#1 Mistake You Make With Doctors

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  • Опубликовано: 10 сен 2024

Комментарии • 2,7 тыс.

  • @briankelly85
    @briankelly85 Месяц назад +1903

    my greatest fear is incompetent doctors with huge egos.

    • @ambrusin4889
      @ambrusin4889 29 дней назад +62

      and there are many of those. Unfortunately. They don`t even hear you out.

    • @Demy1970
      @Demy1970 29 дней назад +30

      And dei= didn’t earn it

    • @jlanderson21257
      @jlanderson21257 29 дней назад +51

      Horrible. When Dad had his first heart attack, I lived out of town and called the cardiologist with a list of questions. He interrupted me and said "what do you do for a living"? I said I'm a musician. He said "I won't tell you about music, and you don't tell me about medicine". Wow.

    • @inkey2
      @inkey2 29 дней назад +20

      @@jlanderson21257 so typical........I totally believe you

    • @kurt1391
      @kurt1391 29 дней назад +24

      @@jlanderson21257 If this happens, you say, "You don't need to live with the consequences of your mistakes."

  • @CheGa2016
    @CheGa2016 Месяц назад +2315

    I am shadowing a doctor. When she is reading the notes of why the patient is coming in, she is already saying “I don’t believe her or why do they come here for this.” It breaks my heart to see such lack of empathy.

    • @CheGa2016
      @CheGa2016 Месяц назад

      @@lovejoy71422 I wish I could do that. I’m not shadowing the doctor. I’m not allow to stay with the patients. I follow the doctor everywhere.
      Imagine you’re done with doctor appointment and the student tells you something negative about the doctor? Who will you believe, would that cause more damage to the patient?

    • @Tiffany-Rose
      @Tiffany-Rose Месяц назад +190

      and what do you do or say? Break the cycle.

    • @A---ti3zz
      @A---ti3zz Месяц назад +221

      Definitely do the opposite of her! What a terrible doctor!!
      I don’t list the complaint when I schedule because I know doctors do this. I figured I would make them come up with their gaslighting argument on the fly. I am not going to give them time to prepare to gaslight me.

    • @SapphireKid-zh3up
      @SapphireKid-zh3up Месяц назад +93

      That is really stupidity though. All you need to do is some research into how many times people have to see a Dr before they are diagnosed. Think it’s around 3 years for my condition and then you are dead. I’m surprised when some are diagnosed first time. And it’s not even by a specialist. Functional or Naturopath. You would think you would need to keep the passion alive when being a Dr since so much of your live is taken. Those others need to find a different profession or situation.

    • @13eye
      @13eye Месяц назад +98

      I had a doctor tell me this about my daughter, turned out she has migraines, and her symptoms and not the usual auras most people get, 3 peds later finally got someone that would list, please don't be like the dr you are shadowing. I hope you are an amazing doctor. All the best to you.

  • @kathyscholten5369
    @kathyscholten5369 29 дней назад +1088

    I went in for a hemorrhoidectomy. I had discussed with my doctor that I would have a local. The morning of the surgery a different doctor came in with residents, she was explaining what she would be doing. She said that they would be using general anesthesia and I stopped her. I explained that I do not handle general anesthesia and have ended up in ICU in the past after having to be revived 3 times. She told me that she is the doctor and will decide how things are done. I said no she was not going to be operating on me. My mother was shocked. You don’t tell a doctor no. I got up, got dressed and left the hospital. I refused to be operated on by an arrogant doctor thinking she controlled my choices. I have never regretted it and I trust my instinct. Side note - I worked in the medical field long enough to know better. She should have known better as well. I hope the residents learned something that day. You have to be your own advocate.

    • @billhesford6098
      @billhesford6098 27 дней назад

      You are right about them.
      I stopped listening to them during covid. The system shut down fully qualified doctors and scientists - anybody with a different narrative. I was on 8 different medications which apparently I had to keep taking or I would die. About 4 years ago now, I stopped taking the pills after the covid debacle and I cannot believe how much better I feel. I don't trust their instincts at all. I will take my chances.

    • @Gabriela-jo7mg
      @Gabriela-jo7mg 25 дней назад +29

      Amen sister!

    • @RunninUpThatHillh
      @RunninUpThatHillh 25 дней назад +40

      WHAT??😂😂😂 Imagine a doctor, or ANYONE, deciding your medical care. Fired on the spot.

    • @susanmclane7781
      @susanmclane7781 24 дня назад +59

      But it is very hard to be your own advocate when you are seriously ill or in terrible pain.

    • @RunninUpThatHillh
      @RunninUpThatHillh 24 дня назад

      @@susanmclane7781 True! My mother was rushed to the ER (lives alone) for sciatic pain. She was screaming in pain. They asked her if she had the "safe and effective treatment". She said no. They asked why. She said she didn't wanna be a guinea pig. Immediately the nurses were so rude to her. My mom is a strong woman with a high threshold for pain. She was in the bed crying her eyes out in the fetal position, she told me. They treated her like a crack head fishing for pain meds and then grilled her about getting the shot. I so wish I was there.

  • @PlantPerson58
    @PlantPerson58 24 дня назад +303

    I’ve fired two doctors for not listening to me. The look on their faces was priceless.

    • @andromedaspark2241
      @andromedaspark2241 18 дней назад +17

      Likewise. Doctors will hurt you and not care if you let them.

    • @lv2tango2
      @lv2tango2 17 дней назад +24

      If a doctor discounts what I say, interrupts me while I'm speaking, or argues with me... I'm outa there!

    • @PlantPerson58
      @PlantPerson58 17 дней назад +5

      @@lv2tango2 Well done!

    • @lisakeller9105
      @lisakeller9105 17 дней назад +2

      Me, too.

    • @pamelaharris8480
      @pamelaharris8480 15 дней назад +4

      Thank you for your replies. I really REALLY need to fire my current doctor. I keep putting it off because, frankly, I am kind of afraid of her. Sad, huh?

  • @maryellenc8837
    @maryellenc8837 29 дней назад +508

    I "spoke up" about a very relevant pre-existing condition and the surgeon treated me like a hypochondriac. I showed her! I nearly died post surgery from complications from the pre-existing condition. So don't blame the patient for "not speaking up." Just bc we speak up doesn't mean they will listen.

    • @psychedelicpython
      @psychedelicpython 27 дней назад +22

      I can relate. What happened to me wasn’t nearly as extreme at what happened to you. I went into the hospital for a arthrogram on the joints in my jaw. I had major facial surgery about 5 years prior to that and the anesthesiologist told me to tell other anesthesiologists in the future not to put me to sleep to put the tube in my throat (or however the anesthesiologist said it). I told the anesthesiologist this prior to my arthrogram and he didn’t listen. My husband told me in recovery the doctor came out while I was in the operating room and told him they may not be able to do the procedure because they couldn’t get the tube in to sedate me. Eventually they got the tube in my throat but when I woke up I could barely swallow because I was in so much pain. I made it clear to the anesthesiologist 3 days before the procedure and he ignored me.

    • @captainfuture2882
      @captainfuture2882 27 дней назад +26

      They always put the blame on the patient.
      If you speak up you are a hypochondrian.
      If you didn't you didn't care about your own health.

    • @ibberman
      @ibberman 25 дней назад +3

      You are exactly right.

    • @RunninUpThatHillh
      @RunninUpThatHillh 25 дней назад +11

      If they don't listen, you are obligated to fire them.

    • @laurens5909
      @laurens5909 24 дня назад +4

      It’s unfortunate that you didn’t or couldn’t leave before the procedure.

  • @forestmcneir3325
    @forestmcneir3325 Месяц назад +1404

    I had plastic surgery after skin cancer on my face. Fotunately, I opted for local anesthesia. My surgeon was off in a corner of the OR, gabbing on his cell phone as residents were performing my surgery. As they were about to finish and sew me up, I asked if they'd removed a small bubble in my facial skin situated alongside the previous surgery scar. I had discussed this issue with the surgeon during our pre-surgery conference. The surgery residents reacted to my question as if I'd been speaking in a foreign language. So I told them to get the surgeon off his cell phone and over here. When I asked him about getting that skin bubble removed, he went "oh shit," stepped in and did the excision of the skin bubble himself. I told the anesthesioligist, "now do you see why I wanted a local, not a general? I stay awake for all my haircuts and i'm damn well staying awake if my face is getting cut on."

    • @kennethflores-hv7uf
      @kennethflores-hv7uf Месяц назад +64

      That totally sucks, I nearly lost a finger to an ER Drs incompetence.

    • @Thi-Nguyen
      @Thi-Nguyen Месяц назад +26

      Dayum!! That’s crazy!

    • @austinballard6815
      @austinballard6815 Месяц назад +35

      You were wise! I've seen and even had some amazing screw ups before, often from inattention by those who were supposed to be in charge...it's gotten worse now as opposed to say 20 years ago, IMHO

    • @forestmcneir3325
      @forestmcneir3325 Месяц назад

      @@kennethflores-hv7uf Inexcusable!

    • @hughcurley6314
      @hughcurley6314 Месяц назад +34

      Ive also had surgery to repair nose after skin ca. Amazing the difference in docs. One was fired by me and #2 stepped in. Dept head at ivy league med school. Have had one major flap surgery and 6 revisions the majors (4) going 90 mins or longer with gen anesthesia the minors were with local. Local anes. Surgeries were accompanied by a virtual history lesson on advancements in plastic surg since world war one. Also he would always ask about our family, knew my hobbies and our travel habits. Amazing difference

  • @fillythrees3341
    @fillythrees3341 Месяц назад +1115

    Please remember that 50% of doctors graduated in the LOWER 50% of their class.

    • @ShadeIsLikely
      @ShadeIsLikely 29 дней назад +61

      What do you call the person who finishes at the bottom of their medical class? Dr. 😮

    • @unbreakable7633
      @unbreakable7633 29 дней назад +50

      Same with lawyers, accountants, engineers, etc.

    • @Golgi-Gyges
      @Golgi-Gyges 29 дней назад +53

      But does graduating top level always make for the best doctors?

    • @inkey2
      @inkey2 29 дней назад +9

      @@ShadeIsLikely a dentist

    • @kurt1391
      @kurt1391 29 дней назад +19

      @@inkey2 Dental training is about as demanding as medical training.

  • @jernidis3316
    @jernidis3316 Месяц назад +1021

    But not every doctor is as nice, understanding and helpful as you...

    • @kimberlina68
      @kimberlina68 Месяц назад +22

      Amen 🙌. I pissed off all my doctors with their stupid arse algorithms!

    • @Oma_Wetterwachs
      @Oma_Wetterwachs Месяц назад +11

      German Hospital: Be nice, but be extremly honest as a foreigner, because they will you ask 1 time and think you was honestly af.

    • @Skatejock21
      @Skatejock21 Месяц назад +14

      not all doctors are competent but also not all patients are right as they think they are

    • @anned.4250
      @anned.4250 Месяц назад +5

      Or sexy 😂

    • @originalcosmicgirl
      @originalcosmicgirl Месяц назад +26

      ​@@Skatejock21You're right, but patients should still be listened to and taken seriously. If a patient has a misconception, or worse, a past trauma that causes them to think or behave a certain way, a good doctor will usually be able to talk it out with them instead of dismissing or ignoring the patient.

  • @a.k.7116
    @a.k.7116 18 дней назад +166

    WHY CANT MORE DRS BE *HUMBLE* LIKE THIS GUY??

  • @Super-225
    @Super-225 16 дней назад +89

    The most powerful and most truthful advice I've ever heard is "No one will care about you as much or take as well of care of you as YOU".

    • @cristyrobertson9165
      @cristyrobertson9165 13 дней назад +3

      Yes 100%

    • @lrs3419
      @lrs3419 12 дней назад +1

      OMG...My mother gave me this piece of advice and I literally told my daughter the exact same thing today...so true!

    • @kathycallahan6810
      @kathycallahan6810 11 дней назад

      Unless it's your mother

  • @jeremiahabbott5277
    @jeremiahabbott5277 Месяц назад +628

    It’s so sad that not all doctors think like Dr. Kaveh.
    Not all doctors even care.

    • @freemanz4051
      @freemanz4051 Месяц назад +4

      Some care in their own, perhaps unrelatable way.
      Surgeons used to be like Mechanics, but they got better.

    • @RitaMBuda-tz6bi
      @RitaMBuda-tz6bi Месяц назад +4

      So true. 😢😢

    • @unbreakable7633
      @unbreakable7633 Месяц назад +15

      They care about the check in the mail.

    • @jangriffin-fi1yx
      @jangriffin-fi1yx Месяц назад +8

      @@unbreakable7633 what I detest with all my heart is that they think (not all as we know but "some") that they can be deceitful cover up the truth well how sadly wrong are they as all know the truth comes out in the end. I say God help them or anyone who does wrong in area of life but especially when someone's precious life is concerned. Mistakes do happen "sorry" huge goes a long way but not F/F records to protect selves each other & Industry work in.

    • @valmacclinchy
      @valmacclinchy Месяц назад +9

      @@freemanz4051 when did they get better? I'm Gen X and it's worse than ever. Insurance companies make everyone's lives harder.

  • @mellie4174
    @mellie4174 Месяц назад +478

    Dr.'s shouldn't have an ego when it comes to patient care, but they do. Most do. Finding one without an ego is nearly impossible.

    • @EvelynBaron
      @EvelynBaron Месяц назад +6

      I would beg to differ. The rate of suicide among psychiatrists is through the roof. I'm not saying there are no egomaniacs around, only, it's not universal.

    • @MJ-gm7km
      @MJ-gm7km Месяц назад +27

      @@EvelynBaronHaving an ego and being depressed/suicidal are not mutually exclusive…

    • @alicianieto2822
      @alicianieto2822 Месяц назад +19

      Not just an ego, THE ego. Sometimes you feel like you have to beg for basic info

    • @excalibro8365
      @excalibro8365 Месяц назад

      @@EvelynBaron Hot take incoming: Psychiatrists aren't real doctors and psychology isn't real science.

