February 11, 2004 -- The widow of Dr. Robert Atkins is considering suing the city over the unauthorized release of her late husband's confidential medical records - which show the diet guru was obese at the time of his death.
The 6-foot Atkins weighed a scale-shattering 258 pounds at the time of his death last year, according to records from the city's Medical Examiner's Office that were released by an anti-Atkins group.
But a representative for widow Veronica Atkins yesterday ripped the medical examiner's report about the diet doc's weight as "absurd."
Spokesman Richard Rothstein said Dr. Atkins, promoter of the popular high-fat, protein-rich diet, tipped the scales at 195 pounds - considered overweight but not obese for a man of that height - when he was admitted to the hospital last April
He then gained 63 pounds from a steady diet of intravenous fluids and from organ failure while in a coma for more than a week.
Independent medical experts said such a large weight gain would have been possible.
"He wouldn't be the first person to die significantly heavier than he was in life after a critical injury," said Dr. Lisa Sanders of Yale Medical School.
The latest furor comes in the wake of Mayor Bloomberg last month disparaging the late doctor in front of a group of Brooklyn firefighters, calling the 72-year-old Atkins "fat" and saying he didn't "believe that bull---- that [Atkins] dropped dead slipping on the sidewalk."
Five days later, after a storm of bad publicity, Bloomberg - who had been to Atkins' home and spoke in unflattering terms about the food served there - apologized for his comments through a statement issued by press secretary Ed Skyler.
The disclosure of Atkins' medical records - first reported in yesterday's Wall Street Journal - is a violation of the law and the Medical Examiner's Office said yesterday it had occurred by mistake.
Rothstein said, "There are a number of legal options being considered" by Veronica Atkins.
The ME's Office is investigating the circumstances surrounding the release of the medical report - which wound up in the hands of an anti-Atkins group before being given to the Journal.
The group, Physicians for Responsible Medicine, promotes a vegetarian diet and is linked to the radical animal-rights group People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, according to Atkins supporters
Responding to the medical examiner's report, which said Atkins had a recorded history of heart trouble, Veronica Atkins said her husband suffered from a heart condition called cardiomyopathy that "significantly weakened his heart," but she insisted the ailment had nothing to do with his slip-and-fall death.
His cause of death was officially listed as a head injury.
Medical Examiner's Office spokeswoman Ellen Borakove said the office had apologized to Veronica Atkins.
http://nypost.com/news/regionalnews/17688.htm
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I find it interesting that the guy had heart problems. I don't see how eating all that fatty food could be good for you in the long run. My apologies to the supporters on this board.