Guest guest Posted July 27, 2004 Report Share Posted July 27, 2004 " Just Take some Tylenol, " Doctors Said - And Then After More Neglect The Patient Died http://www.iht.com/articles/531123.html Korean's U.S. trip ends in death, and anger Marc Santora NYT Monday, July 26, 2004 NEW YORK Moon Chul Sun's head was throbbing, so painful it was a struggle to stand. For three days, after being taken to the emergency room at the Jamaica Hospital Medical Center because of a soccer injury, Moon, a South Korean here on a tourist visa, barely moved from his hospital bed, largely unable to communicate with the doctors and staff because he spoke no English. He just waited. His wife pleaded in Korean with people at two different hospitals who often did not fully understand what she was saying, begging for someone to ease her husband's pain or at least explain to her the mystery of his illness. After 72 hours of fractured conversations and a series of medical tests, an interpreter arrived to tell Moon's wife that her husband was being discharged. " They said, 'Just take some Tylenol,' " Moon's wife said. One month and several confounding hospital visits later, Moon was dead, and his wife says she was told that the cause was an injury to his head. In the arc of his 34-day journey through the medical world, Moon struggled to understand his options even as what ailed him remained a mystery to his family because of communication problems. There were confusing conversations about insurance and a staggering bill that left his family reeling. There was the option to apply for Medicaid, the government program for people who cannot afford care. That was declined by the hard-working family, a decision fueled in part by pride, fear and a lack of information. There would be friends and neighbors drawn into the story, brought along to try and help the family understand exactly what the medical professionals were saying or concluding. In the end, there would be death and anger. The hospitals say they did everything they could for Moon, performing many, tests, directing him to the Medicaid program and even scheduling a follow-up appointment that he did not keep. While unable to go into specific details because of privacy concerns, officials at the hospital system that treated him suggested that Moon's original injury appeared not to have been related to the cause of death. But, as public health experts and even officials of the hospitals that treated him acknowledge, Moon's death illustrates the flaws in a health care system that all too often can seem broken to those without insurance - riddled with cracks and complications that are compounded when cultural taboos and language barriers are thrown into the mix. For the most vulnerable, emergency rooms are the place of first resort. At least there they are assured treatment. Once discharged, they often have no contact in the medical community and become lost in a system that can barely handle the problems on its doorstep looking to come in, much less those already sent back outside. Hospitals feel overwhelmed, and patients feel as if they are treated not as people but as problems. Confusion about coverage is the rule, and basic communication is often imperfect. And in New York, where the number of people with no health insurance is nearing 27 percent, not including undocumented immigrants, the problem is all the more urgent, patients and practitioners say. David Rosen, the president of MediSys Health Network, which owns and operates three hospitals in New York City, Jamaica, Flushing and Brookdale, said, " You have a system that doesn't work. " Congress, he said, has systematically sought to eliminate a whole class of people from being eligible for assistance. Yet, he said, his hospitals provide a standard of care that is top-notch regardless of the patients' ability to pay. Still, he added, the health care system has largely " written these people off. " Moon's wife, 44, who asked that her name not be used because she feared public exposure could cause her children trouble, told the story of her husband while sitting on the floor of the family's one-bedroom apartment in Flushing, a neighborhood in the New York City borough of Queens that has long been a magnet for Asian immigrants. As she held her head in her hand, wiping away frequent tears, she related the details of her husband's hospital treatments. Her sister-in-law, Young Sook Kim, who traveled to America to attend Moon's funeral, sat next to her and picked up the story when Moon's wife became too emotional to continue. Both women spoke through an interpreter. Moon arrived in the United States 10 months ago, after having saved enough money to try to gain a foothold in this country. A skilled carpenter in South Korea, he came with the aim of eventually gaining a green card because he wanted his children to be educated here. After staying with a relative in Boston, Moon moved to Queens, where he felt that given the borough's large Korean community, he could communicate and find decent work. There are some 62,000 Koreans in Queens. After six months, Moon's wife, two daughters - 15 and 13 - and 12-year-old son joined him. " He was happy because he found this place good for his children, " Kim said. " He was healthy, very strong and he played soccer every day. " On Sunday, June 6, at 6:30 a.m., Moon went over to the local high school to sign up for the summer league and play in a match. During the game he got sick, said his wife. He returned home early, around 9 a.m., complaining of a headache. He thought it might have been the result of a being hit hard