego because his doctor made a mistake, according to
a Medical Board of California accusation filed against the doctor.
http://www.kaiserpapers.info/news/ca/paopao.html
Mother
blames Kaiser for son's death
When
Linette McCan's 7-year-old son Gregory came to her complaining
of a stomachache last Saturday, she never dreamed
her child would be
dead
the next morning. She
says doctors in the
emergency room at Kaiser Permanente's Walnut
Creek hospital ignored Gregory as he suffered from
what turned out to
be
meningococcal sepsis, an infection that led to his
death Sunday
morning. http://californianews.kaiserpapers.info/gregorymccan.html
Demonstrations
against Kaiser Baldwin Park over death of child - The
Baby Ryan Huff
Story http://www.kaiserpapers.info/news/ca/ryanhuff.html
People
are dying in California's hospitals because of medical errors
http://eastbay.bcentral.com/eastbay/stories/2001/07/23/focus3.html?t=printable
Kaiser
Employee Perjury Stories
SAN
FRANCISCO
Surgeon indicted on
perjury charge
He's accused of offering false alibi at
gunman's trial Demian Bulwa, Chronicle
Staff Writer Friday,
October 13, 2006
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2006/10/13/BAGVULOS931.DTL
A
San Francisco
surgeon was indicted Thursday on charges that he committed perjury
during a federal trial in 2002 in an attempt to win an
acquittal for a
man he had sponsored in a drug rehabilitation program.
Dr.
Bruce
Barker, a
50-year-old
physician for Kaiser Permanente, was the key witness in the trial
of
Marvin Washington, who was accused of illegally possessing a gun
outside the Holly Courts public housing project, where he
lived, in San
Francisco.... follow above link for complete story.
Dr. Barker was found guilty of
perjury and
on November 2, 2007 the San Francisco Chronicle Reported: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/11/02/BASQT4UO3.DTL
Doctor
admits to perjury in trial of man he sponsored in drug rehab
Heather Knight,
Chronicle Staff Writer
Friday, November 2, 2007
............Prosecutors said Barker's
account was impossible because the doctor had been performing
surgery at the time - 4 miles away at the Kaiser
Permanente Medical Center on
Geary Boulevard. Hospital records showed he'd been
working in the
Post-Anesthesia Care Unit until 5:35 p.m. that day.
Washington's trial ended
when he pleaded guilty to being a
felon in
possession of a firearm and carrying a gun with an
altered serial
number. A judge sentenced Washington to more than eight years in
prison.
The FBI began an
investigation into Barker's testimony. A
federal
grand jury indicted him last year on three counts of
perjury and one
count of making a false statement to law enforcement.
Barker pleaded guilty to
one count of perjury on Wednesday,
admitting he knowingly and intentionally provided
false testimony in
Washington's trial.
The sentencing of Barker is
scheduled for 11 a.m. Feb. 8 He
faces a
maximum of five years in prison and a $250,000 fine.
Barker is not in
custody pending sentencing.
Kaiser spokeswoman Meg
Walker said, "Dr. Barker does practice
here
at Kaiser Permanente in San Francisco, and we are
reviewing this latest
development." Read
the rest of the story at: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/11/02/BASQT4UO3.DTL
MEDICAL
BOARD, DMHC and other State Regulatory Agency STORIES
State
regulators widen probe into Kaiser's ills
San Francisco Business Times - November 10, 2006
by Chris Rauber
http://www.bizjournals.com/sanfrancisco/stories/2006/11/13/story6.html?b=1163394000%5E1374648
State health regulators have widened a probe of Kaiser Permanente's
process
for handling complaints beyond its ill-fated kidney transplant unit and
into
other operations of the health-care giant. http://www.latimes.com/news/local/valley/la-fi-kaiser22nov22,1,4539465.story?coll=la-editions-valley
State Faults Kaiser Doctors
Revisiting the case of
a woman whose cancer was misdiagnosed, medical
regulators decide
to censure five more physicians. By Debora Vrana - Times Staff
Writer - November 22, 2005
The
Medical
Board of California, reversing an
earlier position, has
decided to publicly
censure all six Kaiser Permanente doctors involved
in the death of a Woodland Hills woman whose case
has sparked a debate
about state oversight of California's largest HMO.
Mirrored at: http://www.kaiserpapers.info/kaiserstillwontobeythelaw.html
October
31, 2005 Los Angeles
Attorney - B. Casey Yim, of the law firm Murchison and
Cumming accuses
Los Angeles Times reporter of misquoting. Was
the
intent of Mr.Yim's writing to cast a shadow on the
veracity of the
entire
article? See: http://www.kaiserpapers.info/yim.html in the
October 23, 2005 - How Many Doctors Should Be Blamed? Originally
from: http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-newkaiser23oct23,0,1538660,print.story?coll=la-home-business mirrored at
for public information historical purposes: http://www.kaiserpapers.info/hillarieandrobyn.html Related
story at: http://www.simivalleyacorn.com/news/2005/1028/Community/031.html
and http://www.kaiserpapers.info/robynl.html
Three
Kaiser Patient Victims Stories aired by station KEYT Santa Barbara http://www.kaiserpapers.info/video/Kaiser
Permanente victims.wmv
If using
Firefox please right
click and "Open Link In New Window" From The Simi Valley Acorn http://www.simivalleyacorn.com/news/2005/1028/Community/031.html and http://www.kaiserpapers.info/acorn.html October 28,
2005 - Simi Valley woman wants daughter’s doctors
publicly
named for misdiagnoses
By Michelle
Knight knight@theacorn.com
October
23, 2005 - How Many
Doctors Should Be Blamed? Originally
from: http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-newkaiser23oct23,0,1538660,print.story?coll=la-home-business mirrored at
for public information historical purposes: http://www.kaiserpapers.info/hillarieandrobyn.html A mother
whose daughter died after Kaiser physicians missed her cancer
is
fighting to change a law that let the HMO report only one of the
practitioners
to the state.
