Walls: Noorchashm’s “Campaign of Distortions”

Share on facebook
Share on twitter
Share on linkedin
Share on email
Share on print

This article is part of The Cancer Letter's How Medical Devices Do Harm series.

The text of Ron Walls’s Nov. 10 response to Rep. Mike Fitzpatrick’s (R-Pa.) letter follows. Walls is executive vice president and chief operating officer at Brigham & Women’s Hospital.

Dear Congressman Fitzpatrick:

I am in receipt of your letter dated November 5.

I appreciate your interest in this matter, but want to be very clear that the security measures taken during Dr. Noorchashm’s visit were the direct result of the fear and anxiety expressed by faculty and staff on learning that Dr. Noorchashm would be returning to the hospital.

Since December 2013, Dr. Noorchashm has sent thousands of emails to faculty and staff at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, many of which contained language that recipients found disturbing and threatening.

It is my responsibility to provide a safe and secure work environment for our 18,000 employees. A number of our employees expressed concern about the presence of Dr. Noorchashm within the hospital, given his previous and on-going correspondence and behavior.

It was not feasible to provide personal protection to all for the duration of his visit, so I put discreet security measures in place that would both ensure the protection of and alleviate the anxiety of our faculty and staff while allowing Dr. Noorchashm to be with his wife during her stay.

I undertook these precautions with full knowledge that he would use them to distort the truth and once again publically criticize the hospital. Responding to the safety and security needs of our faculty, staff, our patients and their families is far more important to me than the impact of Dr. Noorchashm’s campaign of distortions.

I also want to assure you that neither I, nor any representative of Brigham and Women’s Hospital, have or would ever retaliate against or try to silence Dr. Noorchashm for expressing his opinions. He has every right to do so. However, when his speech instills fear in our faculty and staff—people who dedicate their lives to caring for our patients and their families—thus impacting their ability to provide that care, then I will do what I must to ensure their safety.

Sincerely,

Ron M. Walls, MD
Executive Vice President
Chief Operating Officer

YOU MAY BE INTERESTED IN

The Trump administration did exactly what it said it would do to disorient anyone involved in making policy or touched by it. The president and his crew have “flooded the zone”—the term and the image are theirs, as is the strategy of dropping a flurry of executive orders and memoranda that shake the foundations of the American system of government, raising questions of legality and constitutionality, and, above all, making it a challenge for anyone to see the entire picture and think strategically.
In two raucous back-to-back hearings on Jan. 29 and Jan. 30, anti-vaccine crusader Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was grilled by members of the United States Senate Finance Committee and the Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee as the Trump administration seeks his confirmation as secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services. 
Over the past century, groundbreaking cancer research in the U.S. has led to life-saving medical advances that benefit patients worldwide. Scientists often devote their lives to making discoveries, putting their scientific endeavors ahead of status, income, or lifestyle. Investigators work tirelessly, often seven days a week, to solve complex medical problems. These efforts often lead to game-changing outcomes that help us understand difficult medical challenges, advance technologies and develop new therapies. 

Never miss an issue!

Get alerts for our award-winning coverage in your inbox.

Login