CBS News/ September 25, 2012, 2:36 PM

How could a nurse throw out a kidney before transplant?

YouTube/ UToledo

(AP) COLUMBUS, Ohio - A nurse who accidentally disposed of a living donor's kidney during a transplant said she didn't realize it was in chilled, protective slush that she removed from an operating room, took down a hall to a dirty utility room and "flushed down a hopper," according to a report released by health officials on Monday.

The nurse said she didn't realize the kidney was put in the sterile, semi-frozen solution because she had been on a break, with a different nurse in her place, when a surgeon made that announcement during the Aug. 10 transplant at the University of Toledo Medical Center, according to a review conducted by the state for the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and obtained by The Associated Press through a records request.

Kidney meant for transplantation thrown out at Ohio hospital
Pictures: Inside look at kidney transplant (GRAPHIC IMAGES)

Hospital administrative staff members interviewed on Aug. 21 hadn't determined how the nurse took the 13-gallon bag of slush, meant to extend the kidney's viability, past several members of the medical staff without them noticing a problem, the report said.

It said poor oversight and communication and insufficient policies were factors in the kidney's disposal, which prompted the voluntary, temporary suspension of the hospital's living-donor kidney transplant program and led to reviews by health officials and a consulting surgeon hired by the hospital.

The hospital, in northwest Ohio about 135 miles north of Columbus, "failed to provide adequate supervision and communication resulting in a donor's kidney being carried out of the operating room, down a hall, into a dirty utility room, and flushed down a hopper," the report stated.

The hospital has since enacted clearer policies to clarify communication between nurses who fill in for one another and to make sure nothing is removed from an operating room until the patient has been moved from it, the report said.

The surveyors determined the hospital wasn't in compliance with Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, or CMS, conditions of participation for transplant and surgical services. CMS will authorize a full review of the conditions of participation for the hospital, and, if it's found out of compliance, it could be terminated from the Medicare program, CMS spokeswoman Elizabeth Surgener said in an email.

The hospital, which says it offers specialty care in areas including cardiology, cancer, surgery and kidney transplantation, also may submit a plan of correction.

A spokesman said he had no comment to provide from the hospital Monday.

The hospital hasn't said what happened to the intended kidney recipient, who was supposed to receive an organ donated by her brother. The intended recipient and her brother were released from the hospital, which didn't identify them and said it couldn't say whether she received a different kidney.

Hospital officials apologized and hired a Texas surgeon to evaluate their transplant procedures but have not released the results of that evaluation.

The medical center suspended two nurses after the incident; one was later fired, and the other resigned, the hospital said. A surgeon was stripped of his title as director of some surgical services, and a surgical services administrator put on paid leave has resumed work.

The hospital also notified 975 patients and potential organ donors and recipients that they might need to make other arrangements for services typically provided through the program under review.

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
6 Comments Add a Comment
linkicon reporticon emailicon
FormerUSMCSergeant says:
A spokesman said he had no comment to provide from the hospital Monday.

---

What's he going to say?

We hire stupid nurses?
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
rwsmith29456 says:
"Ok, the old heart is out, it's time to put the transplant in place. Nurse? NURSE!? Where did the transplant heart go???"
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
erasmus111 says:
After all the things I've been reading about hospitals in America, I'm not surprised by this.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
andacar says:
I was a kidney transplant recipient myself a while ago, and I don't find this terribly shocking. I had many surgeries, and I remember being in pre-op and hearing the staff running around because they couldn't find so-and-so, or a form hadn't been signed, or the room was incorrectly booked. I don't know how many times while recuperating I'd ask for a nurse, or the doctor, only to be told by the staff that they had no idea where they were and no way to contact them. People wandered off to smoke or get a drink constantly. Patients rang and rang and they were ignored. There was no system at all as far as I could see, and I doubt this is going to change anything. Hospital administrators would rather quietly pay people off for errors like this instead of admitting any wrongdoing, which might lower revenues. They hide behind "no comment" like this hospital has and just wait till it all blows over. If that fails, they will resort to shrieking about how dare you criticize us. Standard procedure.
reply
Paula2439 replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
i too am a kidney pancreas transplant recipient. my surgery was held up because admissions could not find my "paperwork" to get to the tranplant team. the surgeons went ahead and performed the operation anyway. it was a minor glitch but i too can totally see this happening.
linkicon reporticon emailicon
far82 says:
Excuse me it can happen,being a nurse I know it can.Sad to say but hospital personel are human.
reply