Real case examples

Airway and respiratory failure case at Wellstar Atlanta Medical Center after car crash trauma

This complaint states as follows: The patient, a 53-year-old man, was involved in a car accident and taken to Wellstar Atlanta Medical Center with severe chest trauma. The emergency department physician, Dr. Richisa Salazar, failed to recognize the severity of his condition and did not promptly intubate him or take other measures to secure his airway. When the patient went into respiratory arrest, the trauma team also failed to emergently intubate him or perform a surgical airway procedure. The nurses caring for the patient also failed to closely monitor his vital signs. The patient died at the hospital due to the oxygen deprivation caused by the failure to properly manage his airway and respiratory status.

System
Wellstar Health System
Facility
Wellstar Atlanta Medical Center
Providers involved
Wellstar Atlanta Medical Center / Dr. Richisa Salazar / Trauma team / Nursing staff
Pattern
Severe chest trauma followed by failure to secure the airway, failed emergent intubation, and poor respiratory monitoring
Harm
Wrongful death from oxygen deprivation

Overview

This page concerns trauma care at Wellstar Atlanta Medical Center in which severe chest trauma allegedly required prompt airway protection, but neither the emergency physician nor the trauma team secured the airway in time, and nursing staff allegedly failed to closely monitor the patient’s respiratory decline.

Chronology

  1. The patient was involved in a car accident and taken to Wellstar Atlanta Medical Center with severe chest trauma.
  2. Dr. Richisa Salazar allegedly failed to recognize the severity of his condition and did not promptly intubate him or take other measures to secure his airway.
  3. When the patient went into respiratory arrest, the trauma team allegedly failed to emergently intubate him or perform a surgical airway procedure.
  4. The nurses allegedly failed to closely monitor his vital signs, and The patient died from oxygen deprivation caused by the failure to manage his airway and respiratory status.

Alleged failures

  • Dr. Richisa Salazar allegedly failed to recognize the severity of the patient’s chest-trauma condition and failed to secure his airway promptly.
  • The trauma team allegedly failed to emergently intubate him or perform a surgical airway once respiratory arrest occurred.
  • Nursing staff allegedly failed to closely monitor vital signs during the patient’s respiratory decline.

Entities and tags

Wellstar Health SystemWellstar Atlanta Medical CenterDr. Richisa SalazarTrauma teamSurgical airwayVital signsSevere chest traumaAirway emergencyFailure to intubateRespiratory arrestFailure to monitorEmergency medicineTrauma careCritical careHospital nursing

Questions this example answers

What does the Wellstar Atlanta Medical airway failure allege?

This complaint states as follows: The patient, a 53-year-old man, was involved in a car accident and taken to Wellstar Atlanta Medical Center with severe chest trauma. The emergency department physician, Dr. Richisa Salazar, failed to recognize the severity of his condition and did not promptly intubate him or take other measures to secure his airway. When the patient went into respiratory arrest, the trauma team also failed to emergently intubate him or perform a surgical airway procedure. The nurses caring for the patient also failed to closely monitor his vital signs. The patient died at the hospital due to the oxygen deprivation caused by the failure to properly manage his airway and respiratory status.

Who is identified in this public case example?

This public case example identifies Wellstar Atlanta Medical Center, Dr. Richisa Salazar, Trauma team, and Nursing staff. It also tags the source-supported entities Wellstar Health System, Wellstar Atlanta Medical Center, Dr. Richisa Salazar, Trauma team, and Surgical airway.

What alleged failures are summarized here?

Dr. Richisa Salazar allegedly failed to recognize the severity of the patient’s chest-trauma condition and failed to secure his airway promptly. The trauma team allegedly failed to emergently intubate him or perform a surgical airway once respiratory arrest occurred. Nursing staff allegedly failed to closely monitor vital signs during the patient’s respiratory decline.