Tag: Surgeries

  • FBI Asks Public for Tips on Medical Institutions Providing Gender-Affirming Surgeries on Kids

    FBI Asks Public for Tips on Medical Institutions Providing Gender-Affirming Surgeries on Kids

    The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) is asking the public for any tips regarding medical institutions that are performing gender-affirming surgeries on children.

    President Donald Trump’s administration has placed gender-affirming care among transgender youth under scrutiny on the second day of Pride Month. “Help the FBI protect children,” the agency wrote, adding that they want to hold accountable those who “mutilate” kids under the guise of gender-affirming care.

    FBI Cracks Down on Gender-Affirming Surgeries on Children

    The Republican leader’s policies have continued to target the transgender community, restricting access to various services, such as gender-affirming healthcare. This comes as the procedure is rarely done in adolescents and is considered only on a case-by-case basis.

    Additionally, the majority of youth who receive these kinds of procedures report high levels of satisfaction, saying they have improved mental health and low levels of regret. Last week, Medicare wrote that selected hospitals sought billing codes and projected revenue from treating gender dysphoria in children, according to Axios.

    It asserted that gender-affirming care for minors has significant risks without providing substantial evidence to back up its claims. This caused it to draw scrutiny among major medical associations.

    A spokesperson for the Human Rights Campaign, Laurel Powell, said that healthcare for transgender youth is simply healthcare. She argued that trying to weaponize the FBI against American doctors who are doing their jobs is detrimental to parents who want their kids to thrive.

    The FBI’s request to the public comes as youth gender-affirming care has become illegal in 27 states across the country. Additionally, 17 states are facing legal challenges over the restrictions, putting them temporarily on hold, The Hill reported.

    Targeting the Transgender Community

    When Trump signed an executive order where he recognized male and female as the only two sexes, he also directed federal agencies to stop promoting the concept of gender transition. The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), under the Republican leader’s directives, adopted the position that it “rejects gender ideology.”

    The development comes as the Trump administration passed a tax bill that bans Medicaid from covering transition-related care. Additionally, the legislation prohibits marketplace plans that are available under the Affordable Care Act from covering transgender care as an essential health benefit.

    The bill would have initially banned Medicaid from covering “gender transition procedures” for minors. However, House Republican leadership introduced an amendment that removed the word “minors” and the words “under 18 years of age.”

    The amendment later passed the GOP-led Rules Committee and the full House passed it the day after, as per NBC News.



    Originally published on parentherald.com

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  • Seven Dead After Man Impersonating Doctor Performed Surgeries With Fake Medical Degrees: Police

    Seven Dead After Man Impersonating Doctor Performed Surgeries With Fake Medical Degrees: Police

    Authorities in India have arrested a man accused of impersonating a British cardiologist and performing dozens of surgeries with allegedly fake medical credentials, resulting in the deaths of at least seven patients.

    The suspect, Narendra Vikramaditya Yadav, 53, also went by the name Dr. N John Camm—a moniker police say was meant to impersonate a prominent UK-based heart specialist, Prof. John Camm, of St George’s Hospital.

    Yadav, who worked at a missionary hospital in Damoh, Madhya Pradesh, is facing charges of fraud, cheating, forgery, and causing death by medical negligence after a child welfare committee flagged a suspicious number of fatalities under his care earlier this year.

    “The accused doctor had worked on a total of 64 cases, including 45 cases of angioplasty, which led to seven patient deaths,” Damoh Police Chief Shrut Kirti Somvanshi told BBC.

    Yadav presented himself as an internationally trained cardiologist with what authorities suspect to be falsified medical degrees. He had claimed to have worked in the UK, Germany, Spain, and the U.S., and even posted online about launching a massive medical institute in Rajasthan.



    “Nobody suspected him of being a fake doctor,” a hospital official told The Indian Express newspaper. “He was good at his job and acted like a big-time professor.”

    When authorities looked into Yadav, he was found to have been under investigation in multiple Indian states and was banned by medical regulators for “professional misconduct” in 2014. He was also arrested in 2019 for allegedly abducting a British doctor and had registered four companies in the UK under his fake name.