    • @PollyT.Pocket22
      @PollyT.Pocket22 Месяц назад

      Patients will be the suicide victims if health care don't pull back on dei & woke agenda all this makes every person working in health care job difficult especially the big egos doctors & nurses have.

  • @chiarac3833
    @chiarac3833 Месяц назад +514

    People need to speak up and not be afraid to fire an incompetent doctor.

    • @TPaine76
      @TPaine76 Месяц назад +14

      Unless you have a background in healthcare, it’s often impossible to figure out if your doctor is incompetent!

    • @elizabethhall1869
      @elizabethhall1869 Месяц назад +20

      It helps if you live in an area where you have more choice, and if you have good insurance. Where I live, and if you have Medicare or Medicaid, your choices are severely limited.

    • @edie4321
      @edie4321 Месяц назад +11

      Insurance doesn't make that a friendly experience. I did that once, and the replacement doctor had me going back to the original. I complained about my doctor only giving me more pills, and no real solutions. I got punished for pointing out the obvious. My doctor had me on deadly combinations and insurance did not care about that. They won't let you talk to them, either.

    • @ISayNukem
      @ISayNukem Месяц назад +12

      ​@edie4321 I've learned the pharmacist is much better with medications. Forget the doc, start asking the pharmacist some questions. Mine even helped me figure out a better medication for something. I went to the doc, got the medication, changed my life!

    • @nickneal3955
      @nickneal3955 Месяц назад +6

      When your choices are an incompetent doctor or no doctor at all you do what you need to do in order to get even bad care. The problem with our current healthcare system is that in many areas there are only a limited number of specialists within an easy to travel distance and you might be limited to just one based on insurance. For example if there's only one endocrinologist in the area that takes your insurance and you have diabetes if you want your insulin you'll have to take who you can get. I have to travel an hour and a half to see one of my specialists and there is literally only one in the practice who can see me. They're the closest specialist of their kind and the only one that takes my insurance in the area.

  • @GMAMEC
    @GMAMEC 23 дня назад +63

    My husband thought I was being too aggressive when he was admitted. I asked questions, wrote down names, documented medications and tests. I wanted answers and consistently followed up. I acknowledged what was done well and educated myself. Sometimes you only get one chance to get things right.

    • @NeilReed-ru7xd
      @NeilReed-ru7xd 6 дней назад +2

      Your husband is most fortunate to have you.

    • @GMAMEC
      @GMAMEC 5 дней назад +3

      @@NeilReed-ru7xd Thanks, although we’ve been married for over 30 years, he was surprised how much I spoke up . At the time, he didn’t realize the seriousness of his illness. After he was released, he was happy that I spoke up.

  • @AnnaLorris
    @AnnaLorris 19 дней назад +1828

    It’s wild how Health and Beauty Mastery isn’t getting more attention-this book is a game changer!

  • @leecarlson9713
    @leecarlson9713 Месяц назад +631

    I had a doctor at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, MN tell me that whatever it was that was wrong with me, it was all in my head, after 10 days of tests, and procedures and exams! 3 months later I was diagnosed with Epstein-Barr Virus, and my titer count was off the charts! I was definitely gaslit by that doctor. It was that experience, in 2000, that made me become the strongest advocate for myself I could be! And yes, I trust my gut instincts a lot!

    • @ceciliapetrowsky2572
      @ceciliapetrowsky2572 Месяц назад +37

      I hope you wrote a letter to the doctor informing him of your diagnosis so he doesn’t continue to gaslight patients.

    • @lisacasselman2467
      @lisacasselman2467 Месяц назад +42

      When I was 14 yrs old had sever back stomach pain went to hospital for 2 years they booked appointment to have brest reduction my mom says having big boobs don't cause this pain my mom told them to look at my gallbladder they did finally found 4 gull stones size of golf balls so I have a really hard time trusting any dr

    • @disqusrubbish5467
      @disqusrubbish5467 Месяц назад +16

      @@lisacasselman2467 That's a pretty serious misdiagnosis. Wow.

    • @peterschuler2832
      @peterschuler2832 Месяц назад +8

      (Lisa). I have had Epstein Barr since September 2004.

    • @SammaVaca
      @SammaVaca Месяц назад +12

      This happens a lot with EBV

  • @elainegoad9777
    @elainegoad9777 Месяц назад +351

    When we speak up we get beat down and there's no one to help us

    • @fredjones4163
      @fredjones4163 Месяц назад +9

      In the UK there are patient advocate services in hospitals etc. that do just that, speak up for you.

    • @incognito595
      @incognito595 Месяц назад +25

      I like the "fake it til you make it " idea. Even if you feel small because of the way they treat you, STAND UP TO DISRESPECT AND ABUSE. PRETEND, IF YOU HAVE TO, THAT YOU ARE NOT INTIMIDATED BY THEM! I WILL NEVER, EVER, LET THEM INSULT OR DISRESPECT ME, AGAIN. THEY ARE NARCISSISTS.

    • @gatitaoso4443
      @gatitaoso4443 29 дней назад +8

      I've been there before, after going to 3 different ERs , vascular Dr, dermatologist for answers to why I have pitting edema in both legs/feet ,crying, begging for help and the say they don't know! I've lived with this for 5 years and don't know who else to turn to.

    • @foofookachoo1136
      @foofookachoo1136 29 дней назад

      ⁠​⁠​⁠@@gatitaoso4443. I have that pitting edema in all the places u mentioned, also. Both legs and feet. He prescribed a diuretic to flush the fluid out, but that doesn’t take very much out. Also am suppose to wear the support hose, but I CANT for the life of me, get them on!! Putting and keeping your feet up in air, against wall 2 times a day for at least 20 min. Is suppose to help, but don’t think I’ve seen a change. Also do feet and ankle exercises without sny change! Have u tried any of these things? I imagine your Dr. told u about most of those, or seen videos about done, like I have. I’ve only been to ONE DR. , though. I need to go to at least one or 2 more to see if they csn find anything! I don’t know WHAT TO DO, either!! I’ve had mine for about a yr and a half! I know this is NOT normal, and am scared what it might bring on!! I feel for u!!

    • @rashoff
      @rashoff 29 дней назад +4

      You have to educate yourself, be confident, and keep yourself up

  • @shirleyscott8879
    @shirleyscott8879 Месяц назад +226

    When I had my first baby I “knew” there was something medically wrong with her but didn’t know what. Fortunately, I had a family doctor who understood about mothers instinct. (I had a previous 12 years experience taking care of babies and young children) She had a UTI and he sent her for an ultrasound. At 5 months, we were referred to a children’s hospital and at 14 months, she had a kidney surgery.
    I’m so blessed that I had such a caring and non-dismissive doctor

    • @jacalynmiller
      @jacalynmiller 22 дня назад +1

      wow, great experience! Very rare unfortunately.... :(

    • @user-sn9to7rq9s
      @user-sn9to7rq9s 16 дней назад

      Good to hear. 😅

    • @imaamericangirl1406
      @imaamericangirl1406 15 дней назад +1

      Children especially a baby getting a uti is not common… i suspect your baby was possibly sexually abused. I’ve read about this being a possible red flag. Was she a bed wetter also later? If not, I’m happy for the two of you that that is not the case.

  • @rdhawke
    @rdhawke 27 дней назад +112

    I had liver cancer and had one of the top surgeons in the country operate on me. He teaches at the University of Chicago. We had a great relationship immediately. He respected me and was also kind. I felt he really cared about me. He saved my life.

    • @lynndinovo3500
      @lynndinovo3500 25 дней назад +4

      You were fortunate. My sister was nearly given the wrong chemo. She screamed that was wrong! Charge nurse intervened. Always stay vigilant

    • @susanmclane7781
      @susanmclane7781 24 дня назад

      My life was saved by a "butcher" then he managed to ruin my life by leaving me with a huge mess while doing a "hernia repair." Two doctors I've spoken with warned me about having it fixed, that I could easily end up worse off. Worse off than constant drainage from infested hernia mesh, worse off than having a huge hernia whereas I started with a small one, worse off not being able to walk properly. I would have much preferred not having my life "saved."

    • @carolbrown7687
      @carolbrown7687 18 дней назад

      Name please 🙏

    • @dd1984mm
      @dd1984mm 16 дней назад

      ​@@susanmclane7781, wasn't there a class action lawsuit in regards to the hernia meshes?

    • @wannabetowasabe
      @wannabetowasabe 3 дня назад

      @@dd1984mm I think that lawsuit was a certain brand of mesh, not all hernia meshes. I had to have a naval hernia redone, but I never looked into if it had been the brand that was the subject of a lawsuit. The second surgery is holding up very nicely.

  • @amy83079
    @amy83079 23 дня назад +26

    Most doctors cannot communicate and let their egos drive the “conversation.” Teaching basic communications and basic everyday manners should be essential in med school. Absolutely essential.

  • @jaycarver4886
    @jaycarver4886 Месяц назад +378

    Gut instinct is the most valuable thing we possess. We're born with it so it's free. Unfortunately we've been trained to doubt and even ignore it.

    • @EvelynBaron
      @EvelynBaron Месяц назад +14

      I think it's the fundamental power imbalance when you're ill and in the hands of someone who is deciding your fate. It does make you doubt yourself, no question.

    • @valmacclinchy
      @valmacclinchy Месяц назад +14

      @@EvelynBaron whenever possible, bring a close relative or friend into the office with you. I have noticed male doctors suddenly are more respectful if there's another male there.

    • @kalima7446
      @kalima7446 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@valmacclinchy I made the experience, that the doctor (hypnotherapy psychocomatic clinic) was very rude to my partner (XXY btw) when he entered the door of the office. The doctor said to me "Are you in Kindergarten that you need someone to hold your hand?" and to my friend "Go out of here!". Maybe it was a mistake that he came later in. By the time I was a people-pleaser completely disconnected from my feelings and had zero trust in myself to speak up for me.

    • @valmacclinchy
      @valmacclinchy Месяц назад +4

      @@kalima7446 sorry to hear that happened to you. I hope you have found a better doctor. A doctor should never tell you that you can't have someone in the room with you!!

    • @kalima7446
      @kalima7446 Месяц назад +1

      @@valmacclinchy Thank you. Yes I found a better doctor soon after. For him (from Turkey btw knows how important family is?) it was completely normal that we come together. But since laughing about my choice what c treatments I let into my body and me feeling threatened by him I'm again without local doctor. Feeling better and better, more connected with myself. Thanks to Dr. Cat's Primal Trust, Liz Tenuto's somatic exercises.

  • @gidgetharris9513
    @gidgetharris9513 Месяц назад +303

    I had a surgery literally scream at me after surgery because I told him I was in pain. He said it was all in my head and that I needed psychiatric help! A few hours later a nurse checked on me and spoke with a different surgeon and they discovered the first doctor HAD screwed up and his actions were causing my pain. The new doctor redid the surgery and I was fine. To this day, 25 years later that A$$hole doctor has NEVER apologized and/ or admitted he was wrong. As far as I'm concerned all of the good doctors who truly cared have retired or quit. I'd rather die than trust another doctor. You, are an exception. I wish you were where I am or could be cloned. Please don't EVER change.

    • @Sushi2735
      @Sushi2735 Месяц назад +11

      Lawyer!!!

    • @A---ti3zz
      @A---ti3zz Месяц назад +15

      @@Sushi2735 Lawyers don't care unless the patient actually dies. I almost died and when I contacted lawyers that was basically what they said. Medical malpractice cases are expensive and time consuming so they only accept ones that will give them a big pay out.

    • @Sushi2735
      @Sushi2735 Месяц назад +5

      @@A---ti3zz , oh I am so terribly sorry! I had no idea. I sincerely hope you have recovered from the trauma. 🙏

    • @A---ti3zz
      @A---ti3zz Месяц назад +6

      @@Sushi2735 Thank you. It is really sad that there really isn't anyone to fight for the patient. It is like doctors can do whatever they want until it kills a patient. I never got an apology either after they almost killed me. They broke me and no one cares

    • @Sushi2735
      @Sushi2735 Месяц назад +7

      @@A---ti3zz , horrible! No they won’t apologize. It indicates guilt. I’m sorry your lawyer wouldn’t take the case. Most hospitals settle. 😢

  • @nonyabiness4023
    @nonyabiness4023 Месяц назад +87

    I complained about “my port catheter stabbing my heart” because I was having shortness of breath and chest pain. Long story short, they blew me off, I hit a deer on the highway which sent me to the ER and they found 2 pulmonary embolism. I was put in intensive care. I was scheduled for reconstructive surgery a week out which was postponed because of blood clots. That deer saved my life. There are awesome doctors out there, but still advocate for yourself.

  • @robincolbert3430
    @robincolbert3430 29 дней назад +44

    When I had knee surgery, I wrote “yes” on the knee they were supposed to operate on and then “no” on the knee that was fine and didn’t need surgery. The surgery team took it in stride and one nurse said I was smart to do that.

    • @lesjohn534
      @lesjohn534 27 дней назад +2

      That was a great idea! Thank you for sharing it.

    • @willowbean0821
      @willowbean0821 25 дней назад +12

      Every joint surgery I’ve had,the surgeon comes in before and marks the joint to be operated on. I’m asked by the anesthesiologist,the surgeon,and nurses what joint before they start. And the surgeon signs his initials on the joint beforehand. Not understanding why this isn’t done in all hospitals.

    • @donnajohnson-kuhn8336
      @donnajohnson-kuhn8336 13 дней назад

      I had knee surgery 3 weeks ago and they had me write yes on my knee and I asked if I needed to write no on the other leg and they said no because some Dr won’t notice what it said just that there’s writing and do the wrong one. After I write yes the Dr came in and wrote his name.

