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Brain surgeon let go by hospital after allowing ‘daughter, 13, to drill hole into patient’s skull’

A BRAIN surgeon in Austria is under fire for allegedly allowing her 13-year-old daughter to drill a hole in a patient’s skull.

A 33-year-old man was flown to University Hospital Graz, in Styria, in January with serious head injuries following an accident in an Austrian forest.

a building with the number 7 on it
The patient was flown to University Hospital Graz after an accidentCredit: Alamy
a surgeon is operating on a patient in an operating room
The teen was allegedly allowed to drill a hole into a patient’s skullCredit: Getty

The unnamed female neurosurgeon is alleged to have allowed her teenage daughter to participate in the emergency surgery, according to Austria’s Kronen Zeitung.

The newspaper reported that she was even allowed to drill a hole in the patient’s skull.

The surgery was successful, but in April, an anonymous tip-off to Graz public prosecutor’s office prompted an investigation.

The patient found out about the incident from the news, only to have the police tell him in July that he was the victim.

Peter Freiberger, his lawyer, said “You lie there, unwilling, unconscious and become [a] guinea pig.

“There’s probably no other way to put it… that’s not possible. You can’t do that.”

He added that everyone involved in the surgery shared responsibility and that the hospital hadn’t reached out to the alleged victim after the revelations, according to Bild

“There was no contact, no explanation or apology, nothing. That is simply undignified,” Peter was quoted as saying.

The surgeon and one other employee, a specialist who was present during the operation, are said to have been let go by the hospital.

A trauma surgery specialist said he “doesn’t understand” how anyone could allow a child to perform surgery.

“An operating theatre belongs to people who have a job to do there and no one else,” Manfred Bogner told Servus TV.

He added: “And a child should not be given a drill and allowed to drill away at the bone of a seriously injured person.”

Graz University Hospital said in a statement seen by The Telegraph that the investigation into the entire surgical team was ongoing but “as of yet, there is no concrete evidence that the daughter herself took actual part in the operation”.

It continued: “The hospital’s management would like to express its utmost regret and extend its sincere apologies for this incident, and is working to fully clarify the matter.”

Last modified: January 15, 2025

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