Recent patient deaths and serious complications have resulted in increased scrutiny of Florida plastic surgery centers. Learn about patient deaths and efforts to improve patient safety with a new bill that, if passed, implements important regulations.
NBC Miami reported in 2016 that plastic surgeon Dr. Osak Omulepu performed the wrong procedure on a patient. She discovered that she received a tummy tuck instead of the correct surgery, a Brazilian Butt Lift. The patient required a seven-day hospital stay after seeking medical attention for the seven-inch hole in her stomach. Although NBC received information that the doctor no longer worked at the clinic, he practiced at another nearby plastic surgery center.
USA Today and the Naples Daily News discovered that at another clinic, Dr. Ismael Labrador performed as many as eight procedures a day. The USA Today investigation yielded information that eight women died after procedures performed at the plastic surgery center. Several other patients experienced critical complications. The clinic changed names three times, yet Dr. Labrador remained at the center.
Senator Anitere Flores filed a 42-page bill that will require Florida’s plastic surgery centers to undergo a regulatory makeover. The bill proposes that all Florida plastic surgery centers be registered to a licensed physician, not a business. If a serious injury or death occurs, the center or doctor could lose registration. It also would require a clear record for five years before anyone opens a plastic surgery center.
Also, the Florida Board of Medicine plans to revisit allowing liposuction procedures in doctors’ offices, particularly regulation of gluteal fat grafting, which averages one death per 3,000 procedures. This action hopefully deters two Miami-area plastic surgery centers, where the death rate makes up a significant portion of plastic surgery-related deaths in Florida.
Attorney John Leighton offers additional tips on avoiding medical mistakes:
Leighton Panoff Law specializes in representing victims of medical mistakes. Founding partner John Elliott Leighton is a