Censured surgeon has left Children’s Hospital

Four-and-a-half  years ago, one of Western New York’s leading pediatric surgeons was censured by the New York Department of Health for negligence and professional misconduct.

Today, she’s back at the operating table, licensed to perform surgery in four states. But she’s left Buffalo behind, selling her house here and setting up a new practice in Roanoke, Virginia. 

In April 2018, pediatric surgeon Dr. Kathryn Bass — then director of trauma at John R. Oishei Children’s Hospital — was hit with a formal reprimand and two years of probation by the state health department after she agreed to not contest one charge of negligence. She denied all of the remaining charges.

The health department said Bass had “deviated from accepted standards of care or failed to exercise the care that a reasonably prudent pediatric surgeon would have exercised under similar circumstances.”

Among other allegations, the health department charged that Bass:

  • Performed a colostomy on a six-year-old using the wrong end of the patient’s colon. 
  • Oversaw an operation during which a large surgical clip was mistakenly placed across a premature baby’s airway.
  • Attempted to perform surgery on a six-month-old baby after failing to document that she’d already done the procedure, on the same patient, several months earlier.

Investigative Post reported in detail on the allegations against Bass, which dated back to 2012, in April 2019. She was halfway through her two-year probation at the time. That report, by Charlotte Keith, is the second-most read story in Investigative Post’s 10-year history and continues to generate reader interest.


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Bass is now practicing at the Carilion Children’s Pediatric Surgery clinic in Roanoke. Virginia granted her a license in June 2021, just over a year after her probation in New York ended.

Bass is also licensed in Texas and Illinois, her home state. Medical boards in all three states reviewed New York’s disciplinary actions and dismissed them as “not legitimate,” according to Bass’s Texas Medical Board profile. 

New York’s health department lifted Bass’s probation in April 2020, after two years. While she was permitted to practice during her probation, another surgeon had to visit her practice and review her records. Her license in New York will expire Sept. 30 of this year. 

Last March, she sold her house on Soldiers Place in Buffalo for $999,999, according to public records.

We asked Bass for an interview for this story. We also asked her for the proceedings of the state boards of Illinois, Texas and Virginia, which are not available online. She did not respond.

However, on her professional website, Bass addresses her censure and probation — and Investigative Post’s reporting — without describing the complaints leveled against her.

“A leader in pediatric surgical quality at The American College of Surgeons, as well as the state health boards in Illinois and Texas, reviewed these cases and exonerated me, finding the allegations without merit,” Bass wrote on her website. “They took no action that would impact my license to practice medicine in those states. Virginia followed suit recently when they issued me my license to practice.”

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For our original story, Investigative Post interviewed Dr. David Tuggle, a pediatric surgeon from Austin, Texas, who Bass enlisted as an expert witness when she was fighting New York’s misconduct charges. Tuggle said Bass’s punishment was “a ridiculous travesty of justice” and that she had “met or exceeded the standard of care” in each of the cases that led to her reprimand and probation.

The other experts Investigative Post interviewed disagreed. 

A former attorney for Kaleida Health, which runs Oishei Children’s Hospital, told Investigative Post that the charges against Bass were “serious, documented errors.” A retired professor of surgery at UB’s medical school said “there was no excuse” for the type of misconduct New’s York’s health department alleged.

New York’s investigators also faulted Kaleida Health’s quality control. In 2012, in response to complaints about Bass and others, state investigators said they saw “no evidence” Kaleida’s pediatric surgery department was evaluating quality of care in “a timely manner” and noted six months of the hospital’s internal quality assurance reports were missing.

Back in 2019, Michael Hughes — senior vice president at Kaleida in charge of communications — refused to answer questions about those findings. Nor would Kaleida share a corrective action plan it provided the state health department, even when presented with a request under the state’s Freedom of Information Law.

Hughes did not respond to a request for comment for this story, either. 

 The Carilion Clinic, where Bass now performs surgery, is Roanoke’s principal hospital, with multiple facilities and partnerships with Virginia Tech university and other academic institutions. Bass is accepting new patients, according to her page on the clinic’s website.

The post Censured surgeon has left Children’s Hospital appeared first on Investigative Post.

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Black pundits and columnists are already predicting the racism that will surface from some of the top media outlets in the country as they try to cover a candidate of color in the presidential race.

Writing for "The Nation," legal expert Elie Mystal shredded the New York Times for a report they titled: "Some Black Voters Say They Wonder if a Black Woman Can Win."

Mystal was furious as the Times "used other Black people to make their point."

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He explained that as a Black voter, he wonders about many things.

"I wonder if aliens exist; I wonder if God is an a--hole; I wonder how many abortions Donald Trump has paid for," Mystal wrote Tuesday. "But the Times wouldn’t run a story that stated 'Some Black Voters Say They Wonder How Many Active Ku Klux Klan Members Attended the Republican National Convention.'"

He thinks that more Black voters likely wonder about the latter than about whether Harris could win in November.

One Black woman from Atlanta, interviewed by the Times, said, "America is just not ready for a woman president, especially not a Black woman president."

Keli Goff at The Daily Beast is another writer parroting that language, he said. Her sentiment is akin to, “I’d vote for a Black woman, but not that Black woman.”

Mystal wrote that Goff simply stating what the U.S. has told Black people for generations, especially Black women. That message: "America hates you."

"We see the disdain this country holds for people of color whenever we turn on the news. We feel the antipathy this country holds for women every time we go to work, or read an opinion from the Supreme Court," Mystal wrote.

"Harris has been subjected to the worst press coverage of any vice president in my lifetime, and she’s about to be subjected to the worst coverage of any presidential candidate in American history… save perhaps Hillary Clinton."

He called it nothing more than "white male supremacy," which not only dictates the leadership, but works to hold others down by telling them that they feel don't deserve power.

"I can already see David Brooks and Bret Stephens clacking away on their keyboards, doing everything in their power to call Harris unqualified, unintelligent, and undeserving of the office she seeks," Mystal wrote.

The Washington Post editorial board has already taken a different path by encouraging Harris not to hold back out of prudence.

He warned it will get "ugly," but said he won't be deterred by "programming that’s designed to make me think a woman of color can’t win."

While "they are not ready for her, but she is ready to beat them," Mystal closed.

Read the full column here.