Doctors Admit Errors in Treating Ariel Sharon

Doctors have admitted making a mistake when they treated then-Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon with large doses of blood thinners after a mild stroke, according to a TV report broadcast Thursday.

Sharon has been comatose since suffering a massive stroke on Jan. 4. Channel 2 TV quoted doctors who treated Sharon at Jerusalem's Hadassah Hospital as saying the anticoagulants given him after a minor blood clot two weeks earlier might have caused the debilitating hemorrhagic stroke.

The TV station broadcast brief excerpts of the investigative report on Thursday, promising fuller versions on Friday and again next week.

The hospital strongly denied the report. It said in a statement that the interpretation that doctors admitted a mistake was "in the imagination of the reporter."

The statement said the hospital has the full recordings of the interviews with the doctors, who said "the elements leading to the decisions and treatment were correct, and they would repeat them if needed."

One of the doctors interviewed, Dr. Yoram Weiss, was shown speaking of a "great failure" in the treatment of Sharon, 78, who was at the height of his political power when he was stricken.

For two weeks, Sharon received two injections daily of a powerful anticoagulant after his first stroke, described as minor. He was to re-enter the hospital on Jan. 5 for a heart procedure designed to correct a defect that might have led to the clot that caused the first stroke.

The large doses of anticoagulants came under stiff criticism after Sharon suffered massive cerebral bleeding the day before he was to report back to the hospital.

Sharon is to be moved soon to the long-term care unit of Tel Hashomer Hospital outside Tel Aviv and from there to his home at a ranch in southern Israel, the report said.

Experts have said that the longer Sharon - who was declared permanently incapacitated by Israel's Cabinet earlier this month - remains in a coma, the less his chances of recovery or even regaining consciousness.

Sharon's closest political ally, Ehud Olmert, took over as acting prime minister. Last month Olmert led the party Sharon created just a few months earlier to an election victory, and Olmert is negotiating with other parties to form a new coalition government.

Sharon was declared permanently incapacitated by Israel's Cabinet on April 11, officially ending his five-year tenure.

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gotchA Reviewed by gotchA on . Doctors Admit Errors in Treating Ariel Sharon Doctors Admit Errors in Treating Ariel Sharon Doctors have admitted making a mistake when they treated then-Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon with large doses of blood thinners after a mild stroke, according to a TV report broadcast Thursday. Sharon has been comatose since suffering a massive stroke on Jan. 4. Channel 2 TV quoted doctors who treated Sharon at Jerusalem's Hadassah Hospital as saying the anticoagulants given him after a minor blood clot two weeks earlier might have caused Rating: 5