Hospital system accused of inaction after ultrasound technologist allegedly assaults 6 women

Six women have filed lawsuits against California health system Sutter Health, alleging sexual assault by an ultrasound technologist during procedures conducted between 2020 and 2022 at Sutter-owned Memorial Hospital Los Banos. 

Despite multiple complaints and two police investigations, Henry Nweke, the accused technologist, remained employed as an overnight ultrasound tech at the hospital. The lawsuits claim Sutter disregarded or mishandled complaints about Nweke's behavior.

Allegations against Nweke range from inappropriate touching to simulating erotic acts with the ultrasound probe. The women are seeking financial damages from the health system. Both Sutter and Nweke have denied any wrongdoing.

According to coverage in the San Francisco Chronicle, the women chose Memorial Hospital due to its proximity and lack of alternative ultrasound imaging options in their shared rural county of residence. After the alleged assault, some drove long distances to other hospitals to avoid returning to the site. The women did not know each other before the lawsuit and were unaware of each other’s cases. 

Despite internal investigations by the hospital and police involvement, no criminal charges have been filed against Nweke. Sutter argues that Nweke followed proper protocols during ultrasound procedures and is conducting its third internal investigation into the claims.

The first civil case is scheduled to go to trial in September.

The full coverage from the San Francisco Chronicle can be found at the link below.

Chad Van Alstin Health Imaging Health Exec

Chad is an award-winning writer and editor with over 15 years of experience working in media. He has a decade-long professional background in healthcare, working as a writer and in public relations.

Around the web

RSNA and several other industry societies have shared a new expert consensus document on the significant value of cardiac CT. Echo remains an effective first-line imaging option, the groups wrote, but CT can make a big impact as well. 

"Using AI for tasks like CAC detection can help shift medicine from a reactive approach to the proactive prevention of disease," one researcher said.

Former American Society of Echocardiography president and well-known cardiac ultrasound pioneer Roberto Lang, MD, died at the age of 73. He helped develop 3D echo technology that is now used by care teams on a daily basis.