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Christopher Daniel Duntsch (born April 3, 1971) [1] is a former American neurosurgeon who has been nicknamed Dr. D. and Dr. Death [2] for 33 incidents of gross neurosurgical malpractice while working at hospitals in the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex, which maimed 31 patients and caused 2 deaths. [3]
Known as "Dr. Death," Christopher Duntsch was a Dallas-area surgeon who left 30 of his patients paralyzed and two dead between 2010 and 2012. After staying up all night partying while using cocaine and LSD, he put on his lab coat and went to work the next morning.
Out July 15, Dr. Death introduces viewers to Christopher Duntsch, a real-life Texas-based surgeon who in 2017 was sentenced to life in prison after maiming and even killing almost all of the...
(CBS4) - When he was arrested in 2015, the man dubbed "Dr. Death" called Centennial home. Dr. Christopher Duntsch split his time between Colorado and Texas after he lost his medical license...
Christopher Duntsch’s surgical outcomes were so outlandishly poor that Texas prosecuted him for harming patients. Why did it take so long for the systems that are supposed to police problem...
Those are the words that Dr. Christopher Duntsch, a Dallas neurosurgeon, wrote to his girlfriend in 2011 — in the midst of a two-year period that left 33 of his 38 patients maimed, wounded or...
Peacock's Dr. Death is a chilling dramatization of the real-life story of former neurosurgeon Christopher Duntsch. As those watching the show know, Christopher was dubbed "Dr. Death" in D...
Christopher Duntsch, known as "Dr. Death," arrived in Dallas in 2010 with an impressive resume and promising career as a neurosurgeon. His credentials boasted an M.D. and Ph.D. from a prestigious medical school, along with a decade of experience and involvement in stem-cell research.
Christopher Duntsch, 46, was convicted last week of first-degree felony injury in one of those instances: a botched 2012 surgery involving 74-year-old Mary Efurd who lost a third of her blood...
Following Oxygen’s ‘License to Kill’ and CNBC’s ‘American Greed,’ the tale of Christopher Duntsch, aptly dubbed to be “Dr. Death,” is being profiled on Peacock in a crime-drama miniseries titled after his nickname.