By Debora
Vrana Times Staff
Writer
Death
sparks Simi mother's
mission
By
Adam Foxman, afoxman@VenturaCountyStar.com Following
her daughter's death from cancer earlier this year, a Simi
Valley woman
has launched a campaign seeking more accountability for
healthcare
providers. Hillarie
Levy, whose
daughter Robyn Libitsky http://www.kaiserpapers.info/robyn.html
died
in February at age 29, has contacted state legislators in hopes of
interesting
them
in her cause. Libitsky
died after a five-year
battle with Ewings
sarcoma, a rare form
of pediatric bone
cancer. Levy said a misdiagnosis of her daughter's
tumor
as psychosomatically induced
back pain and the later denial of certain
treatments increased her daughter's suffering and
led to her death. April 07, 2004 - LOS ANGELES -
Kaiser Baldwin Park
Judge suspends license of
ex-Santa Teresita nurse
Wednesday, April 07, 2004 - LOS
ANGELES -- A judge Tuesday suspended
the license of a former Santa Teresita Hospital nurse
accused by the
state
attorney general's office of negligence that resulted in two
babies
being
born with severe brain damage.
Evidence presented in the
hearing showed that nurse Vynola E. Gadsby
demonstrated a serious disregard'' for state, California
board of
registered
nursing and hospital regulations on at least two occasions,
said
Administrative
Law Judge H. Stuart Waxman.
To adequately protect the
public, Waxman said Gadsby's license must
be suspended on an interim basis, while the nursing board
proceeds with
legal proceedings to try and revoke it. Gadsby is currently
on paid
administrative
leave from her position at Kaiser Permanente Baldwin Park Medical
Center,
according to court documents.
http://californianews.kaiserpapers.info/licensegone.html
Oceanside
man died after appendectomy in 2003 -
A 54-year-old
Oceanside
man bled to death after a routine appendectomy at Kaiser Permanente
Hospital
in San Diego because his doctor made a mistake, according to a Medical
Board of California accusation filed against the doctor.
Kaiser
says it
will finally pay fine of $1,000,000.00 levied by Department of Managed
Health Care in 2000./Nov. 2002 http://fines.kaiserpapers.info/kaiser1milliondollarfine.html
CORPORATE
COST SAVING WHICH RESULTED IN PATIENT
DEATH OR INJURY STORIES
$903,000
awarded to councilman's widow By
Cheryl Clark
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER August
31, 2007 SAN DIEGO
–
The late San Diego Councilman Charles Lewis was never told by his
longtime Kaiser physician Willie Thigpen that he had a
serious liver
disease and that drinking alcohol would hasten his death, an
arbitration judge has ruled.
June 26,
2005-
TRAGEDY AND TRAVESTY AT KAISER HOSPITAL - A letter
from
Dr. Nayvin Gordon regarding the substandard care his daughter, a twenty
year old
San Francisco State University student received at
Kaiser.
Were it not for the Kaiser
diluted, overly managed, corporate cost
cutting
features of standard, accepted by the
entire world life
saving procedures
this young lady may well have not suffered permanent
brain
damage.
Kaiser really botched this case but instead of owning up to it pulled
strings
all over the State of California with every government agency in
existence
to not be held accountable.
Kaiser
Cited By State for Poor Care Criticism in deaths of 2 emergency patients
Kaiser
Permanente's Walnut Creek Hospital has been cited for deficient care of
a 7-year-old San Ramon boy and a psychiatric patient, both
of whom died
after going to its emergency room and being transferred to
other
hospitals. http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/1998/09/04/MN52892.DTL&type=printable
Kaiser
Settles Suit Alleging Denial of Care - Debora Vrana Kaiser
Permanente has settled for an undisclosed amount a lawsuit filed
by Chant Yedalian,
a La Crescenta man who became a lawyer to launch a
legal
crusade against the HMO to
avenge what he alleged was the wrongful
death
of his mother.
Dr.
Robert Pearl, chief executive of Kaiser, said at a private meeting that
"we
chose not to provide our patients with what they desired," The
paper's
staff reviewed
Kaiser documents, including
e-mails and notes of private meetings, and found Kaiser
encouraged its
doctors in Northern California to make themselves as unavailable as
possible
to their patients in an effort to lower patient demand and costs.
Ebony Howard
was
denied a needed operation at the Kaiser operating
room door.
World Class
surgeons
came forward and
helped
this young athlete receive outside of Kaiser
needed medical
care. Story
by
Ramona
Shelburne http://www.kaiserpapers.info/news/ca/ebony.html
Man denied
medical
care, complaint alleges http://www.kaiserpapers.info/banda.html
Kaiser
rejects
costly treatment for sick children An
Amador County couple whose three youngsters suffer from a fatal
genetic disorder have lost the first round of their battle
to obtain a
costly treatment that could save two of the children. A panel
of medical specialists from Kaiser Permanente has ruled against
John and Alicia Bennett's request for insurance
coverage for
transplanting
healthy umbilical cord cells into their sons Hunter, 4, and
Tommy, 2.
The boys and their sister,
Ciara, 6, suffer from a rare
condition known
as Sanfilippo syndrome, which causes progressive
damage to the heart,
bones,
joints and respiratory and central nervous systems. It
is usually fatal
by age 13. http://www.kaiserpapers.info/news/ca/reject.html
Kaiser
Gift
Stirs Hope for 2 Ill Brothers
http://www.kaiserpapers.info/news/ca/brothers.html
Because of a
$1-million
research donation from Kaiser
Permanente, two
Amador County boys with a rare genetic disease may
soon get
experimental
transplants that offer the only chance to save their lives.
Kaiser, the
state's largest HMO, had refused for months to pay
for umbilical
cord-blood transplants for Hunter Bennett, 4, and
his 2-year-old
brother,
Tommy. Their 6-year-old sister, Ciara, also has the disease,
but is not
eligible for the transplant because the illness has progressed too far.
The HMO argued
that the transplants themselves
could be life-threatening
and had not been proved to work. But, after an
onslaught of media
coverage,
Kaiser agreed to donate $1 million to Duke University
in North Carolina
for research into the children's condition, known as Sanfilippo
syndrome. Duke can use the money to cover the boys'
medical costs there.
