Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

English Engineer Performs Surgery on Himself After Being Put on Waiting List

Darpan News Desk IANS, 01 Oct, 2016 02:53 PM
  • English Engineer Performs Surgery on Himself After Being Put on Waiting List
Graham Smith, an engineer from Lancashire, England, was recently in the news for performing surgery on himself to remove eight millimeters of stitches left by surgeons inside his body years ago, after operations to correct it were cancelled twice.
 
Smith had underwent bowel surgery 15 years ago, and was left with stitches protruding through the skin on his abdomen. He first brought up the issue with the hospital where he had the original surgery in 2011, but he was put on a waiting list and an operation to fix the problem was cancelled twice. Rather than waiting for his turn and risk of dying of septicaemia, the crafty engineer decided to operate on himself, using modified titanium instruments he sourced from a dentist friend.
 
"I tried to do it through the normal channels... but I had septicaemia," Mr. Smith told the BBC. "I didn't make the decision lightly - I was desperate, but I had to take control of it and I was not prepared to sit and die on a waiting list."
 
 
Regarding the wire protruding through his abdomen, Graham said it was a lump of nylon 8mm-long with 12 really tight compressed knots.
 
"I couldn't just cut it off as it might have retracted and I would have been in real trouble so I had to undo these knots one by one and I had to make a few tools to allow me to do this," he said in a recent interview.
 
"There was a bit of blood and it stung a bit but I was confident in what I was doing."
 
Believe it or not, the surgery was a success, and Smith says that after 15 years he now feels like a new man. The original operation had left him "hunched over and leaning to the left", but he managed to fix the problem by meticulously removing the botched stitching.
 
"I'm a specialist engineer. I do jobs people can't do, but I'm not a surgeon so don't try this at at home," he cautioned anyone contemplating DIY surgery.
 
A spokesman for the Royal College of Surgeons also said that they would "strongly advise" against people performing surgery on themselves or others.
 
"If you do try to perform self-surgery without surgical training, there is a high risk that the procedure could go wrong, or damage another part of the body. There is also a possibility of infection," they said.
 
Aintree Hospital, in Liverpool, where Graham Smith had his original surgery, said in a statement that he he had been booked in for a consultation last Monday and that it would contact him about his care.
 
Graham is certainly not the first and probably not the last person to attempt operating on themselves. Back in 2011, we posted the story of Wu Yuanbi, a Chinese woman who performed surgery on herself using an ordinary kitchen knife due to not being able to afford a proper clinical procedure.

MORE Interesting ARTICLES

Parrots show how to be committed in relationship

Parrots show how to be committed in relationship
Humans have learnt a great deal about complex social behaviour from other species. It's time now for the avians to teach us a few lessons....

Parrots show how to be committed in relationship

Babies master words differently as they grow

Babies master words differently as they grow
These findings may help parents enhance their children's vocabularies and assist speech-language professionals in developing and refining interventions...

Babies master words differently as they grow

Fear of loss drives entrepreneurs

Fear of loss drives entrepreneurs
Loss aversion or fear of losing one's salary at a full-time job, along with its prestige is what drives most entrepreneurs and not a love of risk....

Fear of loss drives entrepreneurs

Male peacock doesn't sacrifice much to woo his lady

Male peacock doesn't sacrifice much to woo his lady
The magnificent plumage of the peacock may not be quite the sacrifice for love that it appears to be, researchers at the University of Leeds have found....

Male peacock doesn't sacrifice much to woo his lady

Can another drink relieve you from a hangover?

Can another drink relieve you from a hangover?
Is "hair of the dog" the best cure for hangover? According to a renowned author and journalist, another drink is the way to get rid of...

Can another drink relieve you from a hangover?

More siblings share same first initial: Facebook study

More siblings share same first initial: Facebook study
Have you noticed that more siblings nowadays share the same first initial? It is not a Kardashian sisters' trend but having the same...

More siblings share same first initial: Facebook study