    • @priscillamoore5736
      @priscillamoore5736 7 дней назад +3

      @robincolbert3430 ~ I've heard of a surgeon removing the healthy side of a lung (!!!) rather than the side that should've been removed. So the poor person has to be on a ventilator the rest of their life!!!
      How the *HECK* that surgeon didn't realize they were removing the healthy side is beyond me!! I would *DEFINITELY* mark which site needed surgery!!!

    • @lesjohn534
      @lesjohn534 7 дней назад +1

      @@priscillamoore5736 That's appalling incompetence on the part of everyone involved, especially the surgeon for not double checking. I feel for the person who has been left in such a condition. Terrible.

  • @ebgewen
    @ebgewen 26 дней назад +34

    If a doctor or any professional is rude, arrogant, not listening, won't allow being recorded, too busy typing instead of listening, confuse you with someone else, recites incorrect history/meds/info, are condescending esp if a female, doesn't believe you, etc., etc., get up and WALK OUT!! You must be proactive in your own care!
    And the looks of incredulity on their faces as you are leaving is hysterical!!

    • @kathyscholten5369
      @kathyscholten5369 9 дней назад

      @@ebgewen she was mad as a hornet. I’m grateful if her students learned anything at all.

  • @roxannlegg750
    @roxannlegg750 Месяц назад +279

    Ive been gaslit by surgeons. Ive been verbally abused by surgeons. Ive been humiliated by surgeons. Ive been patronised by surgeons, and held to surgical ransom by surgeons, all out of a simple need for control (yet I have been compliant with EVERY ask they placed on me). But Ive always been treated with kindness and compassion by anesthesiologist - and Ive loved every consult, and been cared for deeply by them even after the procedures. One stuck up for me after a C-section that sadly happened because of a traumatic motor vehicle accident, (I was 8 months pregnant and the impact of the steering wheel ruptured my abdominal wall) but because I "had a baby" - I was put on the post natal ward. I was given EVERY pain med possible, IV and suppositories, as i required a lot of internal injury repair and the C-section incision was from hip to hip. But after 12 hours, on the post natal ward (because remember - I had "only" had a baby), the nurse came in and announced "I think i will just give you a digesic - gee that anesthesiologist prescribed you some very dangerous medicatioons - theyre horrible drugs - we dont want you to get addicted now do we?". I gritted my teeth and just uttered "get that anesthesiologist up here NOW. Go call him NOW.". Feeling smug, she did, and he was there in minutes, and stood at my single but public system door and said clearly "Roxann can have 2 end one, every 4 hours, around the clock if she wants it. Ive prescribed domperidone and senna as well to prevent side effects, but she can have as much as she wants - I am NOT going to have my patients develop a pain trauma induced syndrome because of inadequate post surgical pain treatment". I also heard the psych registrar also paid a visit to the nurses station too. Thankyou for your kind videos. Im a big fan.

    • @PollyT.Pocket22
      @PollyT.Pocket22 Месяц назад

      Nurse are butt heads difficult to work with not only do some of them make a patients life more difficult but staff as well especially in labor & delivery but OR nurses are kinder to patients than those in labor and delivery I never understood why could not figure out why they were so evil. They all want revenge. Iam glad you received good care as patient care is most important to me except last 10 years health care has gone woke & dei through gov agendas.

    • @vickifreeman02
      @vickifreeman02 Месяц назад +12

      I've never heard of this term "pain trauma induced syndrome" do you know what he meant? My surgeon stuffed up and I woke up half way through and I was in agony, that was almost 7 years ago and I'm still suffering.

    • @roxannlegg750
      @roxannlegg750 Месяц назад

      @@vickifreeman02 uncontrolled or unmanaged pain, esp that which is assoc with a trauma of some kind - whether it is physical or emotional, is known to trigger pain syndromes, where the central nervous system over reacts to pain, or is hypersensitive to pain stimulus. This is called hyperalgesia. So - its not that you are not in pain, the trauma of the unmanaged pain, supersentisies the pain receptors and pain syndromes can set in, and causes pain signals to amplify and or the immune system not switch of the inflammatory response (which also triggers pain receptors). Recently, because of opiatephobia, most searches wont say that unmanaged pain can cause hyperalgesia - they blame the medication, and if you G it - you just get explanations of opiate induced hyperalgesia. But 30 years ago, it was well understood that unmanaged pain can cause lingering sensivity pain problems - worse than is necessary. By the way I do have a degree in pathology and pharmacology. Im a pain patient and educated. Not that it changes the way Im treated by some practitioners - but still. SOme are great, some are less great. Thats all i can say.... Hope that helps

    • @roxannlegg750
      @roxannlegg750 Месяц назад

      @@vickifreeman02 i replied.. and explained. twas re moved. i wd lurve to no why.!

    • @Mark-rw3kw
      @Mark-rw3kw Месяц назад +10

      I had a very bad experience with an anesthesiologist. She asked me the normal questions about my surgery history and right in the middle of my answer she turned and walked out the door. A few months after the surgery I found out I have a partially collapsed lung due to her incompetence (or maybe deliberate injury) she inflicted on me.

  • @HollyJordan15
    @HollyJordan15 29 дней назад +83

    It also happens in veterinary medicine. Advocate for your fur babies no matter what.

    • @lisakeller9105
      @lisakeller9105 17 дней назад +4

      Of course as they are your responsibility.😊

    • @HollyJordan15
      @HollyJordan15 16 дней назад +2

      @@lisakeller9105 Yes, but even when you advocate for them there are still failures.

    • @MM-d289
      @MM-d289 13 дней назад +2

      I have seen vets act just like human doctors. They can gaslight, too.

  • @hookedonherbs3825
    @hookedonherbs3825 Месяц назад +135

    Medical ptsd is very real.

    • @phoebe2234
      @phoebe2234 22 дня назад +4

      Thank you

    • @pamtyree6634
      @pamtyree6634 18 дней назад +7

      I Have had 2 experiences with this. Awful! They seemed very uncaring and took no responsibility for their actions. I was given a paralyzing drug WITHOUT phenobarbital only bc the surgery schedule was running behind. I was fully awake and suffocating ....a slow death that was horrible. I have never felt such pain my head was exploding, I was gasping and desperately trying to get a breath but my lungs were paralyzed My last thought before I passed out was that they had killed me. Another routine surgery left me dissabled. I confronted both so called "doctors" I was never even given an apology. They seem to think that patients are inanimate objects.

    • @hollandgem2
      @hollandgem2 18 дней назад +3

      I’ve had severe medical PTSD for years from trauma and how I was treated and the things that went on in hospitals. I tell them things and they don’t believe me when they find out I have anxiety they just assume that I’m exaggerating. And I was given medication for high blood pressure and I have told him I’m very sensitive to drugs and I’ve never taken anything like that and I told him I’ve had severe side effects from a lot of drugs, and that I really didn’t want to do it. They gave me the drug. My blood pressure dropped so fast and I was out. They had left me alone in the emergency room, and if my friend had not been present, I would not be here today. That happened last November. Then they came in and shamed me and said I just had anxiety and I should’ve never come there, basically it was my fault. And they had to keep me overnight and they were angry because I went unconscious. They had no choice. I was treated very badly and they were very cold and very disrespectful to me. Telling me I need to get therapy. I said I do therapy. I told you I have PTSD from events that took place in medical facilities from things that happened in the past. but also that I was very careful about any drug. I took because of severe side effects and how they seem to affect me and that I don’t always respond like other people do that people are different and don’t react the same and that I normally don’t need the same amount of medication as other people do. later, when the nurse came in, she laughed at me and said, at least your blood pressure went down! There was eight people in my room, trying to reverse the drug because I was out with in less than 60 seconds I could feel my whole body burning all over and I called out to my friend. Please help me that something was very wrong call for help and I could feel myself going. That was just one simple drug used for high blood pressure. My friend who’s a pharmacist told me it was a very strong drug with many many side effects. They wouldn’t even let the ER doctor come back and talk to me. They sent in the hospitalist and he’s the one who started to berate me. My friend said she told them all of this before they insisted upon giving this to her. It was a terrible experience and I did report them to the patient advocate and they went through the board and they said they were sorry that I feel that I had a bad experience, but that they did nothing wrong.

    • @jennifermeadows2135
      @jennifermeadows2135 17 дней назад

      In February 2022, I was diagnosed with kidney stones and hydronephrosis in both kidneys. The urologist broke up the stones and put in stents to let the kidneys drain. Learned my ureters are very narrow as the right one became scarred and would not function on its own. I had the first of several nephrostomies (with external bag) installed through my back by a surgeon. Fast forward to Tuesday, July 12, 2022. I still have a nephrostomy bag. Urologist decides he’s going to remove the nephrolostomy. He’s standing behind me while his assistant is beginning to remove the tube via my urethra. When the bag hits my back the urologist suddenly realizes his mistake. He yanks the tube back through my urethra, ureter, kidney, and out my back. By the next morning I was feverish, nauseated and had a raging headache. By that night I woke screaming that I couldn’t get warm. The Thursday, July 14, I was in the ER having tests run, having a nephrostomy bag reinstalled by the original surgeon, and my labs came back with sepsis. I was admitted, filled with antibiotics and fluids, and by the 16th they determined the sepsis was caused by e. Coli. I was finally released with more antibiotics late on Sunday, July 17. I had missed my anniversary dinner with my husband. A month later the urological surgeon in the same practice as the urologist performed a function evaluation and determined my right kidney was only functioning at 25%. The original doctor never did a functionality test, so there’s no way of knowing how much of the damage was caused by the sepsis brought on by his errors and indifference. My right kidney was removed September 20, 2022. I never saw the urologist after he pulled the nephrostomy from my back. In fact, on their online portal, that visit doesn’t even appear.
      I have severe PTSS from that day and whole experience. I canceled my last two appointments for follow-up with the surgeon because I couldn’t enter that office. Unfortunately, my husband discouraged me from pursuing legal action because he thought it would be impossible to win. By the time I decided to try (before the two-year SoL was up, all the local firms were busy with multiple murder cases against a local hospital due to a nurse stealing narcotics from patients and injecting several of them with tap water. You can’t make this stuff up.

    • @EBBailey
      @EBBailey 16 дней назад +2

      C-section with a failed epidural.

  • @crystabella39
    @crystabella39 16 дней назад +24

    This is by far your best content!!!!
    I had routine surgery planned in my 20s. He came in and announced a different procedure. I questioned it and he said, " Well don't you want to get better?"
    I went a long with it.
    He accidentally punctured my bowel and didn't believe me when I woke. I almost died. I had a colonoscopy bag for 2 years and it changed me. Anxiety, depression etc..
    No personal injury lawsuit will get that back.
    Doctors are people and some are very tired, flawed, and have the same bad habits as your plumber!
    Always ask your questions, and if it's making you want to run... Do! Reschedule surgery until your anxious feelings are gone. Your life might depend on it.

  • @Somewhere-In-AZ
    @Somewhere-In-AZ 29 дней назад +35

    I’m the advocate for everyone in my family. I never let them go alone. None of us have had bad experiences. I always believe it’s because there is someone there. My mother is almost 90 and she doesn’t always say what she needs to, so I fill in details so it’s a clear picture. Her med caregivers appreciate that so much.

  • @wildwaning9427
    @wildwaning9427 Месяц назад +46

    This absolutely happened to me many years ago. I found myself in the room w/the anesthesiologist before the doc and nursing staff came in for surgery and my gut said, 'he's the most important person you need to share your immediate history with.' Despite all of that wonderful two miles of paperwork you fill out prior to surgery, humans are fallable. When I told him he looked at me w/disbelief and said, "you do?" He left the room a big hurry and returned with a completely different medication. He said to me, "thanks for telling me that because it wasn't in my notes and I had a completely different med for you and it could have gone bad."

  • @roxannabrams348
    @roxannabrams348 Месяц назад +260

    I'm a stage 3 breast cancer patient. He is RIGHT ... if I would have been the "nice " patient I would be dead!!! Ihave "fired" numerous medical oncologists & a surgeon for being disrespectful, pushy & trying to play the power card with me. I now have integrative doctors who listen to my research, think outside the box dont try and force me into treatments I dont want -- and now I am on my way into remission! No thanks to any of my original doctors. Even had an anesthesiologist who prescribed me narcotics after surgery even tjough I very explicitly told them I did not want them & explained my pain control regimin prescribed by a cancer pain Dr. Such narcissistic assholes. Cedar Siani in LA.

    • @Marie-ts8rp
      @Marie-ts8rp Месяц назад +3

      ok purist..toss those pain pills like an idiot and next time when u really need them u are screwed😂

    • @ReadAlong-o9w
      @ReadAlong-o9w Месяц назад +6

      @@Marie-ts8rpNot everyone does well with every drug- I do better with arthritis drugs that aren’t narcotics. I don’t the the post meant they were asking for lavender.

    • @ajagreer-mi3ni
      @ajagreer-mi3ni Месяц назад +11

      ​@@Marie-ts8rp
      🤷🏽‍♀️ EVERYBODY deals with pain DIFFERENTLY

    • @ajagreer-mi3ni
      @ajagreer-mi3ni Месяц назад +4

      Good for you👍🏼 After all, WE ARE OUR BEST advocates ...
      🫶🏽✌🏽and much healing 💗

    • @tagomago2178
      @tagomago2178 Месяц назад +3

      I love the word "Fired"

  • @user-rn1hn3fg5y
    @user-rn1hn3fg5y Месяц назад +101

    Thank you so much! You have just confirmed that leaving a doctor after years was the right move.

    • @RitaMBuda-tz6bi
      @RitaMBuda-tz6bi Месяц назад +9

      I know that first hand, I finally left my PCP after 14 years of being misdiagnosed, etc. I never told him I was leaving but he found out and on my final visit yelled and berated me (he's done this before for other reasons. One of many reasons I changed doctors.) Was never spoken to like that before. I thought of filing a complaint, but decided not to. I dumped him instead.

