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Friday, May 2, 2008

His family was hopeful he would fully recover: Enterobacter Aerogenes infection

On September 2, 2006, 27 year old Josh Nahum was injured in a skydiving accident near Boulder, Colorado. He had broken his femur and fractured his skull and was admitted to the Intensive Care Unit (ICU). His family was hopeful that, even though the doctors believed Josh would have a long road ahead, he would, with rehabilitation, fully recover within a year or two.

During his recovery in ICU he suddenly developed a bacterial infection - Staph. His neurosurgeon prescribed Vancomycin which cleared it up. As the weeks went by, Josh began to get better, even taking brief walks with the help of his walker and his Physical Therapist, Brian.

After 6 weeks or so in ICU, he was transferred to a nearby Rehab facility until he suddenly developed a 103-degree fever and was sent back to ICU. Tests reported that Josh had yet another bacteria named "Enterobacter Aerogenes." 

On Monday, October 9th Josh coded and stopped breathing, becoming comatose with no respiratory effort whatsoever. The Emergency Room was called and he was put on a ventilator. An excessive pressure buildup on his brain due to the bacterial infection caused a portion of his brain to be pushed into his spinal cord, permanently interrupting his ability to breathe on his own as well as his ability to move his head, arms or legs ever again. 

In a matter of moments, Josh had become a ventilator dependent quadriplegic. Less than two weeks later, he died, not from his original injuries, but from complications arising from virulent bacteria he caught in ICU.

Advice: Help strangers protect themselves against medical errors by telling your stories widely, as Josh's mother, Victoria Nahum, has been doing.

Read another young athlete’s hospital infection story.

Thanks to Victoria Nahum for the source story in hospitalacquiredinfections.blogspot.com and to Adam Gee and Elizabeth Cohen.

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