Hospital says RFK Jr. did not operate robotic arm during heart surgery
Source: The Hill
05/14/26 2:48 PM ET
The Cleveland Clinic is pushing back on a report that Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. operated a robotic arm during a patients heart surgery on a recent visit to the medical center, clarifying that he was merely an observer. He briefly observed a robotic heart surgery as part of a broader tour, which included a demonstration using a disconnected teaching console that was unable to perform any surgical functions, a spokesperson for the clinic told The Hill in a statement on Thursday. He played no role in the patients care, they added.
The explanation came after KFF Health News reported Wednesday that Kennedy briefly tested the teaching console of the clinics robotic hands with a live patient splayed open for heart surgery in the room. The article has since been updated to reflect the clinics statement. The tidbit sparked immediate online criticism, with one doctor describing the HHS chiefs presence in the operating room as a horrifying and grotesque violation of HIPAA, referring to the federal health privacy law.
Im curious how he was ever allowed in a functioning operating room to be begin with
, Ian Fields, M.D., M.C.R., a urogynecologist, wrote in a post on social platform X. So, the Cleveland clinic stopped mid-heart-surgery for a photo op with Kennedy. Was the patients heart exposed just sitting there while they stopped the surgery and let Kennedy play with the tools? Still sounds like a lawsuit to me, another X user wrote.
The KFF reporter who joined Kennedy on his tour, Amanda Seitz, clarified in a follow-up post on X that multiple doctors continued working on the patient while they observed. Then, Kennedy sat at the machine that controls the robotic hands with a surgeon, she wrote. Cleveland Clinic did not allow anyone to take photos/videos in OR.
Read more: https://thehill.com/policy/healthcare/5878628-hhs-rfk-jr-robotic-arm-heart-surgery/
Raven123
(7,892 posts)agingdem
(8,955 posts)why the hell was he in the operating theater in the first place?...but then again, the Cleveland Clinic's powers-that-be are probably afraid RFK,Jr. will pull their funding if they don't acquiesce...
sop
(19,235 posts)Buddyzbuddy
(2,867 posts)Just kidding.
reACTIONary
(7,280 posts)
Midnight Writer
(25,714 posts)jmowreader
(53,381 posts)hamsterjill
(17,735 posts)If Cleveland Clinic did this without the patient's knowledge and permission, I hope they get sued. Any doctor performing that delicate of a procedure does not need to be distracted by anything, much less a photo op.
Skittles
(172,773 posts)WTF
Response to BumRushDaShow (Original post)
dalton99a This message was self-deleted by its author.
no_hypocrisy
(55,334 posts)First, I can plainly imagine Patel pestering until they let him do it, even for a minute. ("Aw, c'mon! Just let me TOUCH it . . . . " )
Then, Patel wants to put his hand/wrist on top of the surgeon's as he proceeds with surgery.
Then, Patel wants to just have his hand alone on the controls, even for a second.
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Maybe this never happened, but maybe it did. And you believe the underwriters and the counsel for the hospital and the surgeon and the staff would be ALLOWED to publicly admit that Patel was even in the operating room at the time of surgery? That's malpractice! Do you believe that the surgery patient would let an event like that go unaddressed?
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Then again, maybe the surgeon had self-survival if he refused this request. Very few people outside the surgery staff are allowed into the theater. Plus, a likely inebriated layman even getting near the table would be highly unorthodox.