AXED DOC'S NEW JOB

Surgeon sacked after his patient died during the UK’s first robotic heart op is working at another hospital

Sukumaran Nair admitted he was 'running before he could walk' in using the Da Vinci machine when a patient with 99 per cent chance of surviving during the routine surgery died

A SURGEON sacked after his patient died during the UK’s first robotic heart op is working at another hospital, an inquest heard yesterday.

Sukumaran Nair admitted he was “running before he could walk” in using the Da Vinci machine as he hadn’t had enough training.

Advertisement
Heart surgeon Sukumaran Nair pictured leaving Newcastle Civic centre on 6 November after an inquest into the death of a patient at Freeman Hospital during the UK's first robotic hear opCredit: North News and Pictures

Retired music teacher Stephen Pettitt, 69, had a 99 per cent chance of surviving the routine surgery.

But the robot controlled by Nair stitched his heart incorrectly and use was stopped when its camera was “blinded by blood”.

Nair told the inquest: “I should have gained more experience.”

Stephen, a dad of three, suffered organ failure and died eight days later at the Freeman Hospital, Newcastle. Nair is now working in Scotland but not in robotic surgery.

Advertisement

most read in uk news

TWISTED KILLER
Moment driver asks 'am I going to jail?' after killing teen in horror crash
MUM KILLING
Man denies murder of mum-of-six who was found on path while walking her dog
TRAGIC END
Mum accused of killing son, 9, after 'smashing into van & cattle truck in crash'
WHAT HAPPENED?
Five biggest questions that STILL remain as body found in search for twins

Coroner Karen Dilks recorded a narrative verdict, citing “complications” in surgery. The hospital halted use of robots for heart ops after the death in 2015.

Pepper the robot makes history by being grilled in Parliament
Topics
Advertisement
machibet777.com