    Yadav was arrested Monday evening in Prayagraj, Uttar Pradesh, and is currently under investigation. Police say they are still verifying the authenticity of his documents, which appear to be missing key registration details.

    Yadav has denied all allegations and, just hours before his arrest, filed a legal notice demanding 50 million rupees from individuals accusing him of impersonation.

    The real Prof. John Camm has publicly stated that he has no connection to Yadav and was being fraudulently impersonated.

    Originally published on Latin Times

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  • Republican Anti-Abortion Bill May Block Access to Chemotherapy, Life-Saving Surgeries in Wyoming: Report

    Republican Anti-Abortion Bill May Block Access to Chemotherapy, Life-Saving Surgeries in Wyoming: Report

    A Republican-led bill seeking to challenge abortion access may also block access to chemotherapy and life-saving surgeries in Wyoming, according to a report.

    According to the bill, Senate File 125, “No act, treatment or procedure that causes harm to the heart, respiratory system, central nervous system, brain, skeletal system, jointed or muscled appendages or organ function shall be construed as healthcare.”

    Although the bill is intended to target the concept of fetal personhood, healthcare and law professionals are worried that various other procedures and treatments, such as chemotherapy, could be affected by the bill.

    “There’s a slew of medical procedures, surgeries, treatments that can have potentially positive outcomes but may also cause harm in the short period or as an unintended consequence,” Wyoming attorney Abigail Fournier told the The Guardian.

    An amendment to Wyoming’s state constitution in 2012 stated that making healthcare decisions was a right of individuals in the state. Senate File 125 is the first of its kind trying to change the definition of healthcare.

    While Cheri Steinmetz, the Republican state senator who authored the bill, told The Guardian that she was not trying to change the constitution, just the definition used, Wyoming attorney Clark Stith said that they believe changing the meaning could still constitute changing the constitution.

    Wyoming’s abortion ban was struck down by a judge in November 2024. At the time, women and organizations had argued that the ban violated the 2012 amendment, and that it also infringed upon their rights, NPR reported at the time.

    As the state appeals this ruling, state representatives have also created bills seeking to restrict abortion access, such as requiring a trans-vaginal ultrasound before patients can receive abortion medication, as reported by WyoFile.

    At least two abortion-related House bills have passed the House since the abortion ban was struck down. A third one is set to be debated on in the coming weeks.

    Originally published by Latin Times.

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  • Texas Doctor Accused of Being High During Surgeries Loses License After Testing Positive for Cocaine

    Texas Doctor Accused of Being High During Surgeries Loses License After Testing Positive for Cocaine

    A Houston urologist had his medical license revoked after testing positive for cocaine, following previous allegations of him performing surgeries under the influence.

    Dr. Nathan Robert Starke reportedly exhibited signs of impairment while consulting a patient before a prostate biopsy in August 2024. Records indicated he was absent for all but three minutes of one surgical procedure, despite being the attending physician, as reported by KTRK.

    By September, Houston Methodist had suspended him and later confirmed that he was no longer working at the hospital.

    After the Texas Medical Board to suspend his license in September, drug tests submitted in October indicated the presence of cocaine and kratom in Starke’s system. Kratom is a controversial supplement often associated with energy boosts and managing withdrawal symptoms, as reported by ABC13.



    Since earning his medical license in 2017, Starke’s legal troubles shadowed his career. Within a month of being licensed, he was arrested for driving under the influence. His record also includes a 2023 charge for assaulting a former girlfriend, leaving her with a chipped tooth and bruises.

    These incidents raised red flags about his fitness to practice, leading to mandated drug and alcohol screenings last year.

    “You are putting people’s lives in your hands,” a former patient told ABC13.

    Starke previously served as the head of the men’s health clinic, a position he held until the recent suspension. The hospital has since erased his profile. Houston Methodist’s Fannin Street location, where Starke performed surgeries, is currently listed online as “permanently closed.”

    What’s next for the doctor remains unclear, yet FOX26 reported that he could get his license back.

    Substance use was the leading cause of actions against U.S. physicians’ licenses, comprising 76.3% of cases between 2004 and 2020, a 2022 study found.

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