2018.08.19 03:39
Escape from the Mayo Clinic: How CNN reported the story
By Elizabeth Cohen and John Bonifield, CNN Health Updated 9:15 AM ET, Fri August 17, 2018
More details of the account including a comprehensive video:
This updated report is part of the series,"Escape from the Mayo Clinic." It explains how CNN reported the story and responds to criticisms made by Mayo Clinic officials after CNN published the first and second parts.
In its response: Mayo refuses to acknowledge that the patient in this story, Alyssa Gilderhus, an adult, asked to be transferred, and that her family asked as well. Mayo claims that it had no idea Alyssa wanted to leave Mayo, even though there's written proof that she did, and Mayo had access to those writings.
Mayo completely misrepresents the nature of a meeting held between CNN staffers and Mayo staffers in March. Mayo insisted that the meeting remain off the record, yet now says that the meeting was on the record. CNN has written proof that Mayo's public statements regarding this meeting are false.
Mayo fails to discuss that while it said it would be dangerous for her to go home, she has flourished in the year and a half since she left Mayo. She no longer needs physical or speech therapy and will start college in a few weeks.
Mayo also has made critical misrepresentations about the ground rules for a four-hour meeting five Mayo staffers had with the authors of this story, Elizabeth Cohen and John Bonifield, on March 28 at Mayo offices in Rochester, Minnesota. (Highlights in emails were added by CNN.) |
"Mayo refuses to acknowledge that although Mayo doctors said Alyssa was "desperately ill"
and needed to stay in the hospital, less than 12 hours after Alyssa left the hospital,
Sanford Health, a teaching hospital in South Dakota, said that Alyssa did not need to be hospitalized
and sent her home."
Mayo Clinic has been playing the God over the entire doctors in America.
Now, for some reason, they must be getting hungry for money
and need to keep patients longer in their hospital.
This case may be just a tiny tip of a huge iceberg. I may guess that they might have bilked Medicare
and other insurance companies possibly billions of dollars for nothing.
Not only that, some physicians in Mayo may be good ones
but there may be a plenty of bad apples among the "Mayo doctors" (above) too.