    • @Sushi2735
      @Sushi2735 Месяц назад +3

      Me too! Fired her butt!

  • @Adixonnz
    @Adixonnz 29 дней назад +43

    I woke up in post-op following a total shoulder replacement surgery with incredible HOT pain that felt like I was being branded. I was told the anesthetic in a “PainBuster” ball would keep my shoulder and arm numb and pain would be minimal or no pain. After repeating over and over that my arm was on fire I was hooked up to a Fentanyl drip on a PCA pump. It took the edge off the pain so they whisked me off to a surgical floor. My husband and a friend came in around two hours later and I was crying from the pain. I’d repeatedly told my nurse that something was wrong because I could move my fingers and arm and I was in intense pain (all things my doctor said I couldn’t do and wouldn’t feel while the Painbuster pump was in my shoulder), but my nurse ignored me until my husband came in. My nurse overheard me telling him that I’d been in pain ever since I woke in post-op, but it seemed like even the Fentanyl wasn’t helping anymore and my shoulder and arm were on fire. Long story short….The Painbuster pump was found to be clamped off (and must have been since surgery), and a nurse giving an IV push medication failed to restart the Fentanyl pump over 90 minutes back, so I had NO pain medication on board. It was awful and traumatic!!

    • @luannfeld3983
      @luannfeld3983 25 дней назад +6

      So sorry that happened to you!

    • @sammyjo8109
      @sammyjo8109 16 дней назад +3

      I had shoulder replacement surgery after an accident. It is the most horrible pain for months and months. As a nurse, those nurses should have checked everything when the pain medication was not working.

    • @fayedollar1520
      @fayedollar1520 13 дней назад

      I woke during a cervical fusion and bleeding to death

  • @mayowankenobi
    @mayowankenobi 11 дней назад +11

    I've worked with doctors for over 20 years. Often, patients who speak up get mistreated. I spoke up about my anesthesia sensitivity and fully explained the issue. Didn't stop them from overdosing me. I have little respect for most doctors. I'm glad there are a few like you. YOU need to stand up to your colleagues and remind them that they are here to take care of patients.

  • @JM-vh7oc
    @JM-vh7oc Месяц назад +102

    At one point in my life, I was getting chemotherapy. I had a professional job and came in looking pretty good. The doc didn't take me serious on my complaints of not feeling well, etc. He said - but you look reallly good. I learned after that to come in without makeup and crappy clothes so I could be taken seriously.

    • @deirdremorris9234
      @deirdremorris9234 Месяц назад +7

      Absolutely mind blowing.

    • @ellecooper8217
      @ellecooper8217 27 дней назад +12

      I had a doctor who used to say the same to me when I was 16/17. Being a teenager, I'd always wear make-up and try to look my best. I was on steroids for my condition, which typically give you a "moon face" (we all know that sometimes when told you look well, it's because you've gained weight) I was getting skinnier by the day and felt awful, some days I'd pass out/fall asleep/throw up/have no energy (& other unpleasantsymptoms). My Doctor would tell me I was doing well on the drugs he'd prescribed and send me on my way. My Mom saw me declining daily, so she came along to my next appointment. She told me not to wear make-up and reiterated the problems I was having. I later found out that as my Mom had come with me early on, with my baby sister in tow, the doctor thought she was my child, so dismissed my tiredness. When he saw me without my war paint on, and in an outfit that showed how painfully thin I was despite the fat face I was admitted to hospital. I was there for two weeks, home for a week then had to be re-admitted for a further two weeks.
      My doctor had made assumptions and didn't listen to me "because I was so young". That's never happened again. I've packed up and tried to leave hospital over a handful of times (twice in a one week stay) two different consultants have chased after me to apologise for errors made for not listening to me. After 30 years living with chronic conditions, I know my own body. I know what medications I'm on & why. I always speak up and won't be dismissed for; being too young, a hypochondriac, hormonal, having no medical training, being old[er] an so on. I do however listen to advice, ask lots of questions and make notes to refer to later on. I've got my entire medical history on my emergency notes on my phone (accessible to all) I also have it all on paper for times when I'm not able to speak or to give to someone to when I need them to advocate for me.
      I hate having to change general practitioners when I move, but over the years I've always found ones I can trust and once had every doctor in one practice that I was comfortable with who I trusted. My relationships with my current GP's and specialists are that of mutual respect, trust & honesty. Thank God for the NHS (except the severe difficulties and struggles brought about by poor/under funding from govt, excess red tape & the appointment of too many middle managers/paper pushers)

    • @ava.artemis
      @ava.artemis 16 дней назад +2

      I’ve had similar experiences. I apparently mask my pain very well so doctors blow me off and I’ve been sent away or misdiagnosed because of it and had to return or go to other doctors later. Once they finally saw evidence of what I was dealing with, they would flip out and start offering me pain meds and shift into high gear trying to solve the problem.

    • @GeeEee75
      @GeeEee75 15 дней назад +3

      During chemotherapy, when I was feeling so crappy that I couldn't get out of bed, I was told to get some exercise. They tell you beforehand that any side effects can be treated with medication, but when it comes down to it, you're on your own. 🙄

    • @100samanthamarie
      @100samanthamarie 15 дней назад +2

      Exactly!!! That’s what I do when I want doctors to take me seriously

  • @countrygarden51
    @countrygarden51 Месяц назад +115

    I can relate to the medical trauma. I have had bad outcomes trusting the medical profession.

    • @RitaMBuda-tz6bi
      @RitaMBuda-tz6bi Месяц назад +6

      Me too. I have medical trauma relating to my very first surgery ever. I filed a grievance with the hospital. If I don't get any satisfaction, the next step will be the state agency and then a lawyer 😤 😒.

    • @MacchiatoSwirlGirl
      @MacchiatoSwirlGirl Месяц назад

      ​@@RitaMBuda-tz6bithey will tell you they will bring a review amongst board of his peers. They do nothing

    • @MR-pr8tp
      @MR-pr8tp Месяц назад +12

      Went to ER with swollen painful hand after falling. They diagnosed a sprain and "possible" fracture. Went to orthopedic next day for more x rays and had 2 breaks and a fracture! Sad when a hospital cannot even diagnose broken bones! Scary as hell.

    • @lailasiddiqui263
      @lailasiddiqui263 Месяц назад +3

      And I have had / are having good outcomes without trusting them, but trusting in our creator and Jesus Christ for my healing . Read Isaiah 53:5 - He took everything on the cross - If I need to trust anybody it is HIM, Jesus Christ , the way, the truth and the life

    • @MJ-gm7km
      @MJ-gm7km Месяц назад

      @@lailasiddiqui263Amen. Everything is in His hands. We should ask for His protection when interacting with the healthcare system.

  • @keepdoingthedream
    @keepdoingthedream Месяц назад +29

    My 84 year old father was in life threatening condition after a head on collision. I have no medical back ground, however, I am good at asking questions and I'm not afraid to ask. Better questions get better answers especially when you do research. I think when a doctor sees that you are invested and will never stop asking questions till the best outcome is reached there's a difference in care. After 11 days on life support, bleeding on the brain, fracture C2 and T10, liver nearly torn in half, multiple blood transfusions, pulverized hip and pelvis. Not only did my dad survive, he learned how to walk again and eventually he was living on his own. Surprisingly my dad even got his divers's license back which I wasn't too happy about but that's another story.

    • @marye.fox-grimm6541
      @marye.fox-grimm6541 Месяц назад +4

      Wow re your dad's recovery.
      Double wow for knowing the importance of asking good questions. (If info from dr is too complicated to understand, many drs respond well when asked to explain in laymen's terms.)
      So sorry re driver's license. A very senior relative refused to give his up until he sideswiped a tractor trailer and ended up in a ditch.

  • @mothereagle3624
    @mothereagle3624 28 дней назад +23

    I’m 67 and have fears and anxiety whenever I have to go to doctor. Seeing the doctor/nurses at this age really has changed from when I was younger.

    • @loisaustin6200
      @loisaustin6200 27 дней назад +8

      I'm nearly 86 and feel the same way. I simply do not trust doctors or hospitals. Their answer whenever I bring up something concerning my health is that it is my age and I just have to live with it. I just stopped going to the primary care doctor regularly because going is a big waste of my time and effort. I like my cardiologist a lot, but that primary care doctor does not seem to care about me at all, very cold and impersonal. I go in for lab work and keep taking my medication, another source of worry of what prolonged use of these drugs might be doing to my body and well-being. Have been told I need to keep taking them the rest of my life. It is a worry.

    • @Kiki-wi7px
      @Kiki-wi7px 15 дней назад

      ​​​​@@loisaustin6200
      You Should " T-r-y " a FUNCTIONAL MEDICINE PHYSICIAN. They Do Get
      to the ROOT of a Problem and Don't Cover-Up Problem's with Med's. Not Covered by an Insurance Company.
      Can't Put a Price ($) on Your Health. Good ☘️ Luck.

    • @Supernova752
      @Supernova752 5 дней назад +1

      The older we get the less they listen to. That has been my experience anyway.

    • @loisaustin6200
      @loisaustin6200 5 дней назад

      @@Supernova752 They treat us like they think we're ridiculous old fools who don't know our own bodies at all. After four doctors and a time span of about 14 years none of them have been able to get my dosage of Levothyroxine right for my Hashimoto's thyroid disease to get my levels where they should be. So tiring.

  • @leisa88
    @leisa88 27 дней назад +14

    I wish there were more physicians like you. I almost died because of a Dr with an ego. I fortunately was transferred to a hospital and had an amazing surgeon.

  • @jenniferbrouwer7357
    @jenniferbrouwer7357 Месяц назад +160

    This is so important. I kept asking my Radiology Oncologist if I really needed all the treatment in a clinical trial. I was upfront, due to my mastectomy complications, I wanted the minimum. He kept saying they were required. I researched and it didn’t make sense. So I called another facility in the trial. While they were specific no medical advice could be given, I was told to ask the question again and get another opinion elsewhere if the answer was the same. Had I not done my own research and reached out beyond my hospital, I would have been over treated. Yes, the department is aware of his treatment.

    • @curiousone6129
      @curiousone6129 Месяц назад +11

      Scary😮

    • @disqusrubbish5467
      @disqusrubbish5467 Месяц назад +12

      In a clinical trial, the researchers need you to follow the protocol for them to get useful data. If you're uncomfortable with it (which is ok), please tell them so you can either drop out, or they will know not to count your results in the data.

    • @jenniferbrouwer7357
      @jenniferbrouwer7357 Месяц назад

      @@disqusrubbish5467 I did the same day of the appointment he admitted to not giving proper informed consent that the trial gave more treatment than I needed. And I know not all trials are like this. Had a wonderful experience with a breast cancer vaccine trial that I completed and am excited that it may help save patients one day. It was a night and day difference how was treated.

    • @Maxy2022
      @Maxy2022 Месяц назад +9

      Or you can get permission from the sponsor of the trial to do something differently

    • @taleandclawrock2606
      @taleandclawrock2606 29 дней назад

      I have heard of women being refused treatment unless they take part in clinical trials, we dont have to be guineapigs for so.e arseholes ego who doesnt know the true meaning of informed consent or patient centred care.

  • @lisawinschel2307
    @lisawinschel2307 Месяц назад +115

    You are a very kind doctor..I'm an RN and it's refreshing and I believe you listen to your nurse's concerns as well. Communication is everything.

  • @Norm100ful
    @Norm100ful Месяц назад +104

    Good information. I generally have an assertive nature, so being gaslighted really sets off my radar. Here is an example of two gas situations that happened to my mother at the same time. 10 years ago my mother went into the hospital for spinal surgery after another hospital diagnosed her with “muscle pull” and gave her pain pills. The surgeon said her spine was a “ mess” and should have been easily seen by the other hospital. While recovering from surgery, my mother was telling me how great she felt. However, after a couple of days, she started to feel bad. Her foreign, hospitalist doctor said she was doing fine. I could see my mother declining and told her she was getting worse. That hospitalist doctor told me I was wrong and ignored me. I felt this doctor was incompetent. The next morning I came in and saw she had declined further and found she had a new foreign hospitalist doctor. I pleaded with that doctor, who was very young but attentive, that my mother was dying and could she please run some tests to confirm it. She actually did as I asked and called me at work to come to the hospital immediately. My mother had to go in to surgery that afternoon because she had a perforated intestine. She recovered over the next month or so after having major surgery to remove a piece of her colon. When you have a loved one in the hospital, you need to actively assess their condition daily, or else.

    • @PollyT.Pocket22
      @PollyT.Pocket22 Месяц назад

      Wow you advocated for your mother & did a good job its scary that you had to fight to help her when they should have known. You mentioned forgien doctor I call that dei flunkies which have no skill & are passed through the health care system would have been removed 15 years ago but now nit wits like this are protected its hurting health care in America very dangerous. Some no speak english awful county hospitals have these types & have many low income patients & treatment is bad. The hospital doctor should have been running test anyway to make sure all is going well. Avoid foreign doctors due to this dei nonsense. How did her bowel become perforated? From the spinal surgery? Iam glad you realized what was going on it bothers me to hear these things happen in my field.

    • @HarpMuse
      @HarpMuse 16 дней назад +2

      Similar thing with my dad. He had fallen at age 88 and the hospital admitted him to rehab to help build up strength in his legs. After a week he couldn’t keep anything down and his stomach was extended. My mom pointed this out and all they wanted to do was give him an enigma. My dad kept telling them that wasn’t the problem. My mom finally yanked him out of there and put him back in the hospital. They quickly figured out his urethra was blocked and he couldn’t pee. The ursine had backed up into his stomach, which was why he couldn’t hole anything down. They caught it barely in time to keep his bladder from bursting. Unfortunately, due to his age and that the bladder had been extended for so long, it was. I longer able to push the urine out, so they had to cut a hole and insert a permanent catheter.

