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  • Report:  #1490180

Complaint Review: R3 Stem Cell LLC - Stemcellmarketing.com - SCottsdale az

Reported By:
Tony - Las Vegas, United States
Submitted:
Updated:

R3 Stem Cell LLC - Stemcellmarketing.com
29455 N Cave Creek Rd. 118-458 SCottsdale, 85331 az, United States
Phone:
6026778981
Web:
r3stemcell.com
Categories:
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NEWS REPORT

Dr David L Green marketing sales person / doctor who makes videos on you tube marketing stem cells from tijuanna and unregulated stem cells in patients has a show where he markets to veterans and people with diseases for a free stem cell injection in Las Vegas.

news reports show him as a deadly doctor Phoenix daily news. I was ripped off by his company he paid with a american experess credit card took goods and services and then charged back all funds! 11/08/2019



2 Updates & Rebuttals

thomas

Las Vegas,
Nevada,
United States
Dr. David Greene R3 Stemcell

#2Author of original report

Tue, February 04, 2020

Yes I was hired by your company and followed your direction to record your conference in Las Vegas for 10 hours the 1st day and the 2nd day you hired 2 people to video record your seminar for 10 hours do thats 30 hours of work. You charged back and have paid us 00.00 for 30 hours of videography work!

You are using the videos on your youtube.com page. They look excellent.  I have done interviews for over 10 years with hundreds of interviews. BB KIng, Steve Wozniak, Rorian Gracie,  Robert O'Neill..... and many others. You refused to wear a mic i offered you to wear.

You just dont want to pay for the services and did a chargeback through american express for all the funds. 5 months ago this is unacceptable. Do you think you should have to pay for this? Doctors dont work for free! 

David Lawrence Greene casts himself as a retired orthopedic surgeon turned stem-cell guru through his Scottsdale-based R3 Stem Cell LLC, which distributes amniotic stem cells to clinics across the country and claims to have administered stem cells to thousands of patients. What he fails to mention on his website, in brochures, or at presentations filled with hurting people desperate for relief, is that the treatments he offers might not actually work, and he shouldn't really be calling himself "Dr. Greene" anymore — not after the Arizona Medical Board deemed Greene incapable of "recognizing evidence that he may have made a mistake in the care of any

patient," despite "the sheer volume of established error," including five deaths and one paralyzation, that led the board to decide Greene was unfit to practice medicine. Greene identifies himself as "Dr. David Greene" on his cellphone voicemail. He

told Phoenix New Times he owns up to any mistake he made and feels badly for it, but no longer performs procedures himself. Greene told The New Yorker and

ProPublica that he had "great outcomes" as a surgeon and "the same rate of complications as other doctors who haven't been sanctioned." He said what happened when he was a surgeon is not relevant to his work today.

Greene told The New Yorker and ProPublica, "I don't claim anything" when it comes to stem cells, despite the fact his website proclaims, in all caps, that their treatment centers "change lives every day. Patients frequently avoid surgery while achieving relief from arthritis pain, overuse conditions, COPD, kidney/heart failure, neuropathy, and more."

The findings of the Arizona Medical Board show that Greene graduated from the University of Virginia School of Medicine in 1997. Between 1997 and 1998, he completed a general surgery internship at Maricopa Medical Center. In the following years, he started an orthopedic surgery residence at the Maricopa Medical Center in Phoenix. That residency program was placed on probation, so between 2000 and 2003, Greene completed his residency at Brown University in Rhode Island. After that, in 2004, he completed a fellowship in orthopedic spine surgery at Beth Israel Spine Institute in New York City.

Within months of beginning work as a practicing surgeon back in Arizona, Greene killed someone. Greene's first patient death came on January 31, 2005. A pathology report found a laceration on the patient's abdominal aorta, leading to the person's death. The same day, Greene performed spine surgery on a 51-year-old male patient. The surgery left the man with severe pain in his right leg and an abnormal gait or foot drop, which the board attributed to Greene's failure to "use intraoperative fluoroscopy to document the position" of a screw that was meant to prevent nerve injury.

Then in July 2005, Greene performed a spinal procedure on 35-year-old U.S. Air Force master sergeant James DeJong, The New Yorker and ProPublica reported. When DeJong awoke, he learned he'd never walk again: the procedure had left him paralyzed from the waist down.

On January 6, 2006, Greene performed routine surgery on Lola Ollerton. The 78-year- old's husband and five daughters were sitting in the waiting room, reminiscing about their family history, when they were called into another room, one of Ollerton's daughters told The New Yorker and ProPublica. Greene told the family there was a "complication" and their mother had died. The medical board later found that Greene showed "poor surgical judgment" and should not have taken certain actions that led to Ollerton's death.

