Mastectomy Mistake Fuels
Debate
NEW YORK, Jan. 21, 2003
(CBS) The woman who underwent a double
mastectomy because of a false cancer diagnosis is telling women to take more
control over their medical care, as trial lawyers cite the case in their fight
against tort reform.
Linda McDougal, 46, said she was diagnosed with an aggressive form of cancer
in May 2002, and doctors recommended radical treatment, including the removal
of both breasts.
Days after the surgery, a doctor revealed McDougal's test results had been
switched with another woman's. McDougal, it turns out, never had cancer.
McDougal told the CBS News Early Show this week that her case
should be a cautionary tale for all women.
"It's important for me to get a message across to women to take control
of your own medical care," she said. "Just because a pathologist or
a doctor tells you something, especially in the event of a serious diagnosis,
they could be wrong.
"They have been wrong. They were wrong with me, and caused me to have
both of my breasts removed," she continued.
The Association of Trial Lawyers of America (ATLA) says McDougal's case
exposes the flaws in President Bush's plan to cap damages in medical
malpractice suits.
The president says exorbitant awards for pain and suffering are driving up
fees for malpractice insurance, which is helping to raise health care costs.
He wants to cap damages for suffering to $250,000 and impose a similar limit
on punitive damages.
"To add insult to her horrendous injury, President Bush and the insurance
industry now want to put a one-size-fits-all limit on the compensation Linda
McDougal and other victims of malpractice can receive for their life altering
injuries," said Mary E. Alexander, ATLA president.
ATLA says the president's proposal would "take away the legal rights of
patients injured by malpractice is dangerously wrong and (put) insurance
company profits over the lives of injured people."
McDougal, who has joined forces with the ATLA, echoed that belief in her Early
Show interview.
"I am maimed for the rest of my life," she said, adding that the
president's intent "is to harm me and other victims of medical
malpractice. The solution might be getting to source and taking care of the
mistakes so that they never happen."
McDougal said she was diagnosed with cancer in May 2002 after her doctor had a
biopsy performed when a suspicious spot appeared on her mammogram.
McDougal said she was told the cancer was so aggressive that a double
mastectomy, chemotherapy and radiation were her only chances for survival.
"The options were given to me of a lumpectomy or single mastectomy.
However, the incidents of reoccurrence within five to six years were too high
for me," McDougal said. "My husband and I both decided that we would
take the most aggressive form of treatment.
"I did talk to like my family practitioner. I mean, I talked to other
doctors about the surgery itself, but it never occurred to me to question the
pathologist report," she said.
In June, she had the surgery.
Two days later, she was recovering when her doctor visited. "She had bad
news," McDougal said. "She didn't know how to tell us other than to
just tell us, and immediately I thought I was dying, and she told me I didn't
have cancer."
After finding no malignancy in the amputated breast tissue, McDougal said her
doctor discovered a mistake in United's laboratory. Tissue from McDougal's
biopsy was switched with tissue from another woman.
Dr. Daniel Foley, medical director of United Hospital, told KARE-TV in the
Twin Cities that the St. Paul hospital had made changes so "this kind of
mix-up would never happen again."
Foley said the woman who actually had the cancer has been contacted and
treated. He would not identify the pathologist at fault, but said the doctor
remains with United.
"If you're right 99.9999 percent of the time, you don't want to be that
.01 percent because the consequences are serious and we have to be right 100
percent of the time," Foley said.
An attorney representing United's pathologists said the group's insurance
company has paid McDougal's medical expenses and lost wages, and will continue
to do so.
McDougal said she is fighting several infections and must still undergo
several reconstructive surgeries before she decides whether to sue for
malpractice.
İMMIII, CBS Broadcasting Inc. The
Associated Press contributed to this report.