    • @100samanthamarie
      @100samanthamarie 14 дней назад +1

      @@HarpMuse 😱 I’m so sorry that happened. According to research, a lot of patients die due to a low-nurse and doctor to patient ratio that is set differently by each state…. Democrats and Republicans prefer to support their popular politicians (who enable low patient care by supporting dangerous hospital and insurance standards of care).
      As a surgery tech student 2/20 months into the program, I read these comment sections very often to be very aware and to learn advice about how to help the patients be their healthiest and CONTINUE being their healthiest (both mentally and physically).
      Also as a surgery tech, I’ve already heard/seen hundreds of people say/write that the surgeons they work with are MEAN/NARCISSISTS/UNETHICAL EGOISTS/STUBBORN/RUDE/TOO PRIDEFUL TO ADMIT MISTAKES. (Same as Democrat/Republican voters… can’t admit their mistakes).
      Luckily, being a caregiver for the last recent 10 years to mentally abusive colorist racist elderly people from Whittier, CA, I trained myself to use extreme compassion and empathy and extreme positivity and body language and my voice to turn them from frustrated, mean, hateful, mad, rude, abusive individuals to people who ended up calling me their other granddaughter and saying they loved me and pleading for me to stay with them and telling the office that they preferred me as their caregiver. If I was able help them heal and change their hearts, then I’m confident I can help improve surgeon’s mental health in the OR. (Side note, my clients never stopped being colorist racists, they just became sweeter in general ❤ 🥰).
      Side note: medical staff has a high suicide rate and high depression rate when they have low nurse-to-patient ratios. Not only are nurses bullied by doctors, but nurses bully each other too.

    • @HarpMuse
      @HarpMuse 14 дней назад

      @@100samanthamarie Our health care and educations systems are two of our most important systems, but are two of the most underpaid, undervalued instititions. I'm not surprised the suicide rate is high. I've had great doctors that seem to really care and listen to me, but more of them tend to think because they have a degree in medicine they know everything, and me being a woman know nothing. I've learned to not let them bully me and will walk away. Thank you for being a caring technician!

    • @MM-d289
      @MM-d289 13 дней назад +1

      If at all possible, have a family member at the hospital with the patient at all times.

  • @christinanavarre8389
    @christinanavarre8389 29 дней назад +15

    Thank you for this informative lesson. I had Lithotripsy almost 42 years ago for an impacted right kidney. By a Doctor that I had full trust in. 40+ years experience, then a professor at college that would be doing the procedure. Had zero complications. Back before MRI I had an X-ray. My kidney was like a white light...so many stones. Blessed they were not stag horn stones. I still came out with kidney damage from those stones. Fast forward 42 years, now 67, again needing a procedure to rid me of a stone blocking path out of my kidney. A younger urologist this time told me if I didn't have one of two procedures, my right kidney would be dead in a year. Then stated he preferred having an incision in my back, a newer procedure. Also informing me that he wasn't sure he would be successful at getting to the stone causing partial blockage by doing either procedure. With that information I chose to once again choose (Lithotripsy). I had the feeling the Doctor was less than pleased I made that choice, solely from his mannerisms at my pre appointment date. And having so very briefly seeing me before the procedure in the hospital. Not seeing me after the procedure while still in hospital. Nor discussing how it went at a later time 10 days later, at appointment to remove the stent in his office. All in all I am not very pleased all the way around with this doctor. And here I am again looking at another procedure on my left kidney also having stones. I am at a loss as to what to do this time. I live in a rural area with not many options as to what to do in regards to urologist availability or hospital.

  • @ajd8558
    @ajd8558 29 дней назад +22

    At this stage, I would like a person on my side to stand in at a surgery and keep an eye on what's happening, with a video. Maybe if we had a set up like this, the bad eggs would soon be weeded out.

    • @steffiearchie3670
      @steffiearchie3670 20 дней назад +1

      I am looking at knee replacement in the future, and my husband is my advocate. If he can't be there with me to observe the surgical team's actions, it's not happening. I absolutely get your point here.

  • @oscarpaz27
    @oscarpaz27 Месяц назад +36

    When I was at my worst, it a 2nd year resident at a walk in clinic that listened to me, not my family doctor, not anybody else. This kid listened, ordered the right tests, with the right urgency, and very likely saved my life. My family doctor still had the cojones to argue with the specialist I was referred to, who had confirmed the resident's diagnosis. Sheer hubris.

  • @BELOVEDBYJESUSTHESONOFGOD
    @BELOVEDBYJESUSTHESONOFGOD Месяц назад +72

    My baby started having seizures in postpartum suite and I kept telling the nurse that something isn’t right. Every nurse and doctor said my baby was just having reflux even after showing videos. I knew in my gut something wasn’t right and I demanded them take him to nicu rather than discharging us to go home. They completely denied it the whole 10 days in nicu. Sure enough we went home and he started having seizures again. Took him to another hospital and they saw exactly what I was seeing. I had to forgive the previous hospital. By the grace of God and His goodness my baby is getting taken care of. I thank Jesus what He did on the cross for my son to get his healing.

    • @michaelwoehl8822
      @michaelwoehl8822 29 дней назад +4

      Scary isn't it, went through hell when one of my daughters got very ill and it took 6 months to finally find someone that could help her, my trust and respect for the medical system in this country will never be the same again.

    • @davewilson3897
      @davewilson3897 25 дней назад +4

      AMEN ❤

    • @beth1979
      @beth1979 4 дня назад +1

      My baby had projectile vomiting. Everyone just kept smirking at me and told me babies vomit. Women really aren't taken seriously. I was treated like an hysterical young mother, even though I was studying childcare.

  • @davidimhoff2118
    @davidimhoff2118 Месяц назад +72

    As someone who has had a heart transplant at 16, a kidney transplant at 26, and cancer now at 43 I’m always 100% honest with my doctor. It makes zero sense to keep anything from them. They aren’t going to rat you out. They don’t care about whether you say something incriminating. Now I’ve never done drugs or anything but I’m always listening and making sure whatever they read off is correct. Nowadays they ask you what you are having done to see if YOU know what’s going on. If you don’t then there is a problem. You need to just be aware of everything before going to sleep so that way no surprises. Accidents happen and sometimes patients try to get through those checklists too fast and screw it up for themselves. This is your life so just pay attention. And FOLKS if you get a doctor you don’t like don’t be afraid to ask for a different doctor. I had the head of endoscopy the chief insult me in the hallway to his partner and I screamed at the staff and said I know you heard that. They said he does it all the time and he’s the chief. I said well I need another doctor because he will not be doing my operation. You stick with your gut. Smart words. Don’t ever settle for a doctor that is rude or who doesn’t believe or validate what you are going through.

    • @kaleiam6246
      @kaleiam6246 26 дней назад +3

      They do, “rat you out.”
      One time I asked a doctor for antidepressant medication. She excused herself and returned shortly. A few minutes later 2 very large male police entered. I started crying and the police towered over me yelling at me to calm down. I am a small woman.
      Later I learned that the doctor had made a mistake. Doctors can’t force people into hospitalization for asking for medication. People have to have an active plan to hurt themselves. I didn’t and I didn’t tell her that I did. But it doesn’t matter. I will never be honest again.

  • @gabrieleklein9545
    @gabrieleklein9545 24 дня назад +12

    I am a 75 yr old retired Emerg/nurse and educator and I think you are awesome. Thank you for caring.❤

  • @lisarado2773
    @lisarado2773 26 дней назад +13

    I met a surgeon for the first time and he was professional. Not there to be your friend but to tell you like it is and why. My gut instinct told me I could trust him with my life.

  • @MkE1121
    @MkE1121 Месяц назад +86

    When you're afraid - in general - to stand up for yourself and you finally find the courage to stand up for yourself and the doctor is so upset their face turns beat red - it's hard to do it again. Much less again and again.

    • @Bella-fz9fy
      @Bella-fz9fy Месяц назад +23

      Especially if they turn on you and don’t help you,you end up in a worse position,but it’s true you must still advocate for yourself.

    • @imtiol
      @imtiol 29 дней назад +9

      And it's hard to do it when you're tired and stressed and scared and just want to be able to put yourself in competent hands rather than be on the alert all the time for potential errors.

  • @paulreid1369
    @paulreid1369 Месяц назад +28

    For legal reasons all doctor appointments should be recorded and kept on the cloud. All of a sudden they would start to respect their patients a bit more.

    • @LONETRUCKER
      @LONETRUCKER 5 дней назад

      I agree with u I've had lot of telephone calls with my dr he has lied even told other services not to help me but denies this trouble is I'm in uk under nhs

    • @paulreid1369
      @paulreid1369 5 дней назад

      No doubt he is a financial nihilist who only cares how many $$$ big pharma has to.offer.​@@LONETRUCKER

    • @paulreid1369
      @paulreid1369 5 дней назад +1

      Leave a terrible review for him on google reviews. I am also in the UK and the first thing they will claim is you are mentally ill. Report him to the GMC.

    • @LONETRUCKER
      @LONETRUCKER 5 дней назад

      @@paulreid1369 I'll try that on Google

    • @ellap795
      @ellap795 3 дня назад

      I reported a consultant to the GMC they investigate their selves.. So no point they all cover each others backs in the NHS. I was left disabled after a hysterectomy - herniated discs left foot drop and also need to have a colostomy because my bowels stopped functioning after surgery. I was told things would get better and I would recover but it never happened. Time passed after having scans - mri's , colonoscopy I was unable to sue them due to statue of limitations! NHS is corrupt to the core !!!

  • @dojocho1894
    @dojocho1894 Месяц назад +88

    As a Cardiologist...I tell my staff and patents, families to write a list of questions you have so when we talk or meet you can go over them its a stressful time so organize your time wisely .

    • @fredjones4163
      @fredjones4163 Месяц назад +5

      Quite agree. I recently had emergency surgery (bowel resection for blocked bowel due to misdiagnosis, it was Crohns I had for 10 years not IBS) all the surgeons and anaetheologists were amazing, they happily sat and listened to and answered all my written questions and waited whilst I recorded the answer, they happily discussed things whilst a family member joined me and waited on one occasion whilst I rang same family member so they could listen to the consult too. I’m sad that people here have had such horrific experiences. I have to go back for stoma reversal surgery at some point and I feel so much better about that and knowing that I will have the same surgeon perform that as did the bowel resection, she saved my life. So please keep telling people to write their questions down and record the answers.

    • @pascalswager9100
      @pascalswager9100 28 дней назад

      My cardiologist (marfan specialist) when I tell him certain things I'm experiencing or how some of the meds are and he always says "well that shouldn't be happening" like he'd know, I've been seeing him since I was 18, I'm 42 now. And I'm pretty sure Our Family has to be one of the worst affected with marfans, immediate Family as My Dad was adopted.

  • @ellenstrack6274
    @ellenstrack6274 25 дней назад +6

    I worked ICU for many years and had a lovely senior citizen as a pt and she had several tests that the MD reviewed with her while I was not in the room so I could not address her questions. I got her paper and we wrote down her questions for the MD. He came in the next day at change of shift. I was outside her room getting report when he walked in to see her. Next words she said after good morning to him, this lovely, woman told him to "park it buddy need we need to chat". He laughed looked at me and said" Ellen was your nurse yesterday wasn't she" pulled up a chair and spent 10 minutes answering her questions.

  • @emilycerbone7648
    @emilycerbone7648 21 день назад +5

    I began advocating for my heath and my loved ones’ over 20 years ago when my mom was diagnosed with cancer and I saw the way she was treated by several medical professionals. Recently, many of my longtime doctors have started retiring and I’ve struggled finding the right ones for me. Very recently, I began treatment under a doctor who often interrupted me, didn’t seem to take me seriously, and did many of the things that you mentioned in your video. Although it’s cumbersome finding a new doc, I decided to move on and won’t settle until I find the right one.

  • @judynelson4528
    @judynelson4528 Месяц назад +26

    I took a chance and shared childhood trauma with my surgeon whom I came to trust. He thanked me and I thought that was the end of it. When wheeled into surgery 3 weeks ago, and as the propofol went in, a nurse leaned over and said, “You’re safe and we will take care of you.” Don’t know for sure yet, but I imagine the surgeon told the team. Was the best thing that could have happened for me. I had no post op issues-as far as I know that is.

  • @jeffissimo1221
    @jeffissimo1221 Месяц назад +77

    My mother had a doctor that kept overbooking his schedule. Every time she had to see him, she was forced to sit for HOURS in the waiting room because he was so behind. When she was finally seen, he would rush through her exam often without even making eye contact. One day, she had enough of it. My mother worked for the same hospital as her doctor. After keeping her waiting for hours again for the appointment, with her missing work while sitting there is his waiting room, she sent him an itemized bill for the she wasted sitting in his waiting room. A few weeks later, she received a check in the mail from his practice. I used to work in cardiac rehab as a physiologist. I always told my patients that they need to be their own advocate or have a loved one be their advocate. Big health care systems are always finding ways to cut costs and minimize staff and this leads to overworked and overbooked clinics. These patients need to assert themselves and stop seeing physicians as beyond reproach.

    • @marye.fox-grimm6541
      @marye.fox-grimm6541 Месяц назад +6

      Wow. It's difficult to believe the practice actually sent your mother a check. Great strategy on her part.
      BTW: Very fortunately my husb & i are seeing a medical group that seems to be terrific about timing. Rarely have much of a wait. Except for one specialist who very kindly has staff keep us posted. And they ask if we'd prefer to reschedule.

    • @eileenstasczak6606
      @eileenstasczak6606 24 дня назад +2

      @jeffissimo1221 Your mother was not "forced" to sit and wait. She CHOSE to. She could've left and booked with another doctor. Nice it worked out.

