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Thousands of eggs, embryos possibly damaged at Ohio hospital

AP  |  Cleveland 

An hospital where approximately 2,000 frozen eggs and embryos may have been damaged by a storage tank malfunction has apologised to patients and said it will do "everything possible to address the situation." The unexplained rise in temperatures in a liquid nitrogen tank, first reported Thursday by The , occurred sometime late Saturday or Sunday morning at Medical Center's suburban fertility clinic. "We are incredibly sorry this happened," the hospital said in a statement. "We are committed to getting answers and working with patients individually to address their concerns." One round of can cost patients without around $12,000. The hospital hasn't said whether it would compensate about 700 affected patients, who are being notified through letters and telephone calls. Some of the samples date to the 1980s, said Dr. James Liu, of the hospital's obstetrics and gynecology department. Patti DePompei, of and and MacDonald Women's Hospital, called the situation "absolutely devastating." "At this point, we do not know the viability of all the stored eggs and embryos, although we do know some have been impacted," DePompei said in a video statement posted on Samples would need to be unthawed to determine whether they've been damaged.

Specimens unfrozen for scheduled procedures this week were not viable, reported. Employees were alerted to the problem by an alarm when they arrived for work Sunday morning. No one was working at the facility overnight Saturday. All of the samples have been moved to another storage tank that's being monitored by staff round the clock. The hospital said it's conferring with experts about why the storage tank malfunctioned.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, March 09 2018. 22:50 IST
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