You do know that it's illegal to tape people in a medical setting without their consent, right? That's why there is no video.
This won't be popular here, but I'm going to repost what I just posted over on another thread.
I had the not-fun job of going to the hospital a couple of weeks ago for a heart problem. I first went to the ER and then I was admitted and spent 3 days there.
The ER was standing room only. They were doing triage in the waiting area and it was 8 hours before I got into a room in the ER. They had wheeled carts and they were just going around taking vital signs and so forth. I got wheeled back into a room, passing many patients that were laying on gurneys in the hallway. The ER was completely full beyond capacity.
Once I got into a room in the ER, it was another 16 hours before they had a room in the hospital available for me.
I was moved upstairs and admitted. I stayed there for a bunch of tests and observation, but if they had had less of a backup, I could have gotten all the tests and been out in under 24 hours total.
It was an utter zoo. Healthcare has been a mess since the beginning of the pandemic, but I've never seen anything like this.
Let me clear this up for you. The reason you encountered so many was and is because people have been afraid to go to their regular doctor, so they go to ER. 1) because they can get by on medicaid or pay nothing by going to ER. 2) because, it's paid for,...they go to ER for a sniffle. 3) high percentage are illegal but medical staff cannot refuse them!. Hence, the reason ER's can be overwhelmed.
Okay, plausible. What's the explanation for the whole hospital being completely full? They literally had to wait for someone else to leave in order to get me a room.
ER is always busy though. It would depend on the hospital and what country you're in as to how busy the rest of the hospital would be.
I was making a contrast to a "normal" ER visit. "Normal" is a 2 hour wait in the waiting area, then they bring you back and stick you in a room in the ER, then they do some tests and you are out of there in 8 hours total. Maybe 12.
It took 8 hours just to get me checked in and another 16 before they had a room for me in the hospital. I've literally never seen a hospital doing triage in the ER waiting room before.
Blur them out and I've seen the vieeos.. just blur people and info out
Okay, so the reason you're not seeing them is that no one is making them. So go do it. I guarantee you that hospital security would be escorting you out of the building.
True but a whistle blower maybe? Every one has cameras just get an app or run your camera while walking around then release it anonymously or wiki leaks or what ever
Thanks for the report a nurse I didn't know told me their hospital had a lot of people too.
My question is this... if the medianwas not hyping this up would people just stay at home like 95% used to do when they got the flu?
(post is archived)