Re: Karla- teaching hospitals

From: Kimmi&Dave (kimmi3@mediaone.net)
Wed Nov 28 07:57:35 2001


Jean, OMG I hate teaching hospitals.. You are so right the residents do almost kill ya, and the questions they ask you, I swear you wanna smack em. If its not cut and dry for them they have no idea what they are talking about. I have two hospitals that I use. New England Medical in Boston which have excellent doctors, but you have to deal with all the teaching crap. I really don't want to be a test patient for their residents. I really love South Shore Hospital, the doctors there are great and no residents or interns to deal with. But when in some areas they believe my care would be best suited at one of the bigger hospitals in Boston so I have go in there now and then. My Urologist who I just saw is at NEMC, thankfully his intern wasn't a bad one yesterday. Will give the full scoop and new things I am suppose to be doing on that one later.. Going to go play in a bingo Tournament and hopefully win some money LOL.. Gentle Hugs Kimmi

>----- Original Message -----
From: "Jean Long" <creative@enter.net> To: "Multiple recipients of list ADHESIONS" <adhesions@mail.medispecialty.com> Sent: Tuesday, November 27, 2001 4:16 AM Subject: Karla- teaching hospitals

> Karla,
> That is what I hate about the teaching hospitals. The residents could kill
> you learning!!
> When I went to the one in Philly I wasn't impressed with my care AT
> ALL.......nothing like the smaller hospitals where I live!!
> They spend all their time talking to the resident and it is like you
aren't > even there.
> If you are lucky "maybe" you can catch something he says to the resident
so > you have "some" information about your case!!
>
> I was even almost taken for the wrong surgery and had to be taken back to
> the holding room when it was discovered! I could write a book about my
> experiences there.
> My experiences at that hospital were not good memories at all!
>
> I feel they made my hip even worse than it was before.
> Now I am totally missing 3" to 4" of my bone, and also have allot of bone
> loss where there is bone remaining due to the extra large prosthesis they
> put in compared to what I had before (and I am not a big person). There is
> even a bone fragment in there now for some reason.
> I also now have great difficulty lifting that leg while laying on my side
> and can't lift it very far, and didn't before. The new surgeon is
concerned > about that!
>
> I really wonder if my surgeon did the surgeries or if the resident really
> did!!
>
> JEAN
>
> "OLD" IS WHEN..... Your sweetie says, "Let's go upstairs and make love,"
and > you answer,
> "Pick one, I can't do both!"
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: adhesions@adhesions.org [mailto:adhesions@adhesions.org]On Behalf
> Of Karla
> Sent: Monday, November 26, 2001 3:51 PM
> To: Multiple recipients of list ADHESIONS
> Subject: Re: Cindy & Karla- central lines
>
> It is a dangerous procedure. When I have them done in Milwaukee they take
> me to ICU to do it...and they always do a chest x-ray following it. Here
in > my local hospital one doctor does it right in the room...but he is the
best > when it comes to doing it....very little pain at all. I had one done once
> in Milwaukee where my surgeon was teaching residents how to do it. The
> resident hit an artery instead of a vein. The blood came blasting out
> shooting up into my ear and all over. I was so scared. It definitely had
> the surgeon going too.
>
> Karla
>


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