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South China Morning Post
a day ago
- Health
- South China Morning Post
Appendicitis surgery blunder puts spotlight on Hong Kong public hospital safety
A recent surgical blunder involving a doctor mistakenly removing a patient's fallopian tube instead of her appendix has cast doubt on Hong Kong public hospitals' ability to effectively implement safety protocols and allocate manpower, advocates have said. Caritas Medical Centre revealed the blunder on Friday, which began with a 48-year-old woman being admitted for appendicitis last Tuesday. A higher surgical trainee performed a laparoscopic appendectomy on the patient the next day but wrongly removed her fallopian tube after misidentifying the organ, an error attributed to 'tissue adhesion near the surgical site', according to the public hospital. The mistake was only discovered five days later, on Monday, after the patient's condition failed to improve and a pathology report on Wednesday confirmed the wrong organ had been excised, forcing her to undergo a second operation. The hospital apologised for the incident and requested its department of surgery to undergo a review of its staffing deployment, supervision and coaching, among other aspects. Alex Lam Chi-yau, chairman of patient advocacy group Hong Kong Patients' Voices, described the incident as 'extremely serious' and a throwback to another case in March last year in which a woman's uterus had been wrongly removed due to mishandled lab samples. The Hospital Authority said in March that it would adopt six measures after a series of medical blunders last year. They included building a database to log patients' post-operation wounds.


CBC
18-03-2025
- Business
- CBC
Protest targets engineering firm hired by Ontario to work on bike lane removal
Social Sharing With Ontario poised to begin demolishing bike lanes in Toronto within days, advocacy groups are trying to pressure the engineering firm taking on part of the work to rip up its provincial contract. On Tuesday morning, a group of protesters gathered at the offices of Stantec Consulting Ltd., the engineering firm hired by the province to undertake a portion of the bike lane removal work. Demonstrators entered the building and presented Stantec with their demand to cancel the contract, which prompted Stantec to call the police, said Marcel Jansen, a member of Friday for Future Toronto, one of the groups behind the protest. Alex Lam, outreach co-ordinator for the same group, said they were one of two people were briefly detained by police and issued a $65 ticket — a price they say is well worth it. "We're talking about people's lives here," Lam said. "I think this action was good for highlighting this terrible thing that Stantec is doing. Agreeing to rip out bike lanes, put people at risk, increase congestion, increase emissions." The protest follows a similar campaign launched by advocacy group Cycle Toronto, which is urging people to email Stantec to demand they stop working on the plan. WATCH | Protesters rally against plan to remove Toronto bike lanes: Cyclists protest against removal of Toronto bike lanes 2 hours ago Duration 4:15 In an emailed statement, a spokesperson for Stantec wrote that they "respect the right of community to voice their opinions through peaceful protest." "Moreover, we also appreciate that our team members —also local Toronto residents—were able to safely enter their workplace," said Colin Nekolaichuk, a public relations manager for Stantec. The statement went on to say Stantec is working on developing technical drawings for "a small section" of the bike corridors, representing about 1.5 kilometres in total. After those drawings are complete, the firm will no longer be involved, Nekolaichuk said. City manager says Toronto still committed to cycling program Toronto City Manager Paul Johnson spoke to CBC Radio's Metro Morning on Tuesday about Ontario's plan — billed repeatedly by the province in the leadup to last month's election as necessary to reduce congestion. "This is their operation, this is their legislation," Johnson said. "The city will comply with this, but I just want to assure everybody that the cycling program in Toronto is strong. We are committed to cycling as an important mode of transportation." Last week, an Ontario court denied an injunction request from a group of cyclists, including Cycle Toronto, hoping to press pause on removal work until after their court challenge is heard in mid-April. WATCH | Internal documents reveal removing bike lands may not decrease congestion: Ontario's bike lane removal plan may not reduce congestion: internal documents 5 days ago Duration 2:39 New internal documents reveal that Ford's government is aware of many of the risks associated with removing bike lanes in Toronto. As CBC's Lane Harrison explains, the report shows the move may not have an impact on congestion and could increase collisions for everyone who uses roads. That means that the province could begin the process of undoing sections of cycle lanes on Bloor Street, Yonge Street, and University Avenue in Toronto as soon as Thursday. As part of that court process, a trove of internal provincial documents related to the plan were made public. Those document revealed that the province was warned that there was a "medium risk" that the changes will not achieve the "desired outcomes" of faster-moving traffic. They also included a report prepared for the Ministry of Transportation that estimated that collisions for all road users could spike by 54 per cent when the lanes are gone.