Technically,
the HMO's decision does not set a precedent or
change its
position on covering the experimental treatment--but
it allows the
family
to pursue its only hope.
HMO
benefit reductions put seniors at risk http://www.kaiserpapers.info/ventura.html
SF
Times
Article on how Kaiser legally murders patients
License
to kill Hospitals
reserve the right to pull your plug
Wesley
J. Smith Sunday,
December 2, 2001
Originally
posted at: http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-010202kaiser.story
Cases Reveal Lapses in Kaiser
Emergency Care
Health: Nine arbitration proceedings offer a rare look into HMO. It
denies any pattern of negligence.
By CHARLES ORNSTEIN
Times Health Writer
http://www.kaiserpapers.info/news/ca/arby.html
Fools' rush
in after cancer shock http://www.kaiserpapers.info/foolcan.html
Infant
Anesthesia
Problems Spark Debate - Feb. 2003 http://www.kaiserpapers.info/news/ca/debate.html
Infant
Anesthesia Problems Spark Debate
By Charles Ornstein, Times Staff Writer
February 24, 2003
The soul-searching among
anesthesiologists at Kaiser Permanente's Woodland
Hills hospital began in 1999, after 2-month-old Grant Wray
nearly died
as he was being sedated for hernia surgery. Doubts
grew the following year when 19-month-old Jose Fajardo III suffered
throat spasms during anesthesia, then died.
General
anesthesiologists at Woodland Hills questioned whether they
could safely care for children so young; they implored
hospital leaders
to send these patients elsewhere or hire pediatric
specialists.
Hospital administrators
said the two cases were aberrations
and strongly
defended using general anesthesiologists for pediatric
surgeries. They
did, however, make some changes, such as enlisting
neonatologists, who
specialize in caring for newborns, to help sedate the youngest
infants.
Family
members
help in mom's struggle with leukemia, brain damage
By
EMILY
BERG/Staff Writer VICTORVILLE
— "One step closer" was Debi Moretta's motto as she battled
the pain of chemotherapy almost a year and a half ago.
Now, the wife and mother
of two — as well
as her family — is holding
fast to the motto as Debi fights to regain mobility she lost
after
becoming
comatose. That condition followed chemotherapy treatments to
fight the
acute myeloid leukemia doctors diagnosed her with in
February 2002. Debi's
family said doctors from Kaiser
Permanente in Fontana haven't
explained to them why the then 41-year-old
Victorville woman suffered
severe
brain damage following a week of the cancer
treatment.
Kaiser
settles family's lawsuitHis parents blame the
hospital for their son's permanent disability after birth.
By
Ramon Coronado --
Bee Staff Writer - (Published
October 10, 2002) A Kaiser hospital in Sacramento
has agreed to pay $2.25 million to settle
a lawsuit alleging its staff neglected to tell a Carmichael
couple
their
newborn son had a treatable medical condition that
later injured him
permanently. http://www.kaiserpapers.info/news/ca/coronado.html
High
Court OKs Reduced Malpractice Sum in Girl's Death State's
$250,000 limit applies in suit over hospital `dumping' Harriet
Chiang, Chronicle Legal Affairs Writer Friday,
March 26, 1999 She arrived
at 5:30 p.m.
and was examined by a staff physician, Dr.
Trach Phoung Dang, who wanted to do blood tests to determine
whether
she
had a bacterial infection. But a doctor at Kaiser Permanente
Hospital
told
him not to do so, saying that the tests could wait until she was
transferred
to Kaiser. The girl was enrolled in Kaiser's health plan. http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/1999/03/26/MN102692.DTL
(Copyright,
The Times Mirror Company; Los
Angeles Times 1997all Rights reserved)
Federal investigators have released a critical report detailing
patient-care problems at Kaiser Permanente's hospitals in
Oakland
and Richmond discovered during a surprise inspection in March.
The
inspection followed reports of deaths of three patients
transferred from Kaiser's Richmond hospital last
winter. Among
the
report's
findings were inexplicable delays in transferring patients,
short
staffing and inadequate quality-control procedures. Kaiser,
which
faced
the possible loss of federal funding at the two hospitals,
has
taken corrective actions, said officials of the U.S. Health
Care
Financing
Administration. A follow-up inspection is scheduled in the next several
weeks. (Copyright,
The Times Mirror Company; Los Angeles Times 1997all Rights reserved)
Three HMOs--Kaiser
Permanente, Pacificare and
Health Systems
International--will soon control health care for 9
million of the 13
million Californians in HMOs. Kaiser is singular among these titans
in
receiving an annual tax break of more than $200 million because of its
nonprofit status. Such status requires the provision
of charity care,
but does not preclude Kaiser from diverting profits
to the doctors who
own Kaiser's for-profit medical group and receive dividends
for Kaiser's penny-pinching. While Kaiser was once the
gold standard
for affordable, high-quality HMO care, it has recently led
the race to
the bottom in health quality, clinging to its tax break even as it acts
like a for-profit company. Kaiser has been the
leader in reducing
patient stays and has steadily cut back on preventive
services by
limiting mammograms, pap smears and prostate cancer screenings.
An infamous Kaiser memo
announcing an eight-hour
discharge
policy for
newborns and their mothers (since outlawed) was
called "Positive
Thoughts Regarding the Eight Hour Discharge." It encouraged staff
to
offer such justifications as "hospital food is not tasty" and
"unlimited visitors Authorities
investigate allegations that a Kaiser surgeon in San
Luis Obispo
hastened a possible donor's demise.at home." The state Department
of
Corporations, which oversees HMOs, has done an audit of Kaiser,
released in August, and found that medical decisions
at Kaiser do not
appear to be "independent of fiscal and administrative
considerations."
In other words, money is dictating medicine. This is against the law.
Specifically, auditors
found that "clinical
financial review
nurses
have the authority to overrule physician decisions."
Bureaucrats can,
in effect, practice medicine without a license. The auditors also found
that 25% of non-network emergency room treatment for
Kaiser members was
denied unreasonably.
