By Luanne Rife luanne.rife@roanoke.com 981-3209
A Virginia Board of Medicine advisory group on Thursday released a protest against a Salem corrective specialist subsequent to finding an "absence of clear and persuading proof" regarding wrongdoing.
Dr. Greg Alouf confronted the casual hearing on claims that he neglected to appropriately tend to a patient who built up a serious disease and sepsis taking after liposuction and a tummy tuck.
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"We're extremely satisfied with the board's choice, and we have stuck by the way that Dr. Alouf surpassed the standard of consideration," said his lawyer, Brian Lown. He said Alouf would not create an impression.
Notwithstanding the board grievance, the patient, a 61-year-old Botetourt County lady, recorded a $2.1 million misbehavior suit. Alouf's insurance agency settled it for an undisclosed sum.
The lady's wellbeing took a turn tailing her one-week post-operation exam. Alouf said she called the workplace three days after the fact to say she was tipsy, not thinking right and shy of breath. He said she was advised to come into his Salem office, where he began an IV to give her liquids and anti-infection agents. He was likewise doing surgery on another patient and exchanged between the two.
He said he guided his attendant to advise her to go to LewisGale Medical Center's crisis space to preclude a blood coagulation in her lung, yet was later informed that the patient said she favored Carilion Clinic's Roanoke Memorial Hospital.
The patient had advised state agents that Alouf neglected to send her to the healing center, rather advising her she would be fine and sending her home.
At Roanoke Memorial, she was determined to have a contamination that prompted septic stun and experienced crisis surgery and two more operations amid a 40-day healing facility sit tight.
Alouf said he didn't require a rescue vehicle to take the lady to the healing center since she was strolling around, and he said the circumstance was confounding, as he was exchanging amongst her and the surgical patient.
He later went to Roanoke Memorial, where the lady was in the emergency unit. He offered to give the surgical group data.
"It didn't go well," he said. "They essentially took a gander at me as though I had three heads. They said, 'You don't work here. Get out.'"
Alouf approached two witnesses, a plastic specialist from Charlotte and a general specialist from Washington, D.C., to tell the board that he legitimately watched over the lady.
The board's master witness, however, said somebody who has had stomach surgery and calls to grumble of shortness of breath ought to be advised to go quickly to the crisis room and not to go to the specialist's office first.
Alouf said that he has performed more than 500 liposuction and tummy-tuck surgeries, and this is the stand out with such a poor result.
Whenever inquired as to whether he would do anything any other way, Alouf said, "No. I've lost a considerable measure of rest over this. It's destroyed my heart. Other than wishing she'd have called sooner, I can't consider what I could have done."
This was the third time in seven years that Alouf has been called before the load up for disciplinary activity. He was rebuked in 2009 for composing solutions in others' names for his own utilization. In 2011, he was censured for performing surgeries outside his expertise level and preparing. The board two years after the fact was fulfilled that Alouf had picked up the important preparing, and it appeared to be fulfilled Thursday that Alouf has proceeded with his preparation.
A Virginia Board of Medicine advisory group on Thursday released a protest against a Salem corrective specialist subsequent to finding an "absence of clear and persuading proof" regarding wrongdoing.
Dr. Greg Alouf confronted the casual hearing on claims that he neglected to appropriately tend to a patient who built up a serious disease and sepsis taking after liposuction and a tummy tuck.
click_here
"We're extremely satisfied with the board's choice, and we have stuck by the way that Dr. Alouf surpassed the standard of consideration," said his lawyer, Brian Lown. He said Alouf would not create an impression.
Notwithstanding the board grievance, the patient, a 61-year-old Botetourt County lady, recorded a $2.1 million misbehavior suit. Alouf's insurance agency settled it for an undisclosed sum.
The lady's wellbeing took a turn tailing her one-week post-operation exam. Alouf said she called the workplace three days after the fact to say she was tipsy, not thinking right and shy of breath. He said she was advised to come into his Salem office, where he began an IV to give her liquids and anti-infection agents. He was likewise doing surgery on another patient and exchanged between the two.
He said he guided his attendant to advise her to go to LewisGale Medical Center's crisis space to preclude a blood coagulation in her lung, yet was later informed that the patient said she favored Carilion Clinic's Roanoke Memorial Hospital.
The patient had advised state agents that Alouf neglected to send her to the healing center, rather advising her she would be fine and sending her home.
At Roanoke Memorial, she was determined to have a contamination that prompted septic stun and experienced crisis surgery and two more operations amid a 40-day healing facility sit tight.
Alouf said he didn't require a rescue vehicle to take the lady to the healing center since she was strolling around, and he said the circumstance was confounding, as he was exchanging amongst her and the surgical patient.
He later went to Roanoke Memorial, where the lady was in the emergency unit. He offered to give the surgical group data.
"It didn't go well," he said. "They essentially took a gander at me as though I had three heads. They said, 'You don't work here. Get out.'"
Alouf approached two witnesses, a plastic specialist from Charlotte and a general specialist from Washington, D.C., to tell the board that he legitimately watched over the lady.
The board's master witness, however, said somebody who has had stomach surgery and calls to grumble of shortness of breath ought to be advised to go quickly to the crisis room and not to go to the specialist's office first.
Alouf said that he has performed more than 500 liposuction and tummy-tuck surgeries, and this is the stand out with such a poor result.
Whenever inquired as to whether he would do anything any other way, Alouf said, "No. I've lost a considerable measure of rest over this. It's destroyed my heart. Other than wishing she'd have called sooner, I can't consider what I could have done."
This was the third time in seven years that Alouf has been called before the load up for disciplinary activity. He was rebuked in 2009 for composing solutions in others' names for his own utilization. In 2011, he was censured for performing surgeries outside his expertise level and preparing. The board two years after the fact was fulfilled that Alouf had picked up the important preparing, and it appeared to be fulfilled Thursday that Alouf has proceeded with his preparation.
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