in the head by the ball, his wife said. By midnight the headache had not gone away, and Moon's wife called for an ambulance. He was taken to Flushing Hospital Medical Center. He was given a CAT scan, Moon's wife said, and an interpreter said that it showed a blood build-up in a vein in his brain. Hospital workers told the couple that Moon would have to be taken to Jamaica Hospital, because it had specialists trained to handle such cases, Moon's wife said. There, workers gave Moon another CAT scan, according to his wife, and told him to wait 72 hours. Moon's wife said he was discharged on June 9, with the sole instruction, as the couple understood it, to take Tylenol. Before they left, Moon's wife said, hospital workers asked if they had insurance, and she replied that the family had none. " He was still sick, " Moon's wife said. She said that the interpreter at the hospital spoke little Korean and that they left confused. Workers there told them to return to the hospital in 10 days, his wife said. Dr. Jam Ghajar, the chief of neurosurgery at Jamaica and who works at the other MediSys hospitals, says that head trauma is the leading cause of death among young people - roughly two million cases are treated annually - and that discharging a patient whose CAT scan shows that bleeding has stopped is standard. But the problem for Moon, and thousands of other uninsured patients like him, is that while it is against state law not to treat patients who show up in the emergency room, once discharged, these patients enter a much murkier world, where follow-up treatment is often inadequately discussed. " The experience is daunting and complex, " said Adam Gurvitch, the director of Health Advocacy, a group for the uninsured. " Fortunately, we hear few stories that end in death. " Moon and his wife returned to Jamaica Hospital on June 18, but this time he did not go to the emergency room. He was still suffering severe headaches and spending most of his time on his couch at home, and his wife said that workers there told him that he had to pay $95, or E78, to see a doctor. After paying the money, Moon's wife said, a doctor told the couple that tests could not be run that day, and that they should come back on June 21. On the appointed day Moon showed up, accompanied by his wife and a neighbor who spoke English. Moon's wife said that hospital workers told them that a CAT scan would cost $552 and that they would have to pay at least half of the cost to have the test. They paid, the test was completed and the couple and their neighbor went home to wait for the results. Moon and his wife returned to the hospital a few days later, this time with their eldest daughter, who spoke a little English. The hospital said they had to pay $95 to see the doctor again, and told them for the first time that they owed $4,500 for Moon's previous hospitalization, Moon's wife said. They could not pay. Moon's wife said they never got to meet with a doctor again. Rosen, the MediSys president, could not explain what happened in this case, citing patient privacy laws, but said that hospitals officials had reviewed the case and were confident that they had done everything right. He added that his hospitals never refuse to treat patients, even those who cannot pay. He said that there might have been a communication problem, because there had been an appointment for Moon to meet with a doctor on June 30, an appointment he missed. Rosen also said that the follow-up CAT scan on June 21 showed no new problems. But Moon's wife said that no one had shared that result with her. She said that the couple had set about trying to make sense of their payment options. They were told they could apply for Medicaid, but hesitated. " It means being poor, " Moon's wife said. " We did not want our children to grow up with that stigma. " She also said she worried that if the family took the assistance, their children's chances of getting green cards would be jeopardized. When they asked a woman working in the Medicaid office for guidance, according to Moon's wife, she replied, " It may or it may not. " In Moon's case, a medical emergency, it would not have made a difference, according to immigration lawyers. Immigrant families entertain such fears all too often, according to Dr. Bruce Vladeck, a professor of health policy at Mount Sinai School of Medicine. Moon and his wife decided to try and pay off the debt on their own. For days, Moon's headaches continued, and the hospital did not contact him, his wife said. On July 6, Moon decided to get off the couch and go help a friend work on a kitchen. While there, he became violently ill, an ambulance was called and he was taken once again to Flushing Hospital. Tests this time showed that there was blood in his brain that had clotted, his wife said. He would need emergency surgery. He was transferred to Brookdale University Hospital and Medical Center. Two operations later, he was dead. Moon's wife said that the doctor, whose name she could not recall, asked, " Why didn't you bring him in sooner? " She is now trying to make sense of it all. With her three children and a $1,200 monthly rent payment to make, she said she did not know how much longer she could stay in New York but she needed answers. She recalled the last words of her husband, as they rushed to the third and final hospital he would visit. " He said, 'I don't understand,' " she recalled. " I don't understand why I am sick like this. I can't be sick like this. " The New York Times Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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