HomePoliticsNEVADA MEDICAL BOARD REFUSING TO PROTECT VETERANS FROM BAD DOCTOR AFTER DEATHS Politics NEVADA MEDICAL BOARD REFUSING TO PROTECT VETERANS FROM BAD DOCTOR AFTER DEATHS July 6, 2019 Rob Lauer Political Reporter Nevada State Board of Medical Examiners, is the agency responsible for investigating complaints about doctors. Their Mission statement reads: The Nevada State Board of Medical Examiners serves the state of Nevada by ensuring that only well-qualified, competent physicians, physician assistants, practitioners of respiratory care and perfusionists receive licenses to practice in Nevada. The Board responds with expediency to complaints against our licensees by conducting fair, complete investigations that result in appropriate action. In all Board activities, the Board will place the interests of the public before the interests of the medical profession and encourage public input and involvement to help educate the public as we improve the quality of medical practice in Nevada. Most of the doctors who work at the VA are licensed by the State of Nevada. Which means they fall under the Nevada State Board of Medical Examiners supervision. So in Dec 2017 a formal complaint was filed against Dr. Ramu Komanduri, the Chief Doctor of the Southern Nevada VA with the Nevada State Board of Medical Examiners over the deaths of several Veterans. The complaint alleged that the Chief Doctor of the VA, who is licensed by the state of Nevada, failed to properly supervise his medical staff allowing serious errors leading to the deaths of Veterans. To date Nevada State Board of Medical Examiners has refused to take any action. In addition, they claim the investigative process is secret. There is literally no oversight by the public of investigations into bad doctors. And this is standard procedure for our Nevada State Government regulatory process. They operate completely in secret. The medical board sent me an letter on June 6, 2019 claiming they are still investigating the Dr. now more than a year and a half after the initial complaint. Allowing the doctors to continue to supervise hundreds of medical staff without any discipline to date for the deaths of veterans The Original Story: December 20, 2017 Today, a formal complaint was filed with the Nevada Medical Board against Dr. Ramu Komanduri, Chief of Staff of the VA Southern Nevada Health Care System in the death of Army Veteran Stephen Carey. Stephen T. Carey was 42 years old last year when he died from Stage 4 cancer all alone in his mother’s basement. Stephen’s destiny was cast in stone, according to a lawsuit filed recently against the VA for Malpractice, when VA doctors failed to test and diagnose renal cancer back in 2011 through 2015 on 3 separate occasions. The death stemmed from a cost savings practice at the VA where nurses and non-licensed medical staff cancel consults after Licensed Medical Doctors who’ve examine veterans issue referrals (consult) to a specialist. This practice by the VA is a direct threat to the lives of Veterans. The practice is done with reckless disregard to the current health issues and needs of Veterans in order to save money for the VA. Dr. Komanduri, Chief of Staff of the VA Southern Nevada Health Care System has full knowledge of this practice that has led to deaths and further damage to patients through unnecessary delays. According to this Veteran, Dr. Komanduri refuses to take calls from Veterans with medical issues and delays in care. He has shown a total disregard for the health and well being of veterans under his care. According to outside urologist, Dr. Kelly, who reviewed Stephen’s case, “There were three separate occasions during which time Stephen could have been diagnosed with renal cancer carcinoma… during that time in which Stephen’s cancer could have been diagnosed and most likely cured was ultimately fatal to his survival.” Direct from the Complaint filed with the Nevada medical review board: Affidavit of Mark J. Kelly, M.D On January 3, 201 1 (Monday) at approximately 1:23 a.m., Mr. Cary presented himself to the emergency room of the Mike O’Callaghan Federal Hospital at Nellis Air Force Base in Las Vegas, Nevada (“Nellis Federal Hospital”). According to the hospital’s intake sheet, Mr. Cary’s chief complaint was “blood in urine.” Emergency room staff noted that Mr. Cary told them he had been “peeing straight blood” and that it had “started