    • @jeffissimo1221
      @jeffissimo1221 21 день назад

      @@eileenstasczak6606 Umm you mustn't have much experience in a modern healthcare system. At the time, she was in her 60s, today she is in her 70s. Patients in today's healthcare system do not get choices. The appointments themselves are often several weeks out from the time they are referred by their primary care physician. Example, my mother fractured her leg after being tripped by a dog. Her orthopedist wanted her to begin PT and to return in 8 weeks. 8 weeks had come and gone and she returned for the follow-up. PT still hadn't even made their initial intake evaluation. She is also a diabetic. Her endocrinologist books up months in advance and makes patients weight more than an hour past their allotted appointment. Modern healthcare systems are purchasing smaller hospitals, cutting services, referring patients to designated "main campuses" for imaging and testing, and overbooking doctors. Patients do not have a CHOICE.

    • @mccartney23fan
      @mccartney23fan 18 дней назад +1

      I saw a doctor whose wait time was between 1-4 hours. If you left, you were taken off the list and wouldn't be seen. I finally asked why the wait time was so long. Turns out the Dr booked 4 patients for every 10-15 minute time slot. I never went back.

    • @jeffissimo1221
      @jeffissimo1221 18 дней назад

      @@mccartney23fan I know for a fact that they do this to offset anytime they book Medicaid or Medicare patients. The fees associated with both programs are less than that of private pay or private medical insurance. They try to maximize that time slot by booking 3 or 4 patients at a time. Some doctors even have "medicare" or "medicaid" days where they dedicate one day a week to these patients and keep separate days for private pay patients. The medicare/medicaid patients get book 3-4 at each time slot, but on private pay days, they may only book 1 or 2 per slot and devote a little more time to each patient. I know this because while I was in school I worked part-time at a medical clinic.

  • @jenniferalbrecht5101
    @jenniferalbrecht5101 Месяц назад +16

    I think another important thing is to know when to bail on your doctor. I had a total hip replacement 13 years ago that went really well. I loved my doc. Seven years after the surgery, I developed symptoms of greater trichanteric bursitis on the outside of that hip. I saw him three times over a 4 year period for this. The last time, he said, “if it’s not better in a year, come back to see me.“ My inner voice was all like, “hell no!” He, along with two other doctors, said it wouldn’t help to have an MRI of that hip, because the metal would “scatter“ the image. I found another hip replacement doc, who said, “yes we can MRI that hip. We can use metal suppression MRI” 😮 Getting that done today. And now I have a new hip doctor. 💃🏻

  • @theskyisfallingtom
    @theskyisfallingtom 14 дней назад +15

    I went to three cagiologists at one of the top clinics/hospitals in the United States for an undiagnosed breathing/heart problem. None of them would take me seriously even though I knew something was wrong. Finally I went to a fourth cardiologist who was the head of the cardiology department and in charge of the intensive care unit. He listened. He not only saved me from a heart/lung transplant, but he saved my life. I was a young female, 37 years old. I will turn 72 in September.

  • @jeanettesantarelli1795
    @jeanettesantarelli1795 22 дня назад +7

    I am in total agreement with you. I had an ECG that was read to me by an internist (who was acting for my usual one who was on holiday) as having an issue but nothing to be concerned about we just should do yearly ECG's. Following year my GP (who is not the brightest nor caring bulb in the bunch) phoned to ask if I thought that I should have another one. My reply well considering that there is major coronary issues in my family just maybe we should. (eye roll here). Within 3 days of the ECG I received a call from her explaining if there was any of a list of things happening immediately call for an ambulance and get to the hospital. I was being referred to a cardiologist. Had that appointment and his comment to me was 'how in the hell was this missed?' Immediately placed on surgery list. When I spoke with my regular internist and questioned the reading of the orginal ECG report I was told it said moderate, which (because now where we live we have access to all imaging and blood work testing) I pointed out that no, it had said moderate to severe. To which I was brushed off but I stuck to it relayed what the cardiologists comment was, and told him I should have been immediately sent to the cardiologist at that point. With the outcome of surgery it seems that a Pandora's Box has been opened but I assure you there is not one appointment with the GP after any tests that I am not prepared for. I have referral requests, the names of the doctors I wish to have referral for, and their contact information to give to the GP. I check all referrals out, I have friends who are in the medical field, and I have a fair understanding of medical issues myself. And I make sure I am prepared to stand my ground, politely and non-confrontational but assertively and prepared. If there is something that I am not aware of I will say I need to think about it and will get back to them. Due to previous gaslighting I am now dealing with an issue that requires a different type of surgery that should have been attended to 3 years ago. I guess what I really want for people to read here is YES you have to be persistent if you know something is not right.

  • @Heidi_K_Girl_444
    @Heidi_K_Girl_444 Месяц назад +75

    I have had severe medical trauma, from waking up during a surgery and the Dr. Yelling at the anesthesiologist that I was waking up, but he started rubbing my arm and saying he's right there and in recovery the anesthesiologist came in and blamed ME for choosing the wrong anesthesia. I told her I wanted to be knocked out cold and not remember anything so general anesthesia, I also woke from a surgery with my shoulder rotator cuff, tendons and muscles completely severed. I had told them that I had had shoulder surgery 7 months before that surgery and to make sure to please take extra care and keep it secured and be gentle. It was a nightmare.

    • @debbie4938
      @debbie4938 Месяц назад

      I’ve woke up twice. They accused me of being a drug addict. I am a registered nurse and definitely not a drug addict. I have fired my last two PCP’s on the first visit. I’m paying for a service and I’m the CEO of my health. Trust me, healthcare in America is third world.

  • @joannecordone6831
    @joannecordone6831 Месяц назад +52

    My late-husband was my best advocate. Sent home from ER told I had an acid reflux, back in ER next day with bowel obstruction. Another time went to ER diagnosed with a panic attack, as we were being discharged after I was given medication, husband refused to sign wanted to know all test results before leaving, I had a raging urinary tract infection. I have doctor's now who listen, then give me valuable information I need.

    • @mottawa1
      @mottawa1 17 дней назад

      Doctors who are good listeners make a huge difference!

    • @RoseRed733
      @RoseRed733 17 дней назад

      I know you miss him. Be brave on your own behalf, like he was for you. It’s your right, pet.

  • @MrMusicosity
    @MrMusicosity Месяц назад +238

    "The more around people, more i like my dog"

    • @jmc8076
      @jmc8076 Месяц назад +6

      Tragic how common this is. Feels like judgement or lack of tolerance for diff incl opinions/views, plus competition vs compassion, materialism etc helped create it. Maybe one day our world will be better. 🙏

    • @Dani-it5sy
      @Dani-it5sy Месяц назад

      Humans are a failed experiment. Or I am just not compatible with them.

    • @RitaMBuda-tz6bi
      @RitaMBuda-tz6bi Месяц назад +2

      ​@jmc8076 one can only hope 😢😢.

    • @crazydoglady5
      @crazydoglady5 Месяц назад

      Vets are just as bad too. DO NOT vaccinate your pets yearly. NEVER EVER EVER!!!!!!!!!!! stand up to them too. they push these vaccines or refuse treatment for your pets. WHY? thats called control. they are controlling you. STAND UP AND SAY NO. Your dog, your money, your say so.

    • @leecarlson9713
      @leecarlson9713 Месяц назад +11

      In my case, it is my cats! Had a car magnet the paraphrased what you said, “The more men I meet, the more I love my cat!”

  • @wundertyte
    @wundertyte 21 день назад +2

    i just dropped in and - what a treasure I found - it was the key word self-gaslighting - one word to open the door to a huge "living"room were i had no access - now i can understand this fog around me. I know (meanwhile) that i had serveral trauma, but this keyword lightens up a real darkroom. ❣🧡💙THANK YOU SO MUCH DR. Anthony Kaveh!! GREETINGS FROM GERMANY 🖤♥💛

  • @pcopeland15
    @pcopeland15 25 дней назад +4

    These messages cannot be repeated enough. I just watched a friend moved rapidly into eol palliative care after a surgical mishap. The communication was awful, and everone involved, patient family and proffessianals, has walked away with doubts and questions that they will carry for a lifetime. Low percentage negative outcomes can be real.

  • @Butterfly-mv8fo
    @Butterfly-mv8fo Месяц назад +62

    I wish more doctors were like you!! I can’t bring myself even to go to the hospital due to so much medical anxiety and cptsd! From being gaslit so many times!!!

    • @RitaMBuda-tz6bi
      @RitaMBuda-tz6bi Месяц назад +8

      Same here. I will never go to the hospital again or trust any doctor. 😢😢

    • @martefact
      @martefact Месяц назад +4

      I feel u! Story of my life!

    • @edie4321
      @edie4321 Месяц назад +2

      Same here. I don't think I could ever trust another medical professional of any level. Unless they left Rockefeller medicine too.

  • @rememberinga.o.vietnamvets3823
    @rememberinga.o.vietnamvets3823 Месяц назад +24

    My Oncologist tried to get me to take this new bone medicine last year because i have cancer mets in the right hip. The side effects are jaw fracture and hip fracture. You have to get permission from a Dentist to even take it. I pretty much told him i didn't think it made sense to take it to strengthen my hip when hip fracture is one of the side effects.

    • @cw5451
      @cw5451 29 дней назад +3

      I agree! That makes no damn sense.

  • @A---ti3zz
    @A---ti3zz Месяц назад +36

    When I was lying in the hospital bed dying the only regret I had was that I didn’t fight harder for myself and let my doctors do that to me. I did try to fight for myself. I was gaslit; they beat it into my head that it was all in my head. I absolutely fight now. It is absolutely exhausting though to constantly have to basically be my own doctor. Recently I asked 4 doctors if a medication was safe to take. It turned out that it was contraindicated in patients with a history of clots and I had a DVT. None of them knew it and they told me to take the medication.

    • @joypeace8574
      @joypeace8574 Месяц назад +11

      I am so sorry that happened to you. I had similar experience and learned to check with a pharmacist if medications are okay for me to take. They are the specialists in the area of pharmaceutical drugs. I hope this is helpful.

    • @gloriamaryhaywood2217
      @gloriamaryhaywood2217 Месяц назад +9

      That does NOT surprise me! Most doctors know didilly Squat about the side effects, OR contraindications of the meds they so freely prescribe. You truly HAVE to do your OWN diligent research just to stay Safe. It's crazy and scary that some doctors would be that LAX!??

    • @mitchhills4747
      @mitchhills4747 Месяц назад +9

      I hear you. I have had similar experiences and get tired of having to be so vigilant all the time. Hope you are well....

    • @darkwing3713
      @darkwing3713 Месяц назад

      @@gloriamaryhaywood2217 But they always sound so sure of themselves, even when they don't know what their talking out. Kind of like ChatGPT.

    • @A---ti3zz
      @A---ti3zz 24 дня назад

      @@joypeace8574thank you

  • @KentuckyRanger
    @KentuckyRanger 29 дней назад +8

    I had triple bypass, back in 2014.
    I was brought out of anesthesia, with the breathing tube still installed!
    I've heard that's normal, but NOBODY TOLD ME, before the surgery...
    I panicked, and they had to put me back under.
    Furthermore, I'd say, that my panicking, damaged the closing, and caused me to live in pain, for the next 4 years.
    I finally noticed something wrong, when I had a chest X-Ray, for an unassociated medical procedure.
    I demanded that the cardiac surgeon see me.
    He was very cocky, and said that I didn't have anything wrong with me, other than what was in my mind, so I handed him the disc, with the X-Rays on it.
    5 Min later, he came back, with a look of shame on his face.
    He scheduled surgery for me, and before the anesthesiologist put me under, he apologized, on behalf of the surgeon and his staff.
    All they had to do, was tell me, that when I woke up, the breathing tube would still be inserted, and not to panic.
    Because they didn't, it messed me up, and caused me to be in pain, for 4 years...

    • @RS-td7de
      @RS-td7de 26 дней назад +1

      What a horrible oversight! I’m so sorry you had to go through that. Good for you for standing up for yourself.

  • @TLovly77
    @TLovly77 День назад +1

    He is 100% correct. I unfortunately have had many doctors since childhood due to an autoimmune condition and most of them were dismissive, uncaring and/or rude. I would be discouraged but my sister that’s a nurse told me to be my own health care advocate and it transformed my experience with doctors.
    I now have a conversation with every new physician I see before we address any issues I’m being treated for about patient and doctor etiquette and the steps I will take for poor care or treatment of me as a person and patient, so I rarely run into the problems that I had before.
    Please speak up because it can save your life in more ways than you think. I was almost killed when I was pregnant with my son and I didn’t speak up. They unfortunately start to see numbers instead of people and patients so it’s up to you to remind them that you are both and they are there to service you not the other way around.

  • @OtterFlys
    @OtterFlys Месяц назад +18

    During the process of my last hip replacement, I made it clear to my surgeon that I wanted the old hardware at least four times. When I came out of surgery and the idiot made his first visit., I asked if he had saved the old hip hardware (I’ve had three). After an awkward pause He replied 'I think pathology lost it.' That’s when I knew I’d made a huge mistake in selecting my surgeon. And that’s before I discovered I’d suffered some nerve damage and paralysis during the surgery. sometimes it doesn’t matter how squeaky your wheel is.

  • @Sharkuterie327
    @Sharkuterie327 Месяц назад +14

    I’ve seen it countless times that family members are dismissed and not believed when they do speak up, leading them into worse conditions. This video isn’t about patient mistakes but about doctor’s mistakes creating a hostile environment where patients can’t be honest or express their needs or concerns, and even when the doctor’s actions harm the patient they are protected more than the patient from any consequences despite the patient being harmed. It is very difficult to find a doctor that you can trust.