After examining these four botched surgeries and one other, in which Greene re- implanted hardware in a patient after it was removed due to an infection, severely exacerbating the man's wounds, the Arizona Medical Board was made aware that Greene had killed another patient during surgery in May 2007 and "had an interbody cage migrate into the spinal canal" after performing surgery on another.

Though the Arizona Medical Board was aware that Greene's surgeries had ended or tragically altered the lives of at least seven people from 2005 to 2007, they only suspended his license on August 20, 2007. The suspension was reported by local news at the time; Tucson.com wrote that the board considered Greene "an imminent threat to public health and safety."

The news prompted a deluge of new complaints from old patients. The board received and investigated at least 13 new complaints and found that Greene had consistently misplaced screws in patients' spines, and left two more patients with foot drops, plus others with serious infections, blood loss, nerve injuries, and "drainage" from leaking, infected wounds. There was at least one post-surgical meningitis infection as well as patients who required additional surgeries because Greene left medical equipment poorly positioned inside of them the first time around.

The patient who became infected with bacterial meningitis after he left Greene's operating table had to undergo three additional surgical procedures and was left with debilitating chronic pain that requires the use of fentanyl patches.

In summer 2005, the board learned, Greene killed another patient after he "deviated from the standard of care by continuing with the posterior portion of the surgery although he had been notified that MC [the patient] was developing acidosis." Later that year, another one of Greene's patients died after Greene prescribed him a strong, time- release narcotic drug without advising the patient, who had claimed he was "immune" to narcotics, that the drug had a delayed effect. The man died of a drug overdose from a combination of pain and sedative medications.

On several occasions, complaints from post-surgery patients prompted a second evaluation, many of which included CT and/or MRI scans. Even when scans showed Greene had positioned screws poorly, likely triggering the patient's post-surgical pain, Greene refused to accept that he could have made an error.

When another doctor performed a CT scan on one of Greene's post-surgery patients who was complaining of left groin and hip pain, he found the left screw was extended too far. Yet after reviewing the other doctor's CT scan, Greene told the patient "his screws look fine, no issues here."

After his suspension, Greene participated in a "PACE" program that evaluates physicians' competence. The Arizona Medical Board stated that "Dr. Greene had scored in the 10th or lowest percentile on ethics and communication."

Having reviewed the 13 new cases, the Arizona Medical Board decided to revoke Greene's license. One doctor involved in the review "questioned whether Green is safely able to practice, given his obvious lapses in judgment and errors attributable to limited technical proficiency."

"Most of the cases, viewed alone, would be the kind of result that might occur once in a surgeon's career," the medical board wrote in its revocation decision. "The sheer volume of cases created grounds for special concern ... the protection of the public requires that, at some point, the sheer volume of established error be considered."

As The New Yorker and ProPublica reported, Greene was sued so many times for medical malpractice that he had to file for bankruptcy. So, they reported, he obtained an MBA at Arizona State University, then launched his career hawking stem cells in 2013. Greene is prone to making outsized claims at presentations that misrepresent the efficacy of his stem cell treatments. The New Yorker and ProPublica debunked these claims. Greene supplied the publications with lab analyses of his stem cell products. Both showed that only 42 percent — or roughly 600,000 — of the cells in the vials were alive, though Greene has previously stated that there are 10 million live cells in his products. And those could be any cells, not just stem cells, since testing didn't indicate whether they were stem cells or some other type of unhelpful cells.


David

Cave Creek,
Arizona,
United States
Completely False Report

#3REBUTTAL Owner of company

Mon, February 03, 2020

I own R3 Stem Cell. For the past 8 years our nationwide Centers have performed over 13,000 stem cell procedures. This includes over 100 free procedures on military veterans! The biologics our Centers use are in fact regulated by the FDA and come from labs with a pristine safety record.

So the stem cells ARE regulated. We also have a Center in Mexico that offers regenerative procedures. The safety standards from that lab actually exceed FDA standards. We have videos showing the quality assurance certificates being explained.

I haven't practiced medicine in 13 years, our practicing doctors are Board Certified and experts in regenerative procedures.

The reason this individual put in the report actually has nothingn to do with R3's procedures. It is that we hired his company to film and produce videos from one of our stem cell training courses for doctors. He showed up, which is about it. The videos he produced were terrible. Most of the one hour presentations - he filmed about 2 minutes of each one. None had audio that you could understand.

We asked him over 10 times for the videos, and each time he sent the same files that were missing audio and most of the footage. I've never seen such shoddy work. He doesn't even use a microphone, even for interviews. Out of professional courtesy I will withhold his company's name, however, you can see he had no trouble mentioning R3.

I rarely perform chargebacks on vendors, however, I rarely receive such terrible, shoddy work.

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