Resource Center

Stories

The IRE Resource Center is a major research library containing more than 23,250 investigative stories — both print and broadcast.

These stories are searchable online or by contacting the Resource Center directly (573-882-3364 or rescntr@ire.org) where a researcher can help you pinpoint what you need.

Browse or search the tipsheet section of our library below. Stories are not available for download but can be easily ordered by contacting the Resource Center:



Search results for "malpractice" ...

  • StarTribune: Discipline Deferred

    A six-month investigation by the Star Tribune found that the Minnesota Board of Medical Practice, once considered a national leader in the regulation of licensed physicians, often doesn’t punish doctors whose mistakes harm patients or who demonstrate a pattern of substandard care. After analyzing information compiled by a national databank and reviewing thousands of pages of court and medical board records, the reporters found that the board, which regulates 20,000 physicians in the state, has been reluctant to punish some doctors who have harmed patients, including more than 100 doctors who were disciplined by other states and even doctors who lost privileges to practice at Minnesota hospitals. The investigation also showed that the board lags behind boards in other states in disclosing information to the public, including data on malpractice judgments or settlements. It also doesn’t disclose whether doctors have been disciplined by regulators in other states or lost their privileges to work in hospitals and other facilities for surgical mistakes and other problems.

    Tags: Board of Medical Practice; physicians; doctors; punishment; patients

    By Glenn Howatt; Richard Meryhew

    Star-Tribune (Casper Wyo.)

    2012

  • Bad Medicine

    "This series details the history of a Kansas City area neurosurgeon who has a long history of malpractice cases involving paralysis, disfigurement and deaths yet maintains a spotless Kansas medical license."

    Tags: FOI; malpractice; Department of Health and Human Services

    By Alan Bavley

    The Kansas City Star

    2011

  • The Case of Dr. Konasiewicz

    The investigation finds nearly 90 cases of alleged patient harm by a neurosurgeon, and shows that the hospital kept him on staff despite numerous warnings from other physicians about the quality of his care.

    Tags: doctor; negligence; hospital; malpractice

    By Brandon Stahl; Mark Stodghill

    Duluth News-Tribune (Duluth, Minn.)

    2011

  • "Hidden Mistakes"

    In Connecticut, the "adverse-event" law is supposed to ensure that hospitals report medical accidents that cause harm or death to patients to the state Department of Public Health. The law was revised in 2004 and since then the number of reported adverse-event cases has dropped "dramatically," suggesting that the medical mishaps are not being shared with the public and the state.

    Tags: Bridgeport Hospital; Connecticut Center for Patient Safety; Connecticut Department of Public Health; Wendy Furniss; malpractice; Hartford Hospital; Terri Schiavo; Institute of Medicine

    By Matthew Kauffman; Dave Altimari

    Courant (Hartford, Conn.)

    2009

  • When Caregivers Harm

    The investigation exposes failure of state nursing overseers to take corrective action against licensed caregivers accused of malpractice. Lack of competent oversight led impaired nurses to cause harm to patients through abuse, negligence and stealing patient medication for recreational use among other wrongdoings.

    Tags: nurses; California; Nursing Board; harm; caregivers; Tracy Weber; malpractice; drugs; abuse; negligence; discipline;

    By Tracy Weber

    Los Angeles Times

    2009

  • Carmelo Rodriguez Story

    Carmelo Rodriguez was a marine who said his skin cancer was misdiagnosed while he was serving in Iraq. The Carmelo Rodriguez story raises disturbing questions about the care that military doctors give to servicemen and women, and it presses the issue of whether soldiers should be able to sue the federal government for medical malpractice, which is not currently allowed.

    Tags: Carmelo Rodriguez; health care; veterans; military; Iraq; misdiagnosis; malpractice;

    By Byron Pitts; Rodney Comrie; Betty Chin; Kim Godwin; Rick Kaplan; Michael Mayberry

    CBS News

    2008

  • Prescription for Disaster

    This series examined the regulation of doctors in Arizona and found a number of loopholes that allow dangerous practitioners to diagnose Arizona residents and operate on them.

    Tags: malpractice; Arizona; loopholes; patient neglect; homeopathic medical licensing; alternative medicine

    By John Dickerson

    New Times (Phoenix)

    2008

  • OHSU: Shielded by the Law

    KATU examines the tort liability cap grated to Oregon Health and Science University, "one of the largest hospitals in Oregon." The cap "limits all malpractices awards to $200,000," which results in malpractice attorneys not taking on cases against the hospital.

    Tags: health care; patients; malpractice; law; lawyer; torts; liability; medical malpractice; doctors; hospitals; Oregon; Oregon Health and Science University

    By Anna Song; Chris Wilkinson; Mark Plut; Sean Broderick

    KATU-TV (Portland, Ore.)

    2007

  • Medical Secrets

    Dr. Richard Austin is a Toronto-area gynecologist who has gained a reputation for botching surgeries. This story happened when 14 women "claimed they suffered emotional and physical harm after going under his surgical knife." After the initial story was published, more women came forward to tell about how they had also suffered injuries, often to their bowels, during procedures such as hysterectomies.

    Tags: Medical malpractice; surgery; surgical injuries; hysterectomy; complications from surgery

    By Robert Cribb; Tanya Talaga

    Star (Toronto, Canada)

    2007

  • A Trail of Broken Promises

    The story follows an agency, known as the Southeastern Economic Development Corp., as the president used a legal settlement to get a small business owner to remove its claim on a piece of coveted land. The agency then ignored the settlement and allowed a developer with business ties to the chairman to take over the land. The broken settlement cost the small business owners their expansion plans and their business.

    Tags: small business owners; broken settlements; corporate malpractice; land development; Southeastern Economic Development Corp.

    By Andrew Donohue; Will Carless

    American Voices Newsletter

    2007