Showing posts with label fred webster. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fred webster. Show all posts

Thursday, January 5, 2017

I filed a misconduct complaint against Cincinnati Enquirer editor Peter Bhatia -- here's why (Part I)


In e-mails he sent me yesterday, Cincinnati Enquirer editor Peter Bhatia made it clear  that -- and I am not exaggerating -- he did not care whether or not information in a published article was factually correct or accurately reported.

I've never filed a complaint against a journalist, but I thought his behavior merited it, so yesterday I filed a complaint of professional misconduct against Bhatia with Joanne Lipman, senior vice president and chief content officer of Gannett Inc., the Enquirer's parent company.

Here's what happened.

According to a 2015 Enquirer item, "(Bhatia helped) lead newsrooms that won nine Pulitzer Prizes, including (six at the Portland Oregonian). He also is a six-time Pulitzer juror."

Based on that impressive resume, I wanted to solicit and blog his expert opinion about what appeared to be a number of reportorial problems and factual errors in reporter Cliff Radel's obituary of my father in the December 17, 2016 Enquirer, Cincy native Dr. Henry Heimlich dies at 96.

So on Monday I e-mailed Bhatia a thoroughly-doumented inquiry listing seven of my concerns. I also asked him to provide me with the name of the supervising editor on the story.

For example, in his December 22 Cincinnati CityBeat media watch column, former Enquirer reporter Ben Kaufman tagged the headline as inaccurate. My father was born in Wilmington, DE.


But that was a minor glitch compared to other problems I shared with Bhatia, including the bizarre claim that Belle Jacobson MD, my father's business partner in a short-lived New Rochelle, NY, clinic called the Heimlich Medical Group, was my father's personal physician when he was a child.

Radel's article also included:
After graduating from Cornell Medical College in 1943, Heimlich enlisted in the U.S. Navy. Before he could be assigned to a ship, he volunteered to go to China on a mission...

He treated Chinese civilians and soldiers. “One night as the war was coming to an end in 1945, a Chinese soldier was brought to me with a chest wound,” Heimlich said. “I operated on him. But he died in my hands.

“The next day, I was feeling terrible.” Hoping to lift his spirits, he went for a ride on one of the horses assigned to the 12 American GIs. As he rode toward a nearby town, the Navy surgeon crossed paths with an oxcart.

“The cart was carrying the remains of that Chinese soldier,” Heimlich said. His voice quaked with emotion 68 years after the first seeing that cart.

“I never forgot that sight,” he said. “And, I never forgot how he died in my hands.” He wondered if he could have done more. He worried that if he had known more about draining chest wounds, the man might have lived."
As I informed Bhatia, that tale was disputed in an article (for which I was a source), Henry Heimlich: Polarizing Doctor by veteran Cincinnati reporter Lucy May, WCPO Insider Monthly, March 2014:
Heimlich has spoken publicly many times about how a Chinese soldier dying in his arms inspired his invention of the Heimlich Chest Drain Valve years later. He told WCPO he trained Chinese soldiers to form their first-ever medical corps for the guerilla army, an account repeated in his book.

Frederick Webster said he served as assistant to “Doc Heimlich” at Camp 4. Webster said he doesn’t recall the dying soldier or any medical corps training, although he said there were a few weeks where the men’s service there did not overlap.

“You really can’t believe any of the stories the veterans tell you,” said Webster, who is 93 and lives in (Orleans) Vermont. “The Chinese soldiers never seriously needed help.”

Webster told WCPO detailed stories of how Heimlich treated the Chinese and life at the camp.

Heimlich said he doesn’t remember Webster and questioned whether the two men actually served together.

“He doesn’t mean anything to me at all,” Heimlich said.
I didn't expect Radel to have been aware of the information in May's report, but since my father's story had been contradicted two years ago in a mainstream Queen City news source, I was curious to know if Bhatia thought the obituary should be updated to include Webster's version of events.

Radel's article also failed to report that in a March 16, 2003 Sunday Enquirer front page expose (based on research by my wife and me and our outreach to reporter Robert Anglen), Dr. Dan Gavriliu of Bucharest called my father "a liar and a thief" because, for decades my father falsely claimed credit for a surgical procedure Gavriliu invented.

As I informed Bhatia, the Washington Post's obituary for my father included paragraphs about that and credited/linked to the Enquirer expose.


Therefore, it seemed conspicuous that the newspaper that broke the story should fail to mention it in my father's obit.

While waiting for Bhatia's reply, I did some fact-checking of my own.