Kaiser has been ordered to
answer for these
abuses by February, but it will no doubt resist. Kaiser's own
1995-97
Southern California strategic plan, which includes such reckless
care-cutting as replacing skilled nurses with
unskilled attendants, is
based on a financial goal that amounts to being able to quote the
lowest price to all corporate and individual purchasers. Prevention,
which used to be the signature of HMOs, is barely
mentioned in the
document, which reads more like a corporate prospectus than a plan
for
health policy. This "nonprofit" company has made more than $2 billion
in net operating income, i.e. profit, over the last
three years. Today
Kaiser spends $60 million annually on advertising and marketing,
more
than a 700% increase over four years ago. While
the state has
tried to resolve cases with Kaiser and other HMOs "quietly," only a
forceful and public response will prevent the kind
of reckless
indifference that threatens patients like Charla Cooper. Cooper
will
lose her ability to have children if Kaiser does not provide $70,000 in
specialist care, available only outside the Kaiser
network, that she
requires for a pre-cancerous cervical condition and
ovarian
complications. HMOs like Kaiser do not like to provide such
out-of-network care, even when no qualified
specialist exists at the
HMO, because of cost.
Cooper has stated: "Kaiser
missed a
diagnosis, did not return my phone calls, scheduled procedures three
months after they were needed and returned test results up to two
months after the tests were performed." Fertility
specialists whose
advice Cooper sought on her own have urged that she receive special
surgery and fertility treatment unavailable at Kaiser, but Kaiser
bureaucrats have steadfastly refused to authorize
such treatment.
Cooper's chances of becoming a mother fade every day. Her complaint,
marked "urgent" by department investigators in July, is still sitting
on the desk of Department of Corporations
Commissioner Keith Bishop.
Bishop has charted a
harmfully cautious course
with HMOs since
his
appointment by Gov. Wilson. And indeed, the
Department of Corporations
has issued only one fine in its 20 years of HMO oversight for
improper
denial of health care. But HMOs like Kaiser understand money most, and
that is what they must be forced to pay when they
violate state law and
abandon patients like Cooper. The penalty should be
enough to give a
billion-dollar behemoth an incentive to live up to its obligations
under the law and its debt to taxpayers who
underwrite that
$200-million annual bonus.
Credit:
Jamie Court is the director of Consumers
for Quality Care, a
Los Angeles-based watchdog group (Copyright,
The
Times Mirror Company; Los Angeles Times 1996 all Rights reserved)
November 21, 1996 My
thanks to Ellen Goodman for "The Latest HMO Outrage: Drive-Thru
Mastectomy" (Commentary, Nov. 18). Last week I
became an uninformed
victim of this inhumane practice at Kaiser-Permanente, Los
Angeles.
I
want to acquaint women with my firsthand experience of this degradation
and urge my fellow HMO patients to contact their Washington
legislators.
My
mastectomy and lymph node removal took place at 7:30 a.m., Nov. 13. I
was released at 2:30 p.m. that same day. I received
notice, the day
before surgery, from my doctor that mastectomy was an outpatient
procedure at Kaiser and I'd be released the same day. Shocked by this
news, I told my surgeon of my previous complications
with anesthesia
and the fact that I have a cervical spine condition,
which adds an
additional consideration for any surgery. The pleasant doctor
assured me that I'd be admitted, for the night, if I
experienced excessive pain
or nausea. This was noted in my chart. In the
recovery room and
the holding area, I felt like a wounded soldier in a hospital tent
during the Civil War. I was surrounded by moaning
patients and placed
directly next to a screaming infant. When I finally
found a voice, I
shouted, "Get me out of here!" A nurse flitted by, shot me a
disapproving glance, and commented, "Some folks just
don't know when to
be grateful." This was the ultimate humiliation. While
in a
groggy, postoperative daze, swimming in pain and nausea, I was given
some perfunctory instructions on how to empty the
two bloody drains
attached to my body. I was told to dress myself and
go home. My
doctor's written chart instructions for a room assignment, if I
developed acute nausea or pain, were ignored by the
nursing staff.
Obviously, the reassurance had been given to placate me at the
time of
my discussion with the doctor but everyone knew an overnight stay was
against Kaiser hospital rules. Everyone knew, except
me. I had no time
to mourn the loss of my breast or regain a sense of
composure.
This
experience was especially shocking because four years previously, I had
undergone a hysterectomy and received excellent
treatment and a
four-night stay at the very same Kaiser facility. We
women can
allow ourselves to be discounted or we can demand more from the HMOs.
No civilized country in the world has mastectomy as
an outpatient
procedure. VICTORIA
BERCK Los
Angeles * In
Goodman's
excellent column, every word of which I endorse wholeheartedly, she
quotes Cindy Pearson of the National Women's Health
Network as implying
that women receive second- class medical treatment just
because of their
sex, by asking, "What part of a man's body would they
amputate in
same-day surgery?" I can answer that one from experience: the
testicle(s). When
I had my testicle removed for
testicular cancer
it was admittedly not as serious a surgery as
radical mastectomy, but
it did involve general anesthesia, surgery and the loss of a body
part to which I was deeply attached. And it was only
covered as outpatient
surgery by my HMO, male though I be (still).
MICHEL
MASSON Santa
Barbara
DAY
OF MOURNING, PROTESTS
- Julian
Guthrie, OF THE EXAMINER STAFF Saturday,
December 2, 1995 http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/e/a/1995/12/02/NEWS1071.dtl ACT UP
Golden Gate held simultaneous noontime rallies in San Francisco
and Oakland calling
on Kaiser Permanente to improve care for HIV
patients.
MEDICAL
RECORDS
This
article is from the San
Francisco Chronicle from 2003 and written
by David Lazarus.
The title is Medical
Charts Not All That Private. http://tinyurl.com/dvffc
I
think that today with the rush to outsource everything the
warnings in
this article are even more important to heed.
So
much for the great Kaiser computer system. They can't even
track who writes
what prescriptions.!