    • @Kiki-wi7px
      @Kiki-wi7px 15 дней назад

      A-M-E-N ! ! ! 👍🏻

  • @bkm2797
    @bkm2797 Месяц назад +39

    I could write a book about my disturbing experiences with the medical profession. That is not to say I didn't have some positive experiences that I will always be greatful for. One thing I certainly have noticed, every physician has their own personality, and what might work with one, doesn't mean it will work with the other. Being female and having multi system complaints is a fkng nightmare, makes you question yourself at times. Thank you for talking about this challenging matter, I have ptsd because it's so hard to navigate, I just don't want to see anyone.

    • @MR-pr8tp
      @MR-pr8tp Месяц назад

      Can relate to your "makes you question yourself at times" scenario. Just what I am experiencing and scared.

    • @bkm2797
      @bkm2797 Месяц назад +1

      MR-pr8tp
      So sorry you are at that point, but I can assure you - you are sadly far from alone. Please consider getting a therapist, this kills two birds with one stone (at least,lol). A good therapist will help you navigate those personal fears, and help you navigate the system to some degree. I did for the first 13 years of my nightmare, and it really helped keep me from going on tilt. I'm not sure why you are scared, i.e. Because you are afraid of what the diagnosis is, or being heard, or... Many of us have had to navigate this broken system that isn't getting any better, so if you have questions, please feel free to ask. Wish you the best, my thoughts are with you.❤️👍

    • @LimitlessThinker
      @LimitlessThinker Месяц назад +2

      I've been through the same and I am scared of going to any doctor now.

    • @bkm2797
      @bkm2797 Месяц назад +1

      LimitlessThinker
      It's challenging that's for sure and the farther down your insurance goes, so does the support from the medical profession. Since I'm unaware of your health condition, what's been said or not said, I sincerely hope you don't give up, and I also hope you are integrating some holistic practices like meditation (makes a huge difference), yoga, amazing thing about it, doesn't matter how little you can do of the postures, you will still receive benefits, Therapy, a good therapist can really help you navigate your fears, while supporting your next moves. It can be a lonely place when you are traveling down this road, it's vital that you are kind to yourself. 👍🕊

    • @marye.fox-grimm6541
      @marye.fox-grimm6541 Месяц назад

      ​@@bkm2797
      Please explain more re yoga being of benefit even when someone can't do all the postures. Thanks.

  • @CatCaretakerID
    @CatCaretakerID 25 дней назад +4

    Yes, I have been mis-diagnosed on at least two occasions. The most recent was case of shingles which my primary, and 3 visits to the emergency room (2 doctors) and 1 dermatologist all saying I did not have shingles despite my obvious symptoms. By the way every nurse that did the initial assessment said, "I think you have shingles." I should have spoken up and refused to let them hike my bill up with unnecessary migraine cocktails, Cat Scan and finally an MRI, leaving me $7500 dollars in debt, which 5 years later I'm still paying off. But my case of shingles was on the right side of my head and the pain was so intense I wasn't really thinking on all 8 cylinders, and I didn't have a family member or friend with me to advocate on my behalf. I won't do that again. I'll demand to know why they want to run that test and what symptoms I have indicate it is necessary.

  • @betsybugsmith5324
    @betsybugsmith5324 27 дней назад +3

    I had a cardiologist tell me that I did not have a particular surgery. The surgeon that actually performed the procedure told me what I had done and is in my records as such. I have the huge scar that proves otherwise yet he became argumentative. I got up and left. He came to the desk to apologize. I kept on walking.

  • @b.steiner8495
    @b.steiner8495 Месяц назад +29

    Thank you for this message. They have recently discovered that I have a hiatal hernia at the site of a cyst that was removed from the top of my diaphragm less than a year ago. My first question after surgery was literally asking if the diaphragm was perforated in the process. Two rounds of thoracentesis post op pulled 1.5 liter of fluid from one lung even though the surgeon said I was fine and the symptoms would abate. During the first round at the very end I felt a jolt like my kidney was being vacuumed out. I nearly passed out. The pain took three weeks to resolve. I wrote emails and talked to the office multiple times: Just take the medicine and we will see you in three weeks. In retrospect, I am pretty sure the first thoracentesis aspirated mesentery through the diaphragm. The second thoracentesis was painless and only 350 ml. My repeated concern to the surgeon and his team is that fluid is moving between abdomen and pleural space. I have been referred to a general surgeon, but the whole process of repeatedly being told what I was feeling was not what was happening has left me disoriented and frustrated. Thanks for listening.

    • @kv6826
      @kv6826 Месяц назад +4

      OMW! Been 4yrs & 2 surgeries and several doctors…..telling me I am fine; right up until last week I had enough of feeling like my heart was going to explode. Made an appointment with my cardiologist. He asked about the hiatal hernia that was seen in my scans 4yrs ago. My mouth hit the floor. My response was along the lines of “everyone has told me that it’s nothing to worry about…”

      I’ve been barely able to eat, sleep, exercise, or function like I was prior to the 1st surgery before any of this happened. I have anxiety & panic attacks worse than ever. All over something that should have & could have been addressed 4yrs ago when it was 1st identified.

      I’m sorry you have to experience this issue. Blessings to you & I hope you are able to get yours fixed soon.

  • @Joyful_Michelle
    @Joyful_Michelle Месяц назад +10

    Thank you for this. I’ve had major surgery twice. I ignored my symptoms initially, because I was afraid nobody would take me seriously. I was afraid I would waste the dr’s time and they would scold me. This fear is from my own personal past trauma (not medical trauma). Because I waited, it was much worse. I’m glad I eventually did trust my instincts to go to the ER, because it turns out I was bleeding in my brain from a rare condition I didn’t know I had. It’s a miracle I’m alive.

  • @_Kittensworth
    @_Kittensworth Месяц назад +10

    Learning to advocate for myself has been a huge benefit. It's tough to find a balance because no matter how polite you are, being persistent can make some doctors think you're anxious and a hypochondriac. I love the way you describe the "nod and smile" because that's definitely been me in the past.

  • @terrybingham9524
    @terrybingham9524 22 дня назад +2

    I lost some of my hearing, enough to get a BAHA (Bone Anchored Hearing Aid). I was told I could have local or general anesthesia. I opted for general,I’m had done a lot of reading from people who had one or the other. I decided I didn’t want to hear the drill or feel the pressure of it. I had to have bloodwork done, and had to wait an extra week. The morning of the surgery the surgeon was making her rounds of the surgery patients. When she left me she said something about local anesthesia. I got one of the residents over and told her I or she needs to talk to the surgeon, I’m getting general, not local. She said, the doctor prefers using local, I firmly said but I don’t, and it’s my head. She went and talked to the doctor, a few minutes later came back over and told me they would be using general anesthesia. If I didn’t speak up, I would have been awake for the surgery! I’m glad I insisted on what I wanted.

  • @nicci6751
    @nicci6751 29 дней назад +3

    From 1992 or thereabouts, I started to develop vague pain and intermittent weakness in my hands. My speech also became intermittently slurred, and I would begin to stagger because I couldn't feel my feet. I went to my GP on numerous occasions, and each time, he fobbed me off, saying it was probably viral, muscle strain..etc. He also accused me of being a 'closet alcoholic and/or drug user'. Finally, he said I was probably a hypercondriac and sent me to a psychiatrist. This was in May of 2000. The psychiatrist listened, took voluminous notes, asked a ton of questions, and then sent me for an MRI. 4 days later, I had my diagnosis. It was MS (Multiple Sclerosis). It took 7 years of hell and being gaslit by GP before I got my diagnosis. I burst into tears, not because of the MS but because I could finally put a name to what was happening to me and I wasn't going crazy.

    • @psychedelicpython
      @psychedelicpython 27 дней назад +1

      I think similar things like what happened to you happens to so many people. It’s so sad that your doctor ignored you and accused you of such terrible things. I’ve had several doctors ignore me when I told them my symptoms that were actually that of Lyme disease. I was accused of being a pain medicine seeker when I wasn’t asking for pain medicine. I was just trying to find a diagnosis for what I was going through.

  • @mitchhills4747
    @mitchhills4747 Месяц назад +14

    The message is this: ALWAYS question things if something doesn't feel quite right! Don't worry about how you will be perceived by the medical staff. Trust your instincts! They could save your life.

    • @Kiki-wi7px
      @Kiki-wi7px 15 дней назад

      A-M-E-N ! ! ! 👍🏻

  • @anndavidson287
    @anndavidson287 Месяц назад +36

    So true that PATIENTS must trust their guts and self advocate in Hospitals and in surgery. I had to SELF ADVOCATE for 3 was in hospital when everyone told me different stories about what was WRONG with me and why.!! It was exhausting and I felt like I was on a Rollercoaster. I told them to start I had been diagnosed with Hydrocephalus and needed new MRI. Too many cooks!!! That was what it Was!!

    • @RitaMBuda-tz6bi
      @RitaMBuda-tz6bi Месяц назад +5

      It's true, even in medicine, too many cooks spoil the broth. I heard that expression years ago. 😣😣😠😠

    • @crazydoglady5
      @crazydoglady5 Месяц назад

      i have learned that msot all drs have ZERO clue what they are doing anymore. They are not being taught to fix/cure. they are taught to only guess at a treatment.

  • @adamduncan5371
    @adamduncan5371 Месяц назад +44

    I love your channel Dr. Kaveh. As a very experienced (ex) Healthcare professional (RN on a ICU step down unit that also was med/surg floor) I have some genetic health problems like osteoporosis and 2 clotting disorders. I had a horrible leg break and ended up in the ICU as well as the unit i worked on during my nursing career. It was during yhe height of the covid pandemic it was 90% covid patents although during all of 2020 and 2021 I was a patient on that unit. I didn't have covid but I was in a airborne precautions room in isolation for the entire covid deal pretty much. I was extremely sick with malnutrition, 3 pressure ulcers on my backside. A coccyx one and one on each thigh. There were all unstagesble pressure ulcers where you could see the spinal cord and both femures they were necrotic and I was on hospice twice during that time but I lived through it with many surgeries, multiple wound vacs, many hours of woundcare twice a day. Usually about 4 hours with 2 nurses helping and I assisted with the wounds on my belly and sides. They wanted to do a complete amputation at the waist but I avoided that thank God! 🙏 I am paralyzed from the waist down and incontinent due to spinal cord damage when it was exposed with the coccyx ulcer and advanced osteomyelitis.
    I have lived my life in bed since I first broke that leg late 2019. Thankfully I have a grea 24/7 caregiver and home health. I enjoy continuing my education and your channel as well as excellent courses available for free on RUclips have got me living a acceptable life!! Thank you!
    -Adam

    • @lenitaphillips2186
      @lenitaphillips2186 Месяц назад +8

      Continue to heal and share your words with others. We often fail to realize how fortunate we are. It sounds as if your care could have been managed so much better. Many of the things you listed should never have occurred. God bless you. Lp ✨

    • @india1422
      @india1422 Месяц назад +6

      Sounds terrible. I don’t understand how you be amputated from the waist down. Was that a typo?

    • @jmc8076
      @jmc8076 Месяц назад +7

      Peace and health on your journey.

    • @joyceclark8163
      @joyceclark8163 Месяц назад +9

      Prayers for your continued healing...you certainly have been through a lot..I am so sorry..I hope you continue to improve 🙏

    • @RoseOCull
      @RoseOCull Месяц назад +4

      Adamduncan5371 Praying for your healing and the recovery of your health ❤ 🙏

  • @beckysnead8914
    @beckysnead8914 26 дней назад +5

    I just fired my dentist. I told him I was allergic to epinephrine. He said 'we won't give you MUCH of that.' He's never touching me again. Fired.

    • @sharlariley1216
      @sharlariley1216 26 дней назад

      I had a massive brain bleed from too much epinephrine in too many shots at the dentist for multiple extractions. After successful recovery from my BRAIN SURGERY I went back to that clinic to report my experiences to the dentists and they told me "they would do the procedures exactly the same way and that epinephrine is a substance our body makes, so is harmless". Dental hygienist told me 'they make Novocain WITHOUT epinephrine." Just my experience but if you have anxiety attacks or racing heart rate, etc after dental work-it's probably the epinephrine reactions.

    • @blancavr1
      @blancavr1 18 дней назад +1

      I had a doctor tell me, "you really can't be allergic to epi". I told him ,either way, don't use it me.

  • @MagaMamaNY
    @MagaMamaNY 10 дней назад +1

    After losing two family members to cancer.. my mother would always get annoyed at me when speaking up, asking questions and asking for help.. this was refreshing to listen to and helped me realize I’ve been doing the right thing.. she possibly was the gaslighter towards me lol

  • @appaloosa42
    @appaloosa42 Месяц назад +34

    I won’t even start storytelling.
    As a ‘professional ‘ nurse ( BSN since 1976 ) ( only EMT’s and Paramedics are legally ‘professionals’ because their education-very limited-is standardized nationally) not only have I watched patients get steamrollered but it took 25 years to get a diagnosis for a complaint first made at age 18 ( that my mother…no medical background … diagnosed.

    • @nude_cat_ellie7417
      @nude_cat_ellie7417 Месяц назад

      I feel this. 21 years for me. Now living with a pacemaker.

    • @GrannyLinn
      @GrannyLinn 28 дней назад +1

      Sorry but EMTs ARE quite educated and require ongoing education and skills testing to keep their certifications. And Paramedics require a 2-year degree, same as RNs. I will agree that BSN requires more education. But the rest of us work hard and have our place in medical care.

  • @christiroseify
    @christiroseify Месяц назад +24

    I think you got your list backwards. I didn't develop a fear of doctors until after I had been hurt and gas lite by them.
    And I am still living with the gaslighting while I have no choice but to depend on doctors with adrenal disease.
    It feels like they would prefer that I just die since I'm over 65 "disabled" on SS and medicare. Ignoring the fact that they gave me a bad combination of drugs that disabled me.