Date: Tue, 3 Jan 2017 09:52:31 -0500
To: media@redcross.org
From: peter.heimlich@gmail.com
Subject: blogger inquiry
Cc: pbhatia@CINCINNA.GANNETT.COM

American Red Cross
Media Relations Dept.

To whom it may concern:

I'd appreciate your help with a clarification, please. If you can get back to me by tomorrow (Wednesday), that would be great. If you need more time, please advise and I'll do my best to accommodate.

Via Cincy native Dr. Henry Heimlich dies at 96 by Cliff Radel, Cincinnati Enquirer, December 17, 2016:

Current (American) Red Cross first-aid protocol for someone who's choking calls for five back slaps first. Then, if needed, follow with five of the maneuver's abdominal thrusts. The Red Cross's  inclusion of the back slaps offended Heimlich. So, in 1976, (Dr. Heimlich) asked the (American Red Cross) to remove his name from their first-aid literature for choking.That's why the term "abdominal thrusts" is used.
According to ARC materials and media reports I've seen, your organization's decision to use the term abdominal thrusts had nothing to do with any demands made by my father.

1) Per my blog yesterday, I brought the matter to the attention of Enquirer editor/VP Peter Bhatia.

2) My wife and I have been invited to write an article about the history of my father's namesake maneuver and we may wish to include this issue.

In order to resolve the matter, would you please provide me with a straightforward, unambiguous statement explaining why the ARC uses the term abdominal thrusts and whether or not input from my father had anything to do with that decision?

Thanks much for your time/consideration and I look forward to your reply.

Cheers, Peter

Peter M. Heimlich
Atlanta
ph: (208)474-7283
website: http://medfraud.info
blog: http://the-sidebar.com
e-mail: peter.heimlich@gmail.com


Tomorrow in I'll publish the ARC's response, but I won't keep you in suspense.

Radel got it all wrong, probably because, rather than asking the Red Cross, he took dictation from my nonagenarian father who -- and I've credited him for this -- has been punking Enquirer reporters for four decades, most recently last May.

Back to the obit, a version of which was same-day published in USA Today:


Yesterday I e-mailed the Lasker Foundation and asked if/when the Wilbur, Orville, and George Washington Carver received the award.

I received this prompt reply which I forwarded to Bhatia and USA Today's Standards & Ethics Editor, Brent Jones:

Dear Peter,

Neither the Wright Brothers nor George Washington Carver were ever recognized with Lasker Awards.

The Lasker Awards program dates to 1945. The first Basic and Clinical Lasker Awards were given in 1946.

A complete list of Lasker awardees can be found on our website: http://www.laskerfoundation.org/awards/ (and you can search any name using the “search” tool in the top navigation).

Hope that helps.

Best wishes,

David

David Keegan

Awards Program Director
Lasker Foundation
405 Lexington Avenue, 32nd Floor
New York, NY 10174
212-286-0222  

dkeegan@laskerfoundation.org

And then things got interesting...

Don't miss Part II tomorrow in The Sidebar...

This item has been slightly revised for clarity.

Monday, January 2, 2017

My inquiry to the Cincinnati Enquirer re: my father's obituary by reporter Cliff Radel

January 2, 2017

Peter Bhatia
Editor and Vice President of Audience Engagement
Enquirer Media

Good afternoon Peter,

For an item I'm reporting on my blog, I'd appreciate your answers to some quick questions re:
Cliff Radel's December 17, 2016 Enquirer article, Cincy native Dr. Henry Heimlich dies at 96 which was published the same day by USA Today. (Quotes below from the article are in bold.)

1) Heimlich decided to become a doctor, as he related in 2013, “when I was a child. We had a female physician, Dr. Belle Jacobson, who came to the house. A female doctor was a rarity back then. And female doctors were viewed with great prejudice. But having her for my doctor seemed normal to me.”


Dr. Jacobson served as calming influence in the Heimlich household. “When someone was sick or injured in the house, there was a feeling of terror,” he recalled. “But, when she walked into the house, everybody calmed down. They knew everything would be taken care of.”

In fact, per the corporate records for The Heimlich Medical Group, a short-lived clinic in New Rochelle, NY, Belle Jacobson MD was my father's business partner in the early 1960s:


Via the April 12, 2007 Portland Tribune:
"I think some of his (Henry Heimlich's) ideas are delusional," said Robert S. Baratz, physician president of the Massachusetts-based National Council Against Health Fraud...
Perhaps my father's recollection of Dr. Jacobson was one of those delusions? In any event, do you think Cliff's article should be updated with the information that she was his business partner in the Heimlich Medical Group?