KTVU - Fox
Network A Danville
couple whose
two children were killed by a hit-and-run
driver
wants new controls on how doctors prescribe drugs. Bob and
Carmen say
Kaiser
permanente shares the death of their two children. A woman
charged with
being drunk when she hit and killed the children back in 2003. The
Packs
believe Baretta was under the influence of painkillers at the time
prescribed
by several different Kaiser doctors.
The
month of the accident, a Kaiser doctor prescribed 50 vicadin pills
without knowing
that six days earlier another doctor gave her 50 prescriptions
for 50 pills. updates
to this story: http://www.ktvu.com/news/4516615/detail.html
April
27, 2005
- Hit-And-Run Nanny Sentenced To 30 Years To Life http://www.ktvu.com/news/4422543/detail.html
Regulators
Fine Kaiser Unit $200,000 - June 21, 2005
The state imposes the penalty for breaching patient confidentiality
in exposing health records on the Web. by
Debra Vrana - Times Staff
Writer
Nonprofit
health council sues Kaiser over medical disclosures The
California
Consumer Health
Care Council has sued
the Kaiser Foundation over what it says is inappropriate
disclosure of
private medical records.
The
council contends
that when Kaiser learns of a suit
or potential suit by a patient, its legal department
opens and studies
that patient's private medical records without notifying the
patient. This
alleged review by Kaiser's legal department is inappropriate, said
the council, because Kaiser's legal
employees have no role in the patient's
health care.
"If
a patient has a
claim against Kaiser for negligently
cutting off a little finger, why should a clerk in Kaiser's
legal
department
be able to review the patient's entire medical file,
which might
include information on unrelated sexual, psychiatric
or personal problems ...?"
asked Martin Blake, one of the lawyers who
filed the suit in Alameda
County
Superior Court for the council on Monday.
John
Metz, the
chairman of the council, said that Kaiser
has put its own legal interests above the protection
of its patients'
privacy.
"It is just wrong," he said in a statement
Internal
Kaiser letter regarding inaccurate patient charts http://www.welchco.com/03/00050/60/99/11/3001.HTM
Software
glitch reveals
stranger's health history Kaiser
applicant sees woman's information Victoria
Colliver, Chronicle Staff Writer Friday,
March 12, 2004
When Joe
Carroll applied
for health care coverage online with Kaiser
Permanente,
he was surprised when a completed application for an Oregon
woman suddenly popped
up on his screen.
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2004/03/12/BUGND5J3PR1.DTL
http://www.ktvu.com/news/4422543/detail.htm
Kaiser
Patients Are Billed in
the Street - Peter
Sinton, Chronicle Senior Writer Saturday,
September 19, 1998 If
Kaiser
Permanente is your health care provider
and you live in Petaluma
or other
North Bay spots, your bill may be a little late this month.
A
box of 1,200 September account statements sent
by Kaiser's Southern
California
data processing center to its direct mail company somehow
ended
up all over the
streets of San Francisco yesterday. http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/1998/09/19/BU70537.DTL
PATIENT
DISEASE RELATED TO UNCLEAN PRACTICES AT
HOSPITALS OR
UNSTERILIZED EQUIPMENT Some
Kaiser
patients positive for hep - April 9, 2005 Equipment
wasn't sterile but may not have been source of hepatitis There have
been "a small number" of positive hepatitis test results
from Kaiser patients who were alerted that
unsterilized equipment was
used
during procedures in South Sacramento and Redwood
City, a hospital
official
said Friday. http://www.kaiserpapers.info/kpgvethemhep.html
More
than 3,000
Kaiser patients are at risk for hepatitis Females alerted to
un-sanitized equipment
that hospitals used.
By
MATTHIAS
GAFNI http://californianews.kaiserpapers.info/sendkpsoap.html
Kaiser
sued in instrument scare A
class-action lawsuit was filed Monday in Sacramento Superior Court
on behalf of more than 1,000 Kaiser Permanente patients who
may have
been
exposed to contaminated instruments. http://legalstuff.kaiserpapers.info/soupy.html
SACRAMENTO
- Kaiser
Permanente has notified 1,331 patients that
procedures performed
on them at a Sacramento-area hospital may have been done with
contaminated instruments. - April 29, 2004
Kaiser
Permanente officials seek third-floor patients for TB skin tests Kaiser
Permanente Medical Center South Sacramento is tracking down
1,300 patients who may have had contact with a nurse
recently diagnosed
with tuberculosis. - March 26, 2004
SARAH
NOME STORIES - ELDERLY PATIENT EVICTED
FROM KAISER HOSPITAL
Kaiser to auction former patient's home
to pay bill By Nancy Isles Nation MEDIANEWS
The
house of a woman who refused to leave her hospital bed at Kaiser
Permanente for more than a year will be auctioned by the
Marin County
sheriff's office Tuesday.
If the home at 77 Alder Ave. in San Anselmo sells, the proceeds will be
used to cover the bill for a 14-month hospital stay by
former resident
Sarah Nome, who now lives at the Lafayette Convalescent
Hospital .
The cost to Kaiser was $1.4 million based on the $3,200 per-day price
for the hospital bed, according to a court ruling.
Kaiser has not determined the value of the house because officials have
not had access to the property, but it is believed to be in
substantial
disrepair. mirrored for historical purposes at:http://californianews.kaiserpapers.info/outinthestreet.html
ROOM
502 - SAN ANSELMO KAISER HOSPITAL - Woman, 82,
Refuses to Leave Kaiser
Hospital in California After Being Discharged a Year Ago,
Racking
Up $1 Million in Bills- By BRIAN SKOLOFF Associated Press
Writer
-
This is one very brave lady! Final
update
on Room 502 - 82-year-old woman who refused to leave hospital
placed
in
Marin County guardian's care and shipped off to a home. Eviction
Day for Sarah Nome news coverage Kaiser
losing patience with patient By Nancy
Isles Nation
San Anselmo
firebrand
Sarah Nome, often at odds with City Hall, now
is taking on
Kaiser Permanente from her hospital bed.
KAISER LOST
BODIES STORIES
Kaiser
not
forthcoming over mix-up at morgue -
Kaiser tried to cover up
a missing
Priest's body replacing a elderly woman's for a cremation!
