Saturday, November 03, 2007
You’ll be a Dentist; you have a talent for causing big pain…
A Syracuse New York Dentist could soon be feeling the financial pain, after one of his patients launched legal proceedings after an alleged impromptu dance session in the dental office.
According to the plaintiff, Brandy Fanning, her dentist, Dr. George Trusty was grooving to the vibes of the song Car Wash, when he broke off the drill bit he was using to break up a molar, resulting in the bit to become lodged near her eye.
Judging by the reports from the dental chair, Doctor Trusty's extraction skills seem a tad rusty, as do some of his follow up care theories.
While we can understand enjoying the Car Wash library of songs, surely a more appropriate tune for a dancing dentist could have come from the Little Shop of Horrors soundtrack!
Syracuse, N.Y. dentist sued for dancing while drilling, injuring patient
Published: Friday, November 2, 2007 4:14 PM ET
Canadian Press: THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SYRACUSE, N.Y. - A dentist was dancing to a song on the radio while drilling on a woman's tooth, and she wound up in the hospital when the drill bit snapped off and lodged near her eye, a lawsuit alleges.
Brandy Fanning, 31, said she had to undergo emergency surgery and spent three days in the hospital because of the October 2004 mishap.
The federal lawsuit filed last month against Dr. George Trusty seeks US$600,000 for her medical expenses, pain and suffering.
Trusty, 57, a dentist at Syracuse Community Health Center, declined to comment, as did Dr. Ruben Cowart, the centre’s president and CEO.
Fanning said she went to the centre’s emergency dental clinic after pain in a left molar started getting worse. With a root canal ruled out as an option, Trusty gave her some Novocain and began drilling to break up the tooth before extracting it, she said.
As Trusty drilled, he was "performing rhythmical steps and movements to the song 'Car Wash',"' which was on the radio, according to the lawsuit. Then, Fanning heard a snap.
Trusty tried to use a metal hook to pull the bit out, but that only pushed it farther up, driving it through the sinus and bone near her eye socket, the lawsuit alleged.
After first minimizing the problem, Trusty talked to an oral surgeon to set up an appointment, and then told Fanning she needed to get to an emergency room immediately, according to the lawsuit.
She claimed he had initially told she would likely sneeze the drill bit out, but doctors said later that if she really had sneezed, the drill bit could have blinded her left eye.
Fanning said she sued because Trusty failed on a promise to pay her medical bills. She said she still suffers facial swelling, nerve damage and chronic infections.
The suit is in federal court because the health centre operates under federal law.
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