2) “One night as the war was coming to an end in 1945, a Chinese soldier was brought to me with a chest wound,” (Dr.) Heimlich said. “I operated on him. But he died in my hands.

“The next day, I was feeling terrible.” Hoping to lift his spirits, he went for a ride on one of the horses assigned to the 12 American GIs. As he rode toward a nearby town, the Navy surgeon crossed paths with an oxcart.

“The cart was carrying the remains of that Chinese soldier,” Heimlich said. His voice quaked with emotion 68 years after the first seeing that cart.

“I never forgot that sight,” he said. “And, I never forgot how he died in my hands.” He wondered if he could have done more. He worried that if he had known more about draining chest wounds, the man might have lived.

Via Polarizing Doctor by Lucy May, WCPO Insider Monthly, March 2014:



As widely reported, my father had a career history of providing false information to reporters. For example, you may recall that last May he got caught lying to reporters Kevin Grasha at the Enquirer, Christine Hauser at the New York Times, and Scott Wegener at WCPO-TV News.

Given my father's credibility problems, do you think Cliff's article should be updated to reflect Fred Webster's recollections?


3) Via Henry J. Heimlich, inventor of lifesaving technique for choking victims, dies at 96 by Sindya H. Bhanoo, Washington Post, December 17, 2016:
Dr. Heimlich zealously promoted lifesaving procedures and techniques he invented or refined. Besides the first-aid rescue maneuver introduced in 1974, these advances included a...surgical procedure he helped develop in the 1950s for people with severe esophageal damage

...In later decades, a dispute arose over whether Dr. Heimlich had purposely underplayed the contribution of a Romanian surgeon who performed the procedure on a person before he did. That doctor, Dan Gavriliu, called Dr. Heimlich a “liar and thief” when the Cincinnati Enquirer contacted him in 2003 for an investigative story about Dr. Heimlich’s career.
Cliff's article includes no mention of the esophagus operation or my father getting busted by Enquirer. (As you know, Robert Anglen's 2003 expose was based on research by my wife and me.) And last May the Enquirer again reported the information. Therefore, to some readers, Cliff's failure to report the information may seem conspicuous by its absence.

What's your opinion?

4) The Red Cross’ inclusion of the back slaps offended Heimlich. So, in 1976, he asked the organization to remove his name from their first-aid literature for choking. That’s why the term “abdominal thrusts” is used.

That last sentence is contradicted by published information from the American Red Cross (ARC), so I'm trying to verify the accuracy of Cliff's assertion. Who at the ARC provided him with the information and on what date?

5) From data complied by the Cincinnati-based Heimlich Institute, the (Heimlich maneuver) has saved the lives of more than 100,000 choking victims...

My wife and I have been researching my father's career since 2002 and we've never heard of the Heimlich Institute compiling any such data. Would you please ask Cliff if he has any more information and, if not, would you please ask him or another Enquirer staffer to contact the Heimlich Institute to substantiate what specific data was collected (the data sources?, during what years?, etc.) and let me know the results?

6) Per former Enquirer reporter Ben Kaufman's December 22, 2016 Cincinnati CityBeat media watch column:

The (Enquirer's) headline called (Dr.) Heimlich a "Cincy native.” He was born in Wilmington, Del.
Via: https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/native


Cliff managed to get it right in the text...
Before coming to the Queen City, the Wilmington, Delaware native...
...so presumably it was the headline writer's goof. In any event, do you think the online headline should be corrected?

7) The Lasker Awards, dubbed, “America’s Nobels” recognize scientists, including the Wright Brothers and George Washington Carver, “who have made major advances in the understanding, diagnosis, treatment, cure and prevention of human disease.”

In what years were the Wright Brothers and George Washington Carver awarded the Lasker?


8) Who was the supervising editor on Cliff's article?

Believe it or not, there are other problems with the article, but I don't want to take up more of my time or yours. (If you're curious, just ask and I'll fill you in.)

Big thanks for your time/attention and I look forward to receiving your answers. If you can get back to me by Friday, that would be great, but if you need more time, please advise and I'll do my best to accommodate.


Cheers, Peter

Peter M. Heimlich

Atlanta
ph: (208)474-7283
website: http://medfraud.info
blog: http://the-sidebar.com
e-mail: peter.heimlich@gmail.com

cc:

Robert S. Baratz MD PhD
Ben Kaufman
Lucy May
Cindy Capitani, New Rochelle Daily Voice

Maya Brainard PhD, Albert and Mary Lasker Foundation
Joanne Lipman, S
enior Vice President and Chief Content Officer, Gannett Inc.
Brent Jones, Standards Editor, USA Today