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Gosnell
and his staff made inadequate efforts to resuscitate Mrs. Mongar
Editor’s note. Abortionist
Kermit Gosnell is charged with eight counts of murder and will
be arraigned March 2. One of those eight counts is for the death
of 41-year-old Karnamaya Mongar. For the past three days we’ve
run excerpts from the Grand Jury’s report on the circumstances
surrounding Mrs. Mongar’s death.
Sherry West told
detectives that, some time after Williams had sedated Mrs.
Mongar, Williams came out of the procedure room, yelling that
“she needed help.” Liz Hampton testified that she was in the
room next to the procedure room when Williams emerged and said
that she was having a problem. Although Hampton could not
remember if Gosnell was in the procedure room when Williams came
out, West said that when she subsequently entered the procedure
room, Gosnell was there performing what she thought was CPR on
Mrs. Mongar. Eileen O’Neill eventually came in to assist Gosnell,
according to West.
O’Neill testified that
Lynda Williams summoned her from her second-floor office. The
unlicensed “doctor” told the Grand Jury that she thought Mrs.
Mongar was already dead by the time she got to the procedure
room. Nevertheless, she took over administering CPR to the
lifeless body because, she said, Gosnell was not doing the CPR
correctly. Gosnell, meanwhile, left to retrieve the clinic’s
only “crash cart” from the third floor. A crash cart is usually
a set of drawers or shelves that contains the tools and drugs
needed to treat a person in or near cardiac arrest.
After returning several
minutes later with the medicine case, however, Gosnell did not
use any of the drugs in it to try to save Mrs. Mongar’s life.
O’Neill said that she tried to use the defibrillator “paddles”
to revive Mrs. Mongar, but that they did not work. Still no one
called 911.
Even though an overdose
was immediately suspected as the cause of Mrs. Mongar’s cardiac
arrest, O’Neill testified that Gosnell instructed her not to
administer Narcan, a drug that could have reversed the effects
of the Demerol. She said that Gosnell told her it would not work
on Demerol – which is not true according to the toxicology
expert who appeared before the Grand Jury. O’Neill testified
that Gosnell took the time to look through the case of medicines
and that he was “thrilled” to find it was up-to-date. This is
puzzling, since he seemed to have no intent of actually using
the drugs to try to save Mrs. Mongar.
Gosnell and his staff
attempted to cover up the cause of Mrs. Mongar’s death before
paramedics arrived.
Gosnell’s odd behavior –
retrieving the clinic’s case of emergency medicines from the
third floor, appearing thrilled that the case supposedly was up
to date, and then making no effort to use the supplies to
resuscitate his patient – can only be explained as a cover-up:
He simply wanted to have a “crash cart” on hand when the
paramedics were finally summoned. Gosnell clearly knew it was a
violation of the law – as well as of the standards of the
medical profession – to sedate a patient without having
resuscitation drugs and equipment ready for use.
In fact, when the
ambulance was finally called, the paramedics noted that the
patient had no IV access for administering life-saving drugs.
Someone had evidently taken out the IV access that had been used
that afternoon and evening to administer sedatives. No one told
the paramedics that Mrs. Mongar had been given heavy doses of
Demerol before her heart stopped. There is no other explanation
than that Gosnell was trying to hide from the paramedics the
cause of Mrs. Mongar’s cardiac arrest. The effect of this
deception was to further delay potentially effective efforts to
save the patient’s life.
It is also odd that
Gosnell placed Karnamaya Mongar’s feet in the stirrups of the
procedure table before the paramedics arrived. Eileen O’Neill
and Ashley Baldwin both testified that they remembered clearly
that the patient’s legs were dangling off the table when they
saw her lifeless body before the paramedics were called. Yet,
when the paramedics arrived, her feet were in the stirrups, as
if she had just undergone the abortion procedure.
Ashley Baldwin also
testified that, after she called 911, she went back into the
procedure room where Gosnell was with Mrs. Mongar. O’Neill was
back upstairs by then, and Ashley never even knew she had been
in the room for nearly 10 minutes performing CPR and discussing
the crash cart with Gosnell. It was only then, a good 10 minutes
after O’Neill thought Mrs. Mongar was dead, that Gosnell asked
Ashley to plug in the pulse oximeter – the machine that, had it
worked, should have been used to monitor Mrs. Mongar’s blood
oxygen level during the procedure.
This action by Gosnell
was, again, entirely for appearances – an effort to prevent the
paramedics from noticing that the monitor was unplugged. Ashley
said that Gosnell knew the machine was broken and had been for
months. He had said he would get it fixed, but he never did. She
said it shocked her when she tried to plug it in the night Mrs.
Mongar died.
Part One
Part Two |