Authors: Arthur Hailey
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Fiction - General, #Medical, #drugs, #Fiction-Thrillers, #General & Literary Fiction, #Thrillers
about a penicillin allergy, which did not seem significant. The other was
the absence of any reference to heart disease, which did.
Still not overly concerned, but curious, Andrew decided to make discreet
inquiries about Wyrazik's death at the hospital later in the day.
That afternoon he went to the records office at St. Bede's. Wyrazik's
chart aiid other documents had been sent there from the medical floor
after the patient's death.
Andrew read the last entry on the medical chart first--the cause of
death, as recoyded by Dr. Townsend-then worked backward through the file.
Almost at once the order, in Townsend's handwriting, for six hundred
thousand units of penicillin leaped out at him, striking Andrew like a
thunderbolt. Equally shattering was the nurse's notation that the
penicillin had been administered and, as time sequences showed, it was
shortly before Wyrazik died.
Andrew read the rest of' the file-including the intern's note about
penicillin allergy and the earlier order for erythromycin-in a daze. When
he returned the file to a records clerk his hand was shaking, his heayi
pounding.
Questions hurled themselves. "at to do? Where to go next?
Andrew went to the morgue to view Wyrazik's body.
In death the eyes were closed, the dead man's features composed. Except
for a slight bluish, cyanotic tinge to the skin which could have been
from other causes, there were no telltale signs of the anaphylactic shock
which, Andrew now believed, had killed this young man needlessly,
He asked the morgue attendant who accompanied him, "Has an autopsy been
ordcred?"
"No, sir." Then the man added, "There's a sister who's supposed to be
coming from Kansas. There's to be cremation after she gets here."
Andrew's thoughts were in turmoil. Remembering his earlier experience
with the hospital administrator, he was stilt' uncertain about what to
do next. Clearly, something must be done, but what? Should he sound a
warning about the need for an autopsy? One thing Andrew was sure of: an
autopsy would show,there had been no heart failure. But even without an
autopsy the entries on the patient's chart were damning evidence.
By now it was early evening, most senior people in the hospital had gone
home, and there was little choice but to wait until next day.
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Throughout that night, while Celia slept beside him, unaware of her
husband's problem, he lay awake as courses of action chased themselves
around his mind. Ought he to go before colleagues in the hospital with
what he knew, or would impartial proceedings be more assurt,-d if he went
to authorities outside? Should he confront Noah Townsend first and hear
Noah's explanation? But then Andrew realized the futility of this, as
Noah's personality had clearly changed, even more than appeared on the
surface-the result of his drug addiction over years.
The Noah Andrew had once known and respected, and at moments loved, was
upright and honorable, holding the strongest views about ethics and
medicine, so that he would never have condoned in himself or others the
awful professional negligence, followed by subterfuge, which he had just
practiced. The old Noah Townsend would have stood up, confessed and taken
the consequences, no matter how harsh. No, a personal confrontation would
accomplish nothing.
Over it all, Andrew had a sense of great sadness and of loss.
In the end he decided wearily that he would keep what he knew within the
family of the hospital. If other, outside action needed to be taken, then
others in the hospital must decide. Next morning in his office he took
time to write a detailed summation of what he knew. Then, shortly before
noon, he went to St. Bede's and confronted the administrator.
If he closed his eyes, Andrew thought, he might well imagine he was at a
PTA meeting at the children's school, or perhaps in the boardroom of a
nuts-and-bolts industrial company making everyday, routine decisions.
The words flowed past him.
"May I have a resolution on that?" -
"Mr. Chairman, I propose
"Is there a seconder?"
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second that." been proposed and seconded . . . Those in favor of the res-
olution . . . "
A chorus of "aye.
"Against?"
Silence.
". . . declare the resolution carried By unanimous decision the hospital
privileges of Dr. Noah Townsend are suspended . . . "
Could this truly be the way it happened? This prosaic, formal, minor-key
accompaniment to deepest tragedy. Were these petty, pecksnifflan phrases
the best that could be found to signal the sudden, grievous ending of a
lifetime's work, a once dedicated man's career?
Andrew was not ashamed to find that tears were coursing down his face.
Aware that others seated around the hospital boardroom table were watching,
he made no attempt to hide them.
"Dr. Jordan," the chairman of the medical board executive committee said
considerately, "please believe me that the rest of us share your great
sadness. Noah was, and is, our friend and colleague too. We respect you for
doing what you have, which we are well aware was difficult. What we have
done was equally difficult, but equally necessary."
Andrew nodded, unable to speak.
