Handing the organ to nurse Tammy Nelson, Shaknovsky told her to mark it “spleen,” even though it weighed at least 10 times as much as the average spleen and was clearly a liver, according to Bryan’s lawsuit. Nelson allegedly did as she was told.

Within minutes, other doctors and hospital higher-ups swarmed the operating room, the suit states. All of them allegedly recognized the organ that had been removed was a liver but nevertheless covered up Shaknovsky’s mistake by documenting on official records that he had cut out Bryan’s spleen.

Shaknovsky allegedly tried to persuade hospital staff members that it was the spleen. He repeatedly left and returned to the operating room to tell people that Bryan had died of a “splenic aneurysm,” the suit states. In informing Bryan of her husband’s death, he allegedly told her the cause was a spleen so diseased that it had swelled to four times the normal size and shifted to the other side of his body.

Ascension nurse Kathleen Montag chased Bryan into the parking lot and lied about how her husband had died to get her signature agreeing to forgo an autopsy, the suit states.

The cover-up fell apart when the district’s medical examiner performed an autopsy and determined that the organ that had been removed was Bryan’s liver while his spleen was untouched and in the normal position, state disciplinary records show. The medical examiner ruled Bryan’s death a homicide caused by bleeding to death and having his liver removed.

  • @[email protected]
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    146 hours ago

    Holy shit, that is an insane amount of ineptitude,malpractice, manslaughter, and covering up. Everyone involved needs jailed. Let alone fired and sued.

  • @plantsmakemehappy
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    45 hours ago

    I didn’t think it could get worse then the blurb you posted but the details in the article make it so so much worse.

    • @Snowclone
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      8 hours ago

      I am curious if a nurse being told ‘‘mark it as a spleen’’ leaves the nurse with liability if they do so. But for every doctor involved, they should lose their licenses.

      • ADKSilence
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        248 hours ago

        I feel like if the nurse knew the instruction was false, following “orders” makes them just as complicit. And yes, obviously there are risks associated with telling someone with authority over you “You’re wrong”.

        • Phoenixz
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          240 minutes ago

          That why in airplanes, the first officer is encouraged to speak up to the captain if he feels the captain does something stupid. Last thing you want is a crash because someone follows orders

  • ADKSilence
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    178 hours ago

    So I’m not a doctor, but I assume knowing basic anatomy is a requirement, right? Like, I just recently had an ultrasound and could tell what my liver was compared to other organs. Surely if an untrained eye can pick out a liver, surely a doctor should be able to…

  • @Carvex
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    78 hours ago

    Surgeon Simulator Sertified!