Acupuncture needle left in man's groin, lawsuit claims
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - A Portland man
has filed a lawsuit seeking more than $3 million from an acupuncturist he says
left two needles in his skin, including one that later broke off and became
embedded in his groin.
The lawsuit says acupuncturist Lihua
Wang of the China Acupuncture and Herb Center in Portland failed to do pre- and
post-session needle counts during an October 2013 appointment, and then didn't
inspect Robert Shipp's body for leftover needles before sending him home.
Shipp had gone to the acupuncturist
to alleviate pain after an auto accident, his attorney, James Shadduck, said
Monday.
Shipp felt the needles in his skin
not long after the session, Shadduck said. He removed one of the needles, but
the other broke off into a part of his pelvis and has been embedded into the
area ever since, completely beneath the surface of the skin.
"He couldn't walk at all using
his left leg, the pain so severe, stabbing into a nerve," he said.
The lawsuit filed against the clinic
in Multnomah County Circuit Court says Shipp was bedridden for months, still
has trouble walking and can no longer work as an arborist. One surgical attempt
to remove the needle failed, and he will undergo another procedure next month
to try to get it out, Shadduck said.
Wang and another clinic
representative referred questions Monday to the American Acupuncture Council,
which provides malpractice insurance. Attorney and council Vice President Mike
Schroeder said he couldn't discuss the specifics of Shipp's case because of
laws regarding medical privacy.
"We are not aware of any proof
that the metal object in question is an acupuncture needle," Schroeder
said by phone from Southern California. "Since 1986, when the American
Acupuncture Council was formed, there has never been a recorded case of an
acupuncture needle breaking into pieces.
"You can bend them many, many
times and they don't break."
Shadduck says X-rays clearly show a
foreign object consistent with an acupuncture needle.
Shipp, 34, is married with three
children. Besides $2.5 million for Shipp's pain and suffering, the lawsuit
seeks $650,000 for the losses his family faces without a fully functioning
husband and father.
The source of this report is here.
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