Zhejiang forms team on child’s postoperative death

The Zhejiang Provincial Government has deployed a specialized task force to supervise investigations into the tragic postoperative death of a child at Ningbo University’s Women and Children’s Hospital, according to an official Xinhua News Agency report. The case, involving a young patient surnamed Xu who passed away on November 14 after cardiac surgery, has triggered significant public concern and intensive scrutiny across social media platforms.

Provincial authorities have designated this incident as a critical priority, establishing enhanced oversight mechanisms for subsequent measures. Concurrently, Ningbo municipal authorities have dispatched their own working group to the medical facility to advance the investigation, implement corrective actions, and safeguard normal clinical operations.

In a December 14 statement, Ningbo’s Health Commission revealed that their investigation uncovered multiple deficiencies in the medical team’s management of the case. These included insufficient surgical risk assessment, procedural negligence, failure to promptly notify family members of intraoperative emergencies, and inadequate postoperative monitoring and care protocols. The hospital itself was found to have systemic weaknesses in enforcing quality control standards and risk prevention mechanisms.

Accountability measures have already been implemented, with the lead surgeon and anesthesiologist removed from their departmental leadership positions and suspended from clinical practice. The pediatric intensive care attending physician has likewise been suspended pending further investigation. Additional disciplinary actions against other personnel will follow completion of a technical appraisal of the medical accident and subsequent legal proceedings.

Following the incident, authorities arranged for an autopsy through a forensic center selected by the child’s family. Tide News, a Zhejiang-based digital news outlet, reported that the notarized autopsy report was delivered to the family on December 19. The city has now initiated a formal medical-accident technical appraisal that will incorporate national experts to identify medical errors and establish responsibility levels. A local court has accepted the family’s medical liability lawsuit against the hospital.

From November 19 to December 9, the investigation team consulted 17 medical experts from leading hospitals in Beijing, Shanghai, and various Zhejiang institutions, including specialists in pediatric cardiac surgery, cardiothoracic and vascular surgery, anesthesiology, pediatric intensive care, neonatology, and forensic medicine. While experts agreed that the child’s condition warranted surgical intervention without absolute contraindications, they expressed differing opinions regarding the optimal timing of the procedure—a matter expected to be resolved through the ongoing technical appraisal.

Ningbo’s Health Commission has announced a comprehensive citywide quality and safety rectification campaign focusing on surgical safety protocols, patient safety measures, humane care standards, and medical record documentation practices.