ALAMEDA
COUNTY Couple Claim
Hospital
Lost Baby's Remains
- Wednesday,
April 21, 1999 Oakland
-- Oakland
couple has filed a lawsuit
against Kaiser Permanente
Hospital
claiming that the HMO lost the body of their stillborn
daughter.
URL: http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/1999/04/21/MNR3BA6.DTL
Kaiser
Apologizes For Burial Mix-Up Three
Infants Mistakenly Buried Together
POSTED: 7:16 pm PDT May 23, 2006
http://www.kcra.com/money/9264342/detail.html Mirrored
at: http://www.kaiserpapers.info/news/ca/kaiserlostbodies.html
ARBITRATION
STORIES Lacking lawyers, justice is deniedAttorneys often avoid medical malpractice suits because California limits 'pain and suffering' awards to $250,000.
By Daniel Costello, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
December 29, 2007
Dave Stewart's 72-year-old mother went to Stanford University Medical
Center for double knee-replacement surgery in April. Four days later,
she was dead.
To Stewart, an anesthesiologist, it seemed a classic case of medical
malpractice. After the operation, his mother developed sharp abdominal
pain that she described as "10 on a scale of 1 to 10," according to her
medical records.
Read more at:
http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-malpractice29dec29,1,2913626.story?coll=la-headlines-business&ctrack=1&cset=true Hard
Time For Kaiser Patients To Get Day In Court
http://cbs5.com/local/local_story_244205451.htmlSeptember 1, 2006 - CBS5 San
Francisco Reporter Anna Werner(CBS 5) Getting out of bed is hard for
John Pellini. He can barely walk. "The whole
body, my shoulder my
hands, everything aches," Pellini said. He even
needs help breathing.
For John's family it's a 24/7 job. "I feel
guilty because I have
always been the type of person to do things by myself," Pellini said. John's
family said he could walk fine just over a year ago, when he checked
into the emergency
room at Kaiser in Hayward, complaining of a pain in
his leg. A few days later, it became even worse.
mirrored for historical purposes at: http://www.kaiserpapers.info/pellini.html
Arbitration
provider breaks with HMOs, saying it will no longer handle such
cases unless
both sides agree
to the
out-of-court process. http://www.kaiserpapers.info/2b.html
Kaiser
Arbitration May Be Unenforceable, Says Unfair Business Competition Case
Finalized
Today "Kaiser
broke
California law
by forcing patients into
secret arbitration proceedings without fully and properly
disclosing
that
they had given up their rights. Today's filing closes the door on
the HMO's
illegal actions. The unfair business competition law was the only tool
I had to hold Kaiser accountable for its deception. With
today's
resolution
of the case, Kaiser should take back the donation it made to
the anti-
patient initiative and stop its efforts to restrict patients'
rights,"
Kaiser
and Arbitration in California http://www.rescuehealthcareday.com/arbitration.htm
Kaiser
loses ruling in death
of newborn http://www.pe.com/localnews/stories/PE_NEWS_nkaiser28.58021.html
mirrored and preserved at: http://californianews.kaiserpapers.info/newborn.html
Kaiser loses
ruling in death of newborn
ARBITRATION: An attorney says the doctor used standard procedures to
treat
the birth defect. 12/28/2002
By
DOUGLAS E. BEEMAN
THE PRESS-ENTERPRISE
A
Murrieta couple has won a $1 million
arbitration case against Kaiser
Permanente stemming from the death of their newborn
daughter nearly
three
years ago. An arbitrator ruled that the doctor who
performed the
surgery
to repair a birth defect used poor judgment when complications arose
after
the operation. Under
California's law limiting
general damages in medical liability
cases, the award was reduced to $250,000.
The couple, Rachelle and Leon Phillips, say the award is small
compensation
for the loss of their child. More important, Rachelle
Phillips said, is
that Kaiser has been held responsible for its error that cost Renea
Phillips
her life.
KAISER
EMPLOYEE MOLESTER STORIES Background on Scott Takasugi
saved from The Permanente Medical Group before they removed it. http://www.kaiserpapers.info/takasugi3.html http://www.kcra.com/news/9379863/detail.html
Accused
Doctor
Makes First Court Appearance
Attorney
Questions Kaiser's Failure To Act
SACRAMENTO,
Calif. -- A
plastic surgeon
charged with sexually exploiting his patients and
stockpiling military
weapons in his Carmichael home made his first court appearance on
Thursday.In a civil lawsuit filed Thursday, an attorney for one of
Takasugi's
alleged victims
reports suspicious conduct by the doctor dating back to
2001. READ More - mirrored for
historical purposes at: http://www.kaiserpapers.info/takasugi2.html
http://www.sacbee.com/content/news/story/14267935p-15079484c.html Surgeon
is held on weapons, sex charges By
Carrie Peyton Dahlberg and Christina Jewett -- Bee Staff Writers
Published
8:27 pm PDT Wednesday, June 14, 2006
A
Carmichael plastic surgeon was being held on sex and weapons charges
Wednesday
after police found an armor-penetrating rocket launcher,
machine guns and dozens of other
weapons in his sprawling ranch home. Dr.
Scott Takasugi, known by neighbors for his lavish Halloween
parties, dapper clothes
and luxury car collection, was being
investigated for sexual exploitation of patients when
the cache was
found. Complete
story at above link and mirrored for historical purposes at:
http://www.kaiserpapers.info/rocketlauncher.html
Jun
14, 2006 12:00 am US/Pacific http://cbs13.com/topstories/local_story_165145914.html
Kaiser
Statement Regarding Arrest Of Dr. Takasugi
(CBS
13) SACRAMENTO Kaiser Permanente released the
following statement
regarding
the arrest of Dr. Scott Takasugi on charges of sexually
expoiting a patient.
"After
receiving patient care
complaints, we contacted the sheriff's
department and have
cooperated fully with their investigation. We
encouraged the patients to file police reports
as well. We have begun
the process to terminate the physician and to report him to the
medical
board. mirrored
for historical purposes at: http://www.kaiserpapers.info/takasugi.html
IMPROPER
PROCEDURES FOLLOWED IN PELVIC EXAMS, SIX WOMEN ALLEGE
- Feb.
