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Within the otolaryngology community, Dr Pou is widely regarded as a skilled and compassionate ]. Following her arrest, her only phone call was to a colleague to arrange care and coverage for her existing patients. In addition to her clinical expertise, Pou has authored many papers concerning ] of the head and neck and has been an active teacher of medical students and residents. | Within the otolaryngology community, Dr Pou is widely regarded as a skilled and compassionate ]. Following her arrest, her only phone call was to a colleague to arrange care and coverage for her existing patients. In addition to her clinical expertise, Pou has authored many papers concerning ] of the head and neck and has been an active teacher of medical students and residents. | ||
In February 2007, seven months after Dr. Pou's arrest, the case against her and the two nurses appeared more questionable after the Orleans Parish Coroner, Dr. Frank Minyard, announced that he had classified the patient deaths at Memorial as "undetermined," which means that on available evidence he cannot classify the deaths as due to homicide or natural causes. Minyard told the media that he had retained some of the nation's leading experts as consultants in the case. Nonetheless, there is no legal bar to the district attorney seeking an indictment based on the coroner's determination, and District Attorney Eddie Jordan's office announced it planned to bring the matter to the Orleans Parish Grand Jury in mid-February 2007. | |||
==External links== | ==External links== |
Revision as of 17:33, 3 February 2007
Dr Anna Pou is an associate professor in the Department of Otorhinolaryngology at the LSU Health Sciences Center, New Orleans.
On Tuesday, 2006-07-18, Louisiana Attorney General Charles Foti arrested Pou (along with two nurses, Cheri Landry and Lori Budo), accused of being "a principal to second-degree murder" in the deaths of four patients at Memorial Medical Center in New Orleans, Louisiana in the days following Hurricane Katrina.
The affidavit says Pou and the nurses "intentionally (killed)" Emmett Everett Sr., 61; Hollis Alford, 66; Ireatha Watson, 89; and Rose Savoie, 90, by administering or causing to be administered lethal doses of morphine sulphate (morphine) and/or midazolam (Versed)."
Within the otolaryngology community, Dr Pou is widely regarded as a skilled and compassionate surgeon. Following her arrest, her only phone call was to a colleague to arrange care and coverage for her existing patients. In addition to her clinical expertise, Pou has authored many papers concerning cancer of the head and neck and has been an active teacher of medical students and residents.
In February 2007, seven months after Dr. Pou's arrest, the case against her and the two nurses appeared more questionable after the Orleans Parish Coroner, Dr. Frank Minyard, announced that he had classified the patient deaths at Memorial as "undetermined," which means that on available evidence he cannot classify the deaths as due to homicide or natural causes. Minyard told the media that he had retained some of the nation's leading experts as consultants in the case. Nonetheless, there is no legal bar to the district attorney seeking an indictment based on the coroner's determination, and District Attorney Eddie Jordan's office announced it planned to bring the matter to the Orleans Parish Grand Jury in mid-February 2007."N.O. coroner finds no evidence of homicide," Times-Picayune, 1 February 2007
External links
- Official Bio at LSU
- Support Dr Pou Official Website
References
- Rukmini Callimachi 3 Arrested in New Orleans Hospital Deaths Associated Press July 182006
- James Varney Doctor's drug mix not ideal killer: Evidence in Memorial case called unreliableTimes-Picayune August 062006
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