Doctor faces inquiry after giving his cat a Cat scan at Italian hospital

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Doctor faces inquiry after giving his cat a Cat scan at Italian hospital
Italian radiologist, who says injured pet was ‘between life and death’, also operated on animal at Aosta facility
Angela Giuffrida / Feb 5, 2025

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The injured cat fell from the roof of a six-storey building. Picture posed by a model.

An Italian doctor has been placed under investigation after giving his cat a Cat scan at a hospital in Aosta before performing a life-saving operation on the feline.

Gianluca Fanelli took the animal, called Athena, to Umberto Parini hospital in the northern Italian region, where he is a manager of the radiology unit, after she fell from a roof.

“She was between life and death,” Fanelli said. “I knew I could only save her with a quick intervention.”

Athena underwent a brief Cat scan before Fanelli performed pneumothoracic surgery on her in the unit’s angiography suite.

She survived the ordeal, but the local health authority undertook an internal inquiry into the incident and referred the case to prosecutors in Aosta, who said Fanelli could face charges of wasting public money and depriving patients of essential services.

In his defence, Fanelli said he used the hospital equipment after hours, when all the X-rays scheduled for the day had been completed and no other patients were booked in for urgent tests.

Athena, who plunged six floors from the roof of the building where the family live, was one of five stray cats Fanelli said he had “rescued from the street and saved from extreme conditions”.

“I’m sorry if all of this led to a violation of the rules,” he said, adding that he was ready to reimburse the hospital if his actions proved costly.

“Being a doctor means carrying out a mission. The driving force is precisely the life that flows in the eyes of those who entrust themselves to your care. And this life flows in every living being. If my cat had died, I would never have been able to forgive myself, especially because my children adore her.”

Fanelli is married to Nicoletta Spelgatti, a senator for the League party. “My husband saved a life. That’s it,” she said.
 
Fanelli is married to Nicoletta Spelgatti, a senator for the League party.
Swear to God, I read that as "Nicoletta Spaghetti" and almost spit my drink....

“My husband saved a life. That’s it,” she said.
Yes, the life of a cat, which is not that of a human, entitled to care that would cost me five figures...... there's a reason they have veterinary services. Even emergency ones for trauma. Go there.
 
Yes, the life of a cat, which is not that of a human, entitled to care that would cost me five figures...... there's a reason they have veterinary services. Even emergency ones for trauma. Go there.
It's nuts how some people will find a way to get angry about even the most feel good of stories.

In a world of horrors a guy saves his cat and prevents his kids from crying. No one will remember his misconduct in decades (and it's not like Italy can afford to fire a doctor in Aosta) except his kids who will remember their Dad saved their pet. Cheer up and wish @Cats a speedy recovery.
 
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to be fair each time you boot up a MRI it costs thousands of dollars the fact this doc thought he could just sneak in and no one would notice is silly.
I think she should be made to pay the cost of running the machine but nothing more. Just use a cute pet saving story as a PR move but also put out a statement that the hospital cannot do it again because veterinarian care isn't available do reasons x, y and z.
 
It's not like he kicked a person away to use it on the cat. If you tell me he made a human being wait for their scan, then yeah, I'd believe he did the wrong thing.

If he can pay for the use, I'd have no problem. A cat is still one of God's creatures. Doctors often try to save animals when there aren't vets around.
 
would cost me five figures
to be fair each time you boot up a MRI it costs thousands of dollars the fact this doc thought he could just sneak in and no one would notice is silly.
That's a system issue, Big Pharma is to blame not the cat.

He didn't use it when a person was waiting, I assume he cleaned it up and didn't wreck the machine.

A scan like this costs between 150 to 300 dollars in Eastern Europe. A bit expensive but people left more at a veteranian than this.

Hint: If something you get for 50000 dollars can be obtained elsewhere for 500 dollars, it is not made of crushed up diamonds and gold. You are getting scammed by an industry.
 
It's nuts how some people will find a way to get angry about even the most feel good of stories.
This is The Guardian: they wrote an article accusing gardening of being racist, and an article condemning Noel Gallagher for being a white supremacist because he played a Union Jack-themed guitar on stage. The Guardian is the U.K.'s MSNBC, as in, a leftoid rag made for faggots who blow goats.
 
This is The Guardian: they wrote an article accusing gardening of being racist, and an article condemning Noel Gallagher for being a white supremacist because he played a Union Jack-themed guitar on stage. The Guardian is the U.K.'s MSNBC, as in, a leftoid rag made for faggots who blow goats.
It's a story about a cat, put down the politics for a moment and be happy.
 
to be fair each time you boot up a MRI it costs thousands of dollars the fact this doc thought he could just sneak in and no one would notice is silly.
Nope. And it wasn't a MRI anyway.

Agreed, liquid helium ain't cheap.
Indeed, but it takes months to lose any sizable amount, assuming no big mechanical break.
 
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