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Health inspector testifies about her findings at the Gosnell abortion clinic
NBC10.com
Day 4 of testimony in the trial of Philadelphia abortion doctor, Kermit Gosnell.
Dr. Kermit Gosnell's abortion clinic
went nearly two decades without being inspected by Pennsylvania health
officials. It's the latest revelation to come from the abortion doctor's
murder trial as it moves into a second week.
Pa. Department of Health employee
Elinor Barsony testified Monday about conditions she found during a
surprise inspection of the Women's Medical Society in 2010. Days later,
the clinic was shut down. She said the inspection was the first
conducted by the state since the early 1990s.
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Gosnell, 72, is charged with the murders of seven babies.
He's accused of delivering the babies alive and then snipping their
spinal cords with scissors. Gosnell denies the allegations. The former
abortion doctor is also charged with third-degree murder in the death of
a 41-year-old woman who obtained an abortion in his clinic.
During questioning by the
prosecution, Barsony said she witnessed crowded waiting rooms, sedated
patients without proper care and a lack of privacy in the recovery
room.
"There was no privacy, no quiet rooms, there was nothing," she testified.
Staffers, described by prosecutors as desperate and unlicensed,
were visibly nervous when discussing their credentials or patient
medication, according to Barsony. Prosecutors say two "doctors" on-staff
did not hold medical licenses. The clinic's "anesthesiologist" had only
a 6th grade education and another medical staffer was a 15-year-old
high school student.
Barsony told jurors she found
"filthy, corroded" tubing in medical machines inside the West
Philadelphia clinic. Broken equipment blocked a padlocked emergency
exit, according to the health inspector.
The facility, located at 38th and Lancaster Streets, was named a "house of horrors" by prosecutors for the deplorable conditions inside.
Speaking to patients inside the
clinic during her visit, Barsony said some complained of cramps and
bleeding. Two women, who had same-day procedures, received no counseling
and were not subjected to a state-mandated 24-hour waiting period. This
was noted on forms signed by Gosnell, according to Barsony.
Barsony said the clinic failed to
meet several state regulations -- including having a registered nurse in
the recovery room and insufficient information in the clinic's
narcotics log.
The inspector told the court she
spent hours inside the clinic, staying until 2:00 a.m. during her 2010
visit. She returned a few days later to ask Gosnell to voluntarily close
his clinic.
During that return visit, Barsony
said she smelled cleaning fluid in the clinic, along with necessary
equipment that wasn't there before.
The state eventually revoked Gosnell's medical license and the facility has been closed ever since.
Monday's proceedings mark the second week of testimony in the murder case that's captured national attention.
A toxicologist will take the stand Tuesday. Gosnell's former employees are expected to testify later this week.
Gosnell faces the death penalty if convicted of the crimes.
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