19,
2003 http://www.kaiserpapers.info/raul3.html
Raul's
Trial Begins - February 16, 2003 http://www.kaiserpapers.info/raul2.html
RAUL
GALINDO IXTLAHUAC - KP OB/GYN Doctor molester of numerous female
patients http://www.kaiserpapers.info/raul.html
Further
Update - March 14,2003
http://www.kaiserpapers.info/raulmarch.html
DA
may add another sex charge http://www.kaiserpapers.info/rauljuly.html
Kaiser
Male Nurse pleads not guilty to four sexual battery charges January 21,
2005 A male nurse
who has
cared for patients at hospitals in San Diego and
North County
for a decade pleaded not guilty yesterday to four felony
counts
of sexual battery on medically
incapacitated people.
Julius
Ariston
Villareal, 32, of Chula Vista is accused of fondling
and committing other sex
acts on two men in their hospital beds who
were
drugged and unable to resist.
San
Diego Union-Tribune, The (CA) August 20, 2005
Estimated
printed pages: 1 A nurse who cared
for patients at hospitals in San Diego and North County has been
convicted of six counts of sexual battery for
fondling several
patients. A Superior Court jury Wednesday found Julius
Ariston Villareal,
32, of Chula Vista guilty of sexually touching three male
patients in
September 2003 and June 2004. He could be sentenced to up to
nine years
in prison at a court hearing scheduled for Sept. 20. He is free on
$50,000 bail. Prosecutors say the incidents occurred
at Sharp Coronado Hospital and Healthcare Center and Kaiser
Foundation
Hospital in San Diego. He was fired from both hospitals after the
patients complained. Villareal
was also fired from a nursing job at Scripps Memorial Hospital
Encinitas in 1996 after he was accused of similar acts. He
did not face
charges in connection with that incident because the statute
of
limitations had run out, a prosecutor said. Edition: 1,2,6,7 Section:
LOCAL Page: B-2 Column: AROUND
THE REGION
Index
Terms: CRIME; HOSPITALS; SAN
DIEGO; SEX; TRIALS; VERDICTS
Copyright 2005
Union-Tribune Publishing Co. San
Diego Union-Tribune, The (CA) November 9, 2005 Author: Dana
Littlefield; STAFF WRITER Estimated printed pages: 2
 A nurse convicted of fondling patients
at two local hospitals was sentenced yesterday to 240 days
in jail and
placed on three years' probation. A jury found Julius
Ariston Villareal,
33, of Chula Vista guilty Aug. 17 of six counts of sexual battery
on an
unconscious person for inappropriately touching three male patients. He
had worked as a licensed vocational nurse at hospitals in
San Diego and
North County for a decade. San Diego Superior Court
Judge Peter C. Deddeh also ordered Villareal to work 20 days in public
work service and register as a sex offender for the rest of
his life. Villareal,
who had been free on $50,000 bail, was taken into custody immediately
after the hearing. Deputy
Attorney General David Songco said the incidents occurred at Sharp
Coronado Hospital and Healthcare Center and Kaiser
Foundation Hospital
in San Diego between September 2003 and June 2004. Villareal
was fired
from both hospitals after the patients complained. He
was also fired
from a nursing job at Scripps Memorial Hospital Encinitas in 1996 after
he was accused of similar acts. However, he did not face
charges in
connection with that incident because the statute of
limitations had
run out, Songco said. According to court
documents, a 28-year-old patient who had been admitted to Sharp
Coronado for severe pneumonia reported that Villareal
touched his
genitals twice during sponge baths and also sexually
propositioned him. The
victim did not immediately report the incident because he was
embarrassed, according to court documents. Another
male patient who was treated for an infected dog bite at Kaiser told
authorities that Villareal sexually touched him on several
occasions
during his hospital stay last year. A third patient, also from Kaiser,
came forward after seeing news reports of Villareal's arrest. All
of the patients told authorities they were heavily medicated when the
incidents occurred. Villareal
repeatedly denied the accusations to his employers and investigators,
according to court documents. He told a probation officer
that his
immediate goal after the sentencing hearing was to get a job. The
prosecutor said he plans to immediately initiate proceedings to revoke
Villareal's nursing license. Dana
Littlefield: (619)
542-4590; dana.littlefield@uniontrib.com Edition:
1,7 Section: LOCAL Page: B-3
Index Terms: ABUSE; CRIME; FIRINGS;
HOSPITALS; MEDICINE; SAN
DIEGO; SENTENCES; SEX;
TRIALS Copyright
2005 Union-Tribune Publishing Co. Record
Number: UTS1911355 Jay
Tibbles Sex offender history since 1975- still KP MD
http:/californianews.kaiserpapers.info/kpwierdo.html
Dr. Jay Tibbles, M.D. -
Pediatrition that specialized
in molestation cases at Kaiser Permanente Fontana
As
of April 8, 2002 Dr. Jay Harold Tibbles,
of Fontana, California convicted of six feloney counts of
unlawful
attempt to commit lewd acts with a child and five felony counts of
unlawful
attempt to send harmful matter to a child under 14 years of
age with
intent
to seduce the child. License revoked. Effective,
April 8.
Former
Kaiser Internist Gets
Year for Sex Charge Chronicle Staff Report Wednesday,
February 7, 2001
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2001/02/07/MNC110209.DTL The FBI
learned in March 1998 that Jacobson, a former Kaiser internist
in Milpitas, had
spoken of having sex with young girls, authorities
said.
An undercover agent tape-recorded
telephone calls in which Jacobson
arranged
for the agent, posing as a "madam," to find an
11-year-old girl for his
sexual purposes, authorities said. Kaiser's
Dirty Little Secret - Kaiser Bellflower - Dr. Peter
Fischer by Susan Goldsmith http://kaiserpapers.info/co/dirtylit.html Kaiser
Permanente Hospital Officials were warned twice that
pediatrician
Dr. Peter Fischer
was molesting his boy patients. And they
let him
keep doing it.
