An old Chaplain is misdiagnosed with a urinary tract infection, but when test results reveal a much more serious infection the hospital fails to let him or his family know.

Published on

He was the one who consoled countless victims of crime and disaster, a fire and police chaplain well known in San Diego.  Even after a long struggle with diabetes cost Rabbi Aaron Gottesman his legs to amputation, the unsinkable chaplain would show up at fires, crime scenes, and disasters to console those in grief from his wheelchair.

It all came to an end in 2005, as the man who took care of victims became a victim himself, a victim of medical negligence.  Gottesman awakened one Saturday in pain.  At the ER, a doctyor discharged him saying it was nearly a urinary tract infection.  When in fact it was a lethal infection was raging through his body.  Lab results done over the weekend would show it, but the lab never alerted Gottesman or his family if the looming threat.  The single call a lab tech made was to the rabbi’s empty office.

By the time he returned to the hospital a day later, it was too late.  Gottesman died at age 63.

His grieving family south accountability for the hospitals cavalier treatment, but instead ran headlong into California’s non-economic damage cap for medical malpractice.  “I had no idea,” said his daughter, “that since the 1970’s a person’s life according the state of California is only worth $250,000.”

Latest Videos

Latest Releases

In The News

Latest Report

Support Consumer Watchdog

Subscribe to our newsletter

To be updated with all the latest news, press releases and special reports.

More Releases