SINGAPORE: A Danish national has filed a writ against Alexandra Hospital (AH) for allegedly planting a microchip in him during a 1988 operation, which he claimed later caused him mental distress due to being constantly monitored.
According to court papers filed in the High Court on June 21 against AH, which has been managed by Jurong Health Services since August last year, Mr Mogens Tindhof Honore said he first found a metal instrument akin to a microchip in his left lung after an X-ray scan in 1997.
Mr Honore, 54, added
the metal piece was implanted in him during an operation at AH more
than two decades ago - the last time he had undergone surgery in his
chest and lung.
Represented by lawyer Oliver Quek, the former
seaman said that he was stabbed in the lung in May 1988. After his
discharge, he kept hearing voices in his head and could not lead a
normal life. He would also feel generally unwell and would even cough
out blood.
"(Mr Honore) also discovered and experienced that
strange people on the streets would approach and speak to (him) about
strange subject matters or pass strange irrelevant comments," according
to the papers filed.
Mr Honore said that his subsequent discovery
of being constantly tracked left him in a "perpetual state of
apprehension and fear for the safety of his life". It also prevented him
from holding on to a job.
When he returned to Singapore in
December last year to investigate his condition, he claimed that he was
turned away by AH which said it had no records of his stay.
He
claimed that two X-ray scans later on May 9 this year at AH and Mount
Elizabeth Hospital found the metal fragment (microchip) in his left
chest wall instead of his left lung.
He also claimed that, earlier this month, he underwent an operation at Mount Elizabeth Hospital to remove the fragment.
In
his lawsuit, Mr Honore is now alleging that employees of AH who had
then operated on him implanted the microchip in him intentionally,
causing "exceptional harm and lifelong suffering". He also said that the
alleged act constitutes a trespass on his body.
Mr Honore claims
that he suffers from various conditions following the alleged act, such
as impairment of relationship, loss of enjoyment of life and suicidal
thoughts.
Seeking damages for expenses incurred such as
psychiatric help and medication, he is also alleging that AH medical
staff who tended to him were negligent.
He said that the staff
was careless in placing a metal fragment in his left chest wall during
the operation, resulting in harm and injury.
Responding to media
queries, AH director of communications and service quality Casey Chang
said: "We understand that the patient had recently returned to Alexandra
Hospital to seek information regarding medical treatment he had
received at Alexandra Hospital in May 1988. This was 23 years ago when
Alexandra Hospital was a government hospital."
She added that,
after the hospital was informed of the lawsuit, AH has taken steps to
convey to the patient's lawyer (Mr Quek) that Jurong Health Services Pte
Ltd has been wrongly identified as the defendant in the suit.
At the time Mr Honore was treated in AH in 1988, the hospital was under the Ministry of Health.
-- TODAY
I think he should be throwed into IMH instead
Originally posted by icare:I think he should be throwed into IMH instead
Greater harm caused, greater damages payable.
i wonder what Fox Mulder would have to say about this
He made a mistake, lah, that fella went to Animal Hospital and got microchipped. Now twenty-three years later he is suing AH - Alexandra Hospital.
His lawyer must be laughing when he sees the large amount of money his IMH patient is paying to him instead of paying to the IMH doctors.
But wait, if he really go to IMH he might end up sueing the IMH doctors too
The winner of this case is the laywers
but seriously...