Friday night.” Dr. Phil Goebel, M.D., the attending physician that morning, ordered an emergency, noncontrast CT scan to be performed upon Mr. Cary. The test results revealed a solid lesion in his kidney and concern was appropriately focused at that time on the possibility that this lesion represented renal cell carcinoma. Mr. Cary’s results were interpreted that same morning, at approximately 5:29 a.m., by Valor Teleradiology. Dr. Goebel appropriately recognized the severity of these findings and the maxim that visible blood in the urine is a malignancy until proven otherwise and notified Mr. Cary that he was initiating a referral to urology and medical oncology to be performed within 72 hours (“urology and oncology will be calling you to set up appointments to further evaluate the blood in your urine and the mass on your kidney and in your liver”). Dr. Eric B. Schmell, M.D., the interpreting physician for Valor Teleradiology, noted “the findings could represent a renal cell carcinoma with hepatic metastases. A CT with IV contrast is recommended for further evaluation.” Computed tomography or “CT” is the standard medical test that can reveal die presence of life-threatening malignancies in patients presenting with blood in their urine that cannot be seen in a conventional X-ray. Proper administration of the appropriate CT Imaging with and without Intravenous Contrast is crucial to the detection of renal cell carcinoma. b. The same morning, January 3, 2011 at approximately 4:21 a.m., Dr. Camilo Tabora, M.D. confirmed Dr. Goebel’s directive by noting tire following: “patient found to have a 3.2 cm left renal mass and 3.8 cm hepatic mass suspicious for cancer. Patient needs work up. Referred to urology and oncology.” However, five hours later, or at 9:12 a.m., Dr. Robert Sarazen, M.D. dictated the following: “Reviewed ER note. Urology consult canceled. I have ordered labs, CT scan of chest/abdomen/ and pelvis. Will have the patient come in for evaluation ASAP.” Issue #1 When Dr. Robert Sarazen, M.D., who never examined Mr. Caery, never spoke with Mr. Carey, never spoke with the Doctors who examined Mr.Carey, and still canceled Mr.Carey’s consult from Doctors who did examined the patient, was not done in the best interest of patient Cary, but part of the VA’s cost-saving scheme. Dr. Sarazen’s actions were reckless and callous and violated Dr. Sarazen’s oath and ultimately cost Mr. Cary his life. Issue #2 The VA also uses nurses and non-licensed medical staff to cancel consults from Licensed Doctors. This practice by the VA is a direct threat to the lives of Veterans. It will be proven that this practice is done with reckless disregard to the current health issues of Veterans in order to save money for the VA. Dr. Komanduri, Chief of Staff of the VA Southern Nevada Health Care System has full knowledge of this practice that has led to the deaths and further damage to patients through unnecessary delays. Stephens’s family filed a claim (before filing their lawsuit) with the VA seeking help, which was denied. The VA has failed to help his family since his death. Attorney Paul Padda took the case and filed a lawsuit against the VA in U.S. Federal District Court and is awaiting a trial date. The Doctors who failed Stephen continue to work at the VA today. 360Daily.net reached out to the VA for comment on this story but they refused to comment. President Trump recently signed the VA Accountability Act providing more authority to fire VA personnel. Currently, the life of a Veteran is only worth $350,000 under caps here in Nevada and that’s before attorney fees. The complaint accuses Dr. Komanduri of displaying: “Gross Negligence, Intentional Disregard for the safety of patients Failure to Supervise Medical Staff Failure to provide reasonable medical care Failure to put the best interests of patients first. Failure to timely following up in a medically necessarily timely manner following a medical issue with the patient.” The complaint also listed several other cases in which Dr. Komanduri failed to provide proper medical supervision. The complaint goes on to state that “Dr. Komanduri has refused repeatedly to take phone calls from veterans who have serious medical issues and who cannot gain access to medical care due to the incompetent bureaucracy that is creating medically lethal delays. Delays he could remedy with one phone call to his staff.”