RH
doctor faces sex charges - Sampras' former coach accused of
molestation Daily Breeze (Torrance, CA)July 18, 1997Author: The Associated
PressA doctor from Rolling Hills who
once coached tennis star Pete Sampras faces 16 charges of molesting
boys he met through his medical practice, authorities confirmed
Thursday. The allegations against Dr. Peter Fischer, a pediatric endocrinologist,
involve four boys who were 13 to 15 years old at the time,
said Deputy
District Attorney Eloise Phillips. http://californianews.kaiserpapers.info/peterfischer.html
SAMPRAS'
EX-COACH IN TROUBLE Times Union, The (Albany, NY) July 23,
1997 Author: Associated Press
DOWNEY,
Calif. -- A doctor and former coach of tennis star Pete Sampras was
ordered Tuesday to stand trial on charges that he
molested young male
patients.
After a preliminary hearing that included testimony from the alleged
victims, a Downey Municipal Court judge ruled
prosecutors have enough
evidence to proceed with the case against Dr. Peter
Fischer.
Fischer,
who is free on $460,000
bail, was ordered to appear Thursday in Norwalk Superior Court
for
arraignment.
In a separate case filed in February, Fischer, a pediatric
endocrinologist from Rolling Hills, is charged with three
counts of
committing a lewd act on a child and three counts of penetration by
a
foreign object.
HOSPITALIZATION
CUTTING STORIES
Kaiser
struggles to
cut cost of care
- Lisa M. Krieger, EXAMINER MEDICAL WRITER
Monday, September 25, 1995 CALIFORNIA
-- Kaiser Permanente,
once the
undisputed leader in low-cost
health care, is
struggling to stay competitive by hospitalizing fewer
patients
and rewarding cost-effective
doctors, internal documents
show. "We're
competing in
a very hot market," said David
Pockell, executive
vice president and
regional manager of the Kaiser's Northern California
region. http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/e/a/1995/09/25/BUSINESS9917.dtl
Kaiser
Dumps Bonus Plan
Program
rewarded doctors
for containing medical costs Carl T.
Hall, Chronicle Staff Writer Wednesday,
December 20, 1995
The giant
Oakland-based HMO denied the move was intended to placate
critics of the
bonus plan, who had said the system essentially rewarded
doctors for rationing care.
Instead, officials said the budgetary goals
were met for 1995 -- so the incentives were
not necessary for 1996. In
Northern California, Kaiser
doctors operate
under a different incentive
program. It includes
modest bonuses to physicians if the facility where
they work meets certain budget and quality
goals. The giant
Oakland-based HMO denied the move was intended to placate
critics of the bonus
plan, who had said the system essentially rewarded
doctors for rationing care. Instead, officials
said the budgetary goals
were met for 1995 -- so the incentives were not necessary for 1996.
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/1995/12/20/BU72074.DTL
MA
BARKLEY: Kaiser Permanente is
best known for its health care, but
when it comes to
building its new San Francisco medical center, it
seems
some of its advisers are . . . well,
ready to kill. At
least that's the
impression staffers got when
they heard Kaiser attorney
Alice Barkley's
voice- mail message to San Francisco's city planning
office,
warning that if she didn't like the
agency's forthcoming environmental
ruling on Kaiser's Geary Street project, ``you may have a
staff that is
dead by tomorrow.'' http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/1996/09/27/MN72628.DTL
Kaiser
Denies Charges by L.A.
Group - Carl T.
Hall, Peter Sinton, Chronicle Staff Writers Wednesday,
September 27, 1995 A
Los Angeles group
called Consumers for Quality
Care, interpreting
a Kaiser business
plan, charged that the HMO plans to dramatically
reduce
the number of patients hospitalized,
limit prescriptions of high-cost
drugs
and continue to prescribe more medication, apparently in
lieu of needed
treatment. http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/1995/09/27/BU11469.DTL
KAISER AND
DHS/HHS/CMS STORIES Kaiser Told to Reinstate Coverage Originally
Posted at:
http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-kaiser19oct19,1,3274480.story?coll=la-headlines-business &track=crosspromo
Regulators'
action in a kidney patient's case comes as scrutiny over cancellations
grows. By Lisa Girion Times Staff Writer October 19, 2006 State regulators for the
first time have ordered a health plan to reinstate the insurance
coverage of a patient whose policy was ruled to have been
illegally
canceled.
In
an order posted Wednesday, the Department of Managed Health Care ruled
that Kaiser Foundation Health Plan illegally canceled
coverage for a
Northern California woman in urgent need of medical
attention for large
kidney stones. The cancellation was illegal, the agency ruled, because
there was no evidence the woman intended to deceive the health
maintenance organization about her medical history.
http://californianews.kaiserpapers.info/oct192006.html
Kaiser
answers state complaints By Richard Halstead IJ reporter Sunday,
December 26, 2004 - State inspectors discovered dirty shower
rooms and patios fouled
by bird droppings when they visited Kaiser
Permanente
Medical Center in San Rafael last September. - Vickie's
comment on this
article - All patients should take photographs of unsanitary conditions
at
Kaiser and present copies to their local Health Departments,
Newspapers
and any other entity they
can think of to get those places cleaned up.
California
DHS Director becomes Kaiser Stooge Oct. 21,
2004--Diana M. Bonta, R.N., Dr.P.H., former Director of the
California Department
of Health Services, has assumed the newly created
position of Vice President of Public Affairs
for Kaiser Permanente's
Southern
California Region. Is this a reward for something you did
Diana? http://californianews.kaiserpapers.info/dianabonta.html
Kaiser
hospice program may lose Medicare funding
Kaiser
Hospice Under Threat of Losing Medicare Funding San Francisco Chronicle
Kaiser
Fined
for Phlebotomy Practices, Policies; Safety Needles Called Ineffective
Kaiser
gets out of paying $1,000,000 fine to DMHC
Kaiser
fined Half a Million Dollars by DMHC in California for death of 19 year
old
Kaiser Agrees
to Pay Fine for Care Lapse
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