The chairman was Dr. Ezra Gould. He was a neurologist and the chief of
medicine, having succeeded Noah Townsend in that office three years
earlier. Gould was small and soft-spoken, but quietly strong and greatly
respected at St. Bede's. The others on the committee were heads of
services--surgery, obstetrics and gynecology, pathology, pediatrics,
radiology, several more. Andrew knew most of them fairly well. They were
decent, sensitive, caring people, but doing what they had to, even though,
in Andrew's view, their action had been delayed too long.
"Mr. Chairman," Leonard Sweeting said, "I should inform the committee that
in anticipation of its decision I prepared a notice which will go
immediately to the entire hospital-nursing stations, admitting office,
pharmacy, and so on. In it I took the liberty of describing Dr. Townsend's
suspension as being 'because of health reasons.' I believe that's more
discreet than anything specific. Is that agreeable?"
Gould glanced inquiringly at the others. There were murmurs of assent.
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"It's agreeable," Gould said.
"I would also urge," the administrator continued, "that the details of
what has passed here be discussed outside this room as little as
possible."
Leonard Sweeting had guided the committee on procedure from the moment
the meeting's purpose had been made known-to ' the shock and
consternation of the senior doctors summoned here so hurriedly. Sweeting
had also, before the meeting began, had a hurried telephone consultation
with the hospital chairman, a veteran local lawyer, Fergus McNair, whose
practice was in Morristown. The conversation had been in Andrew's
presence and, while hearing only one side of it, Andrew did catch the
chairman's emphatic final words which rattled in the phone receiver,
"Protect the hospital."
"I'll do my best," the administrator had said.
After that Sweeting had gone into the boardroom, which adjoined his
office, closing the door behind him and leaving Andrew alone. In a few
minutes the door reopened and Andrew was summoned in.
All faces around the boardroom table were deadly serious.
"Dr. Jordan," the chairman, Dr. Gould, had said, "we have been informed
of the nature of your charges. Please tell us what you know."
Andrew had repeated what he had told the administrator earlier, at times
referring to his notes. Following his statement there were a few
questions and some discussion, but not much. Leonard Sweeting then
produced the hotspital's file on the deceased Kurt Wyrazik, which was
passed around and the patient's chart, with its damning entries, examined
amid doleful head shaking.
Andrew had the clear impression that although members of the committee
had not expected today's disclosures to unfold as they had, the subject
itself was no surprise to them.
The formal resolution had come next, stripping Noah Townsend of his
long-held status at St. Bede's.
Now the chief of pediatrics, a gaunt, slow-speaking New Englander, said,
"Something we haven't discussed is what's to happen concerning the young
man who died."
"Knowing what we do," the administrator answered, "it's essential that
an autopsy be performed. Just before this meeting I spoke by telephone
with the deceased's father in Kansas-a sister is on the way here--and the
father has given the necessary permission.
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So the autopsy will be done today." Sweeting glanced at the head of
pathology, who signified assent.
"All right," the pediatrics chief persisted, "but what do we tell his
family?"
"Quite frankly," Sweeting said, "because of the legal issues involved,
that is a delicate, potentially volatile subject. I suggest you leave a
decision on it to Dr. Gould, to me, and to Mr. McNair who will be here
shortly and who will also advise us legally." He added, "Perhaps, later
on, we will report back to this committee."
Dr. Gould asked the others, "Is that all right?" There were nods of
agreement and also, it seemed, a sense of relief.
Perhaps. Andrew thought: it was the operative word. Perhaps . . . we will
report back to this committee. And perhaps we wont.
What the hospital, in the persons of Leonard Sweeting and his boss Fergus
McNair, would undoubtedly like was for everything to be hushed up, and
for young Kurt Wyrazik, the innocent victim, to be cremated and
forgotten. In a way, Andrew supposed, you couldn't blame Sweeting or
McNair. They had their responsibilities. And if all this came to a
malpractice case in court, a jury award or financial settlement could be
horrendous. Whether insurance would cover it, Andrew had no idea and
didn't care. The only thing he was sure of was that he would not be part
of a cover-up himself.
There had been a buzz of conversation and the chairman rapped a gavel for
attention.
"Now," Dr. Gould said, "we come to the hardest part." He glanced around
the room. "I will have to go to Noah Townsend and tell him what has been
decided here. I understand he is still in the hospital. Is there anyone
who chooses to come with me?"
Andrew said, "I'll come with you." It was, he thought, the very least
that he could do. He owed that much to Noah.
"Thank you, Andrew." Gould nodded his appreciation.
In the calm of later, quiet reflection, and despite the pathetic,
strident scene that followed, Andrew had an instinct that Noah Townsend
had been waiting for them and was relieved to see them come.
As Dr. Ezra Gould and Andrew stepped out of an elevator on the medical
floor, to their right were a busy corridor, patients' rooms and a nursing
station. At the end of the corridor Townsend was standing, doing nothing,
appearing to be looking into space.