The Kirov Ministry of Health is being "shaken" by millions of rubles for treatment

The Kirov Ministry of Health is being "shaken" by millions of rubles for treatment

      On April 4— the fortieth day after Vyacheslav Kochkin's death, his family gathered to say their last goodbyes.: "Goodbye and forgive me, brother, without you, there are four of us—your sisters and brothers-left."

      Remembering his brother, they talked about how 49-year-old Vyacheslav, who had recently married, wanted to live and dreamed of the future. How, following his young wife, he moved from Kirov to Shabalino, and how, when he was coming from the doctor, he fell and died. And, although you can't bring the dead back, the family council decided to go to court with a claim to recover five million rubles from the Ministry of Health and the Shabalin Central Hospital.

      ... On February 17, Vyacheslav Anatolyevich, feeling unwell, went to the hospital. He knew that with his "cardiac diagnosis" (heart failure) and hypertension, it was better not to wait "for it to pass by itself." Pretty quickly, he got an appointment with therapist Nina Klepce. The doctor listened attentively to the patient, making notes on a piece of paper — since Nina Ivanovna, who retired about 15 years ago, was not at home with the computer.

      Noting the patient's complaint of "burning in the chest," the therapist of the Verkhoshizhemskaya CRH issued a verdict: chronic gastritis. And what else can hurt a young man who "ate chips" today? The doctor did not look into Vyacheslav Anatolyevich's medical history, as she did not use a computer.

      After prescribing a festal and something else gastric, the therapist referred the patient to "feces" and FGDS, providing instructions: do not drink, eat or smoke before the procedure. Kochkin went home and died on the way. The autopsy revealed that death occurred from an acute myocardial infarction.

      Saving drowning people is a matter for drowning people themselves

      Oleg Kalinin, 47, an employee of a local sawmill, filed a lawsuit with the Ministry of Health and Verkhoshizhemskaya CRH. On February 13, he informed his comrades that he was "unable to stand watch." At first, Kalinin felt like his arm was numb, and then half of his body went numb.

      The workers, seeing that the patient was getting worse, took him to the Central Hospital. However, it was not possible to get an appointment with a therapist. "We only have appointments," the receptionist said, "and only on the 20th."

      Oleg's brother, who lives in Kirov, ordered him to take a taxi immediately and go to the hospital in the city. But as we approached the train station, it became clear that the passenger would not reach the clinic without an ambulance.

      Diagnosed with a stroke, an ambulance took Kalinin to cardiology, where doctors fought for his life for three weeks.

      The doctor told me to go to the morgue.

      It should be recalled that over the past year alone, four residents of Verkhoshizhemye have filed lawsuits against the district Central Bank. So Ekaterina Plastinina, waiting for the conclusion of the capital's expertise, collected from the clinic a million rubles in compensation for moral damage for the death of her husband Sergei, who was being treated for blood pressure, food poisoning, epilepsy, positional vertigo and osteochondrosis. And death came from the increasing swelling of the brain. Despite the fact that the sanaviation doctors who arrived in the village on a call... The patient's wife was immediately diagnosed with a stroke.

      Sergei Plastinin's mother also filed a lawsuit to recover a million rubles.

      In June last year, Svetlana Kolesnikova filed a complaint, according to which her 65-year—old brother Anatoly "died because of the doctors - they were not interested in the patient, as the whole hospital celebrated the Day of the doctor."

      Recall that on June 14, Svetlana Kolesnikova called the district doctor Svetlana Bragina to her brother's house, who was coughing violently. On the morning of June 16, when Anatoly began to wheeze and suffocate, an ambulance paramedic, having identified pneumonia, sent the patient to the Central Hospital, where he was sent to surgery. Kolesnikova started looking for the therapist on duty, who was the same Bragina that day, at seven in the morning.

      However, the doctor on duty continued to celebrate the Day of the doctor, saying on the phone: "I will not come." Although the surgery was already talking about Kolesnikov as a "serious patient," and nurses from other departments came to watch his slow demise.

      On the morning of the same day, local social networks, where they congratulated the doctors, "rang the bells": Help, he's dying!" The posts were redirected to the Moscow and Kirov Ministries of Health, the Investigative Committee and the Prosecutor's Office. Around noon, after endless calls to the chief doctor of the Central Hospital, he finally picked up the phone. And the "therapist on duty," Svetlana Bragina, appeared in the room where Kolesnikov was lying, "only at 14:00 hours. Just to say out loud, "He's going to die anyway." At the same time, the patient was conscious.

      Vladimir Smirnov, a member of the SVO, also appealed to the Soviet Court, in whose statement it was stated: "for compensation for moral damage to the Verkhoshizhemskaya CRH, which violated the applicant's rights when registering a disability group." The claim was denied, but the court of appeal declared Judge Olga Strelkova's decision illegal.

      However, Verkhoshizhemskaya CRH really "became famous" on February 26, when the Leninsky District Court sentenced Alexander Skrobants— a narcologist and deputy chief physician for... "drugs."

Другие Новости Кирова (НЗК)

The Kirov Ministry of Health is being "shaken" by millions of rubles for treatment

At the same time, several Kirov residents filed lawsuits against the Ministry of Health and the district Central Medical District demanding compensation for moral damage caused due to the failure to provide assistance to the patient, lack of control and lack of provision of high-quality medical services. The claims amount to millions of rubles.