    • @HopefulEmpath
      @HopefulEmpath Месяц назад +5

      I’m so sorry. I can totally relate on many points. ❤

  • @user-zr4rm7ii9n
    @user-zr4rm7ii9n Месяц назад +16

    I had a gut instinct that the ER doctor was up to something and I was right..When he rubbed his fingers on his chin and said "Now what do we have here" it frighted me like as if he had never seen a case of Meningitis before.. It was so obvious that anyone who saw me including staff were all turning around to look at me like that were in shock...He discharged me shortly after a Lumbar Puncture then falsified my records to lie about me having Meningococcal Meningitis and cancelled the testing on the spinal fluid. The nurse was in on it too... His plan was for me to take a dirt nap in my bed at home...You cannot imagine the cover up that ensued. To conceal damage done to my body they falsify radiology reports, continually breach privacy to do it.The breaches are all lied about also A never ending pattern of cover up and deception ....No one would ever think pre-mediated or deliberate stuff could happen to them.

    • @ninner196
      @ninner196 28 дней назад

      @@user-zr4rm7ii9n wow I am so sorry to hear that. I have watched patients come in with late stage meningitis and I know that I would have never covered it up. Well they all exposed themselves then too and if the hospital pharmacy didn’t give the staff their preventative antibiotics then well like ol Forest Gump said “ stupid is what stupid does.” I hope that doesn’t happen again nor any horrible things and I will spare everyone from reading my own because medical workers don’t get treated any differently. We just don’t always announce what our job was because we all are patients too.

    • @sharlariley1216
      @sharlariley1216 15 дней назад

      So, "your lawyer was all over this and you received a great judgement and the doctor went before the medical board" right? Yours is one of the worst cases I've heard but I've known several others who've died from back surgeries, been totally ruined by the anesthesia for back surgery and two other cases where the people were put on ventilators because "they were moaning too loud" and "she's been screaming bloody murder". NOT one of those cases were able to find a lawyer who would take their cases! Praise be you survived!

    • @ninner196
      @ninner196 15 дней назад +1

      @@sharlariley1216 I am familiar with many cases since I chart reviewed. Sometimes the stress that a very ill person has to deal with just doesn’t help them personally to go further with a case. It may seem selfish to some but when one needs to choose between just moving on with their life or that literally death dealing stress then maybe some take the stance to letting someone with far greater power handle those who have been unworthy to be in the medical field.

    • @sharlariley1216
      @sharlariley1216 15 дней назад +1

      @@ninner196 I totally understand as that is how most who've experienced medical malpractice or their survivors feel. I should have used the /s for sarcasm as it has been my experience, personally and through others' losses that lawyers won't take these cases against hospitals or doctors. I hope you've been able to heal from this abuse. Sorry if I rang bells that cause harm.

    • @ninner196
      @ninner196 14 дней назад

      @@sharlariley1216 lawyers do take cases. I would never let any hospital staff know, just call a lawyer from whatever room you are in and avoid mentioning anything even to a nurse. Letting them know gives them time to smear the patient and change their notes. For those studying to by in the medical field, this is real and your boss will try to bend your arm. Be honest and do not change your charting. They get caught ;)

  • @marlow769
    @marlow769 29 дней назад +2

    It’s very good of you to post this information. The issue is, the more doctors you know personally, the less you want to speak up. You’ve heard all their stories about their pain-in-the-ass patients and no one wants to be one themselves…and it’s even worse once you’ve been married to one.

    • @ginlj
      @ginlj 27 дней назад +1

      You're singing my song. Familiarity breeds contempt, and watching egotistical people go through med school and come out even worse you are always on the lookout. But now I'm older and cynical and have to be proven wrong about med professionals but it sure has saved my family and me from morons like the one I once was married to.

  • @Sunny-bw1mo
    @Sunny-bw1mo 9 дней назад +1

    This doctor projects confidence and calmness! My goodness, we need more doctors like this!

  • @Eva-g4h
    @Eva-g4h Месяц назад +76

    I have been gaslit and traumatized by my doctors because they don't believe Lyme disease is real even though I've been bit by 2 ticks. I don't trust doctors anymore and I have a hard time sticking up for myself because of CPTSD and the trauma I've been through.

    • @dubinatub1
      @dubinatub1 Месяц назад +2

      My friend had lyme in america.she was on a terrible path for several years.
      Thankfully received energetic healing and many enigma to cleanse the body.
      She has made a complete recovery.
      Wishing you the same

    • @sr2291
      @sr2291 29 дней назад

      ​@dubinatub1 I got Lyme, and when small bumps that looked like spider bites on my leg turned into the sores - blotch and a ring a little over one inch overnight. I ran to the ER. The doc wanted to give me Doxyclcline but I told him it makes me sick. He gave me Amox-Clav 800 MG and it knocked it out in two months. I still had all of the symptoms over time. Most aren't even on the Intetnet.

    • @sr2291
      @sr2291 29 дней назад

      It is disgusting that doctors don't research this disease.

    • @jennywoodley7057
      @jennywoodley7057 29 дней назад

      Same 🙄

    • @greenfields396
      @greenfields396 28 дней назад +1

      I had to go to urgent care and switch doctor's because of a tick bite that developed a rash. Ask for a lyme test and tests for other tick diseases. First doctor didn't know blood test wouldn't even read positive for weeks. Cbc won't prove anything for lyme. I would not take prednisone! Original doctor became very angry and hmo was nasty. I left. I did get doxycycline for it from another doctor.

  • @originalcosmicgirl
    @originalcosmicgirl Месяц назад +19

    I was a victim of medical trauma about 20 years ago. I thought i was over it, that I had left it in the past. Recently, I experienced a similar kind of trauma again. It all came flooding back, and suddenly, I felt like how I did 20 years ago again. You are right. My experiences have diminished me both as a patient and as a person. I doubt myself more, especially when talking to doctors. Even with doctors I know well and trust a great deal. This time I will respond differently. This time I plan to make some sort of formal complaint. I hope a different reaction on my part will produce a different result in me. Most of all, I hope this doctor will never treat anyone else the way he treated me. Thank you for being an understanding doctor, and providing a safe space in which your patients feel comfortable being honest with you.

  • @msjetta5818
    @msjetta5818 Месяц назад +16

    Never stay alone in a hospital.
    Always have someone present who can oversee anything going into IV’s, or meds by mouth.
    Question everything, it may safe your life.

  • @LightUpNancy
    @LightUpNancy 29 дней назад +2

    This is the first video of yours I’ve seen, and wow, it is such an important video. I have had over 10 years of medical problems due to Ulcerative Colitis. Many medications including lots of prednisone, and eventually had my entire colon removed. I then went on to have 4 small bowel blockages in less than 7 years. The last one was two years ago.. where I had 10 inches of infarcted small bowel removed. I’m still trying to recover from that hospitalization/surgery.
    Through the years, I have dealt with a LOT of what you discuss in this video, but I’ve never heard a doctor discuss these issues. Much of it has been gaslighting my symptoms repeatedly, which has led to more poor outcomes for me. It also causes me to be afraid to speak up. THANK YOU for addressing this. I’m going to go watch your gaslighting specific video now. Thanks again.

  • @rosettakilby6192
    @rosettakilby6192 26 дней назад +6

    I once had a doctor ask me, "You ever hear of doctors who act like God? Well, I AM God, so don't ever question me."
    He did a spine bone scan with radioactive stuff. Then he tells me, "All I will say is that you don't have SPINE cancer." Turned out I had colon cancer, & he wouldn't even tell me.

  • @pamelastutz3621
    @pamelastutz3621 Месяц назад +12

    I'm 4 days away from a relatively minor procedure. My first and only interaction with the physician who will perform the procedure left me feeling uncomfortable. I've made arrangements to see a group with a higher level of acuity in their practice because doc #1 didn't feel my issues were a big deal. Thank for confirming my ability to trust my instinct. Your posts are so very helpful, important, and reassuring. You're a gift.

    • @jeweldenile8995
      @jeweldenile8995 Месяц назад +1

      Trust your gut. Always, I’d rather be embarrassed than sorry. Hope everything goes well. ☮️

    • @marye.fox-grimm6541
      @marye.fox-grimm6541 Месяц назад +1

      Yes. Trust your gut. Congrats on seeking another dr.

    • @OgdenM
      @OgdenM 29 дней назад +1

      Hrm, you just reminded me about a colonoscopy that I was supposed to get last month and canceled. One of my reasons was that I was not going to meet the doctor beforehand. Their procedure is to have nursing staff give you an IV, drug you up, wheel you in to the procedure room and you meet the doctor while you're twilight sedated. (You can still talk but more have no filters and most people remember NOTHING that happened)
      I'm like, uh.. what? No thanks... that means the doctor doesn't treat patients like human beings, I'll pass.
      Granted, I was going to do it without sedation.. I could have read the doctor the riot act about how horrible the clinic is for doing that.
      In stead, I'll just demand proper care in the first place.

  • @jaeljade3609
    @jaeljade3609 Месяц назад +33

    My psychiatrist is the worst. He calls me by a different name each time I'm there. He made me feel bad about something recently. I realize it's him, not me. I've seen other psychiatrists and have never been treated like that before. My husband and I have a good laugh about him after each appt. He shuts me down if I try to tell him anything going on in my life and says he can't do anything about that, that's what the councilor is for, but it takes months just to get into one at his clinic. They see so many people that it's like a conveyor belt. I only go just to get a couple of meds and I'm looking for a real doctor right now. I feel bad for the rest of his patients. I laugh when he calls me the wrong name each time, but somebody else could really be hurt by that. I've seen him for 4 years and I'm like a brand new person to him each time lol. I often wonder how he got that license.

    • @christiroseify
      @christiroseify Месяц назад

      I think if my husband told me that my most intimate thoughts and feelings were for the psychiatrist, I would tell him his sex drive is for the hookers because there could not possibly be any more care in his desire for my body than there is in his lack of desire for my soul.
      Speak to him anyway, then you won't need a psychiatrist. Telling someone else the things you need to say to your husband won't change a thing.

    • @curiousone6129
      @curiousone6129 Месяц назад +11

      Change doctors🎉

    • @mhenderson9311
      @mhenderson9311 Месяц назад +5

      Omg, I had one psychiatrist years ago who wore dark sunglasses in his office. The question asked going around was how much he was self medicating. He did nothing for me. Pretty much ruined my life at the time. Best thing I did was to stop going to him as soon as he took me off medication. I'd already told him my GP would prescribe me medication if he couldn't get his act together.
      Seriously, look for another doctor!!

    • @KassiusFineArt
      @KassiusFineArt Месяц назад +9

      Report him. Help the next person.

    • @mhenderson9311
      @mhenderson9311 Месяц назад +3

      @@KassiusFineArt I'm not sure if you are replying to me. However in my case this happened 40 years ago when I was in my early 20's. That Psych. Dr. Is dead now. When I read in the 2005 obituary he had died with dementia/alzheimers it did not surprise me. He wasn't old.

  • @ViriKyla
    @ViriKyla Месяц назад +7

    As someone who has had a lot of bad experiences with doctors, I must say you have many good points! Not all doctors will listen if you have a concern though, even if you tell them yours gut instinct, they will still go ahead with the thing and say it's ok when it's clearly not ok.

  • @lilybelle2780
    @lilybelle2780 28 дней назад +4

    my 26-year-old son passed away. He was a 1st Lt. in the Marines. He was in training to be a fighter pilot. He passed from a heroin overdose. I don't tell doctors anymore as there is perceived judgment and losing a child affects all parts of the mind and body I developed cancer from the stress and grief.

    • @bobbiema6671
      @bobbiema6671 23 дня назад +1

      I'm so sorry you have been treated that way. The loss of your son was bad enough but then the medical stigma is very cruel. I know about medical stigma, judgement, gaslighting, cruelty, and it's horrible effects. My heart goes out to you. Anybody- medical or otherwise- judging you or your son needs to look in the mirror and judge THAT person instead. 💔

  • @wolfsdream499
    @wolfsdream499 19 дней назад +1

    When I had surgery in april this year it brought up a huge old trauma of mine.
    As a 3 year old I had an accident where I broke my skull especially the bones in my face (eyes, nose, sinus caverties, jaws you name it). I was very lucky to have survived at all and with minimal scarring to my brain and face.
    So this year there was a big benign tumor in my sinus caverty (probably caused by the accident so many years ago) it had already destroyed the bone and filled half of my eye socket too. It also put pressure on the Trigeminus nerv which hurts like hell...
    I saw the actual surgeon for less than 10 minutes the day before and less than 30 seconds after the surgery.
    He told my that he couldn't foresee if he would go in through my nose, mouth or eye that that would be decided during surgery and when I told him that I was afraid not knowing what would happen to me while I'm under especially because of the trauma from the accident, he just shrugged and said it couldn't be helped.
    The actual surgery went very well but when I woke up I still didn't know what happend and no one would tell me except that surgery is over and everthing went well. I was in so much pain and couldn't open my eyes because everytime I did it was like a drill went through my right eye into my brain. Because you can open just one eye of course but even with a closed lid the other will move too.
    I was told that my left eye is alright and why I didn't want to open it. When I said it hurt too much I was told that that wasn't possible.
    It was days later when I was told that they could remove the tumor in total, that it was most likely benign and that they had to cut through a nerv to do so (but that will heal, even though it takes up to a year) and that they had to put in titanium mash and two screws to seal the bottom of my eye pocket shut again.
    The only painkillers I got was Paracetamol 500mg which had the same effect like chocolate drops.
    I was in massive pain. And. I. Couldn't. SEE!
    No one cared. They even scolded me because I couldn't eat and had high bloodpressure and when I broke down and cried after three days I was told that it's no wonder when I'm in so much pain if I keep crying because that way the swelling wouldn't go down and the neither would the pain...
    I've had two abdominal surgeries before and compared to this they were a walk in the park.
    So even when you talk to the doctors it's not guaranteed that they will LISTEN!