WelcomeUser Guide
ToSPrivacyCanary
DonateBugsLicense

©2024 Poal.co

350

(post is archived)

[–] 1 pt

It was pretty obvious from the beginning if you were at a hospital.

My nephew got severe appendicitis a week before the lockdowns. It took three days to operate as the surgeons argued with each other in the meantime it burst.

He finally has surgery and doesn’t improve, he’s on antibiotics and eventually stops the whole pain management because they make him sick.

For the first week he could have visitors and everything was normal even though everyone was panic buying. About a 6 or 7 days they closed the cafeteria some diversity hire made the signs for the roped off cafeteria “cafeteria is close” lmao.

The hospital was dead and the icu you walk by when entering had no visitors in their waiting room.

Then later in the day we were told it was coming down that only two visitors could be in the room. I’d call and his mom or dad would go outside while I visited or any other family member.

That lasted 4 or 5 days, then it became only one person could be in the room and if they left the hospital they couldn’t re-enter, so my brother ran home and packed a suitcase for his wife, not knowing it was going to be over a month before he’d be released. He handed it off to her and he went home.

In between the days of only 2 visitors then only one, the doctors that would come in would be in full hazmat gear, then you’d see them down in the small cafe that was still open and jammed packed in their regular outfits touching everything mixing their own coffee along with the visitors. I saw some old lady licking her fingers to grab each sugar packet then a DR walking up two minutes later and grabbing the same bin of packets. Sitting at the tables all crammed together with other staff and visitors.

Why the huge spacious cafeteria was closed, I have no idea except it was supposedly to prevent the spread of covid but no problems jamming everyone into the little cafe.

Then they closed all the wards down, except maternity and the floor my nephew was on. Next they closed the fire doors so there were only a total of only 6-8 rooms for non-covid patients, the rest of the floor would be reserved for covid patients. He was in one and some fat only fans girl who’d have phone sex 24/7 was in the room next to him. After complaining to everyone a doctor heard it and put an end to it. At the end it was those two and a guy from a motorcycle or car crash.

There was a total of three people in the hospital(minus the maternity ward). Everyday my nephew was threatened that he needed to hurry up and get better or the place was going to be filled with covid patients and he’d probably catch it and die along with his mother.

Yet the hazmat suits continued and the same doctors and nurses would be in the cafe intermingling with everyone.

The parking lots were empty, the floors were empty, the icu was empty it was a joke.

Finally my brother called the insurance company explained my nephew wasn’t getting better and wanted one of their specialists to check him out.

The specialist showed up looked at all the ct scans and said his abdomen is full of fluid from the peritonitis(nflammation of the membrane lining the abdominal wall and covering the abdominal organs.) from the burst appendix and from waiting to do surgery. The surgeons stated they knew that, they were just waiting for the body to reabsorb it.

The specialist stated the abdominal cavity doesn’t reabsorb fluid and drains are needed. The full surgically team including the head of surgery had seen my nephew and the clowns didn’t know to put drains in? He could’ve been out weeks before, not in pain and not sick every time he ate.

5 days after the drains were put in he was finally discharged. The hospital was completely empty except the accident victim. But each day they were told any day now the hospital is going to be overflowing with covid patients which never happened. And this was March and April when everyone was supposedly dying and in the hospital.

[–] 0 pt

That is fcking horrible. I know from personal experience how awful appendicitis is. Happened to me in 2000. While awaiting a diagnosis, they couldn't give me anything for the pain. I would have shot myself if I had a gun, the pain was that severe. I hope he made a full recovery. God bless.

[–] 1 pt

Full recovery, started at 11pm at 6am he was screaming and had an ambulance.

The wait for surgery was due to Crohn’s disease the surgeons said it was a flare involving the appendix his gastros said it was his appendix. Three days of fighting and they brought in a special radiologist to compare a mri from the year before to the current ct scan. That still didn’t convince them.

They wanted to send him home with prednisone and antibiotics. Finally they agreed to do surgery after a second ct scan that showed it had ruptured and also decided to remove a foot of large intestine that was slightly scarred.

The stupid thing is he had a mri in January 2019 and this happened March 2020, every surgeon and their resident(every single one for three days, no joking) said the mri from 3 months ago is slightly worse then the current ct scan, it’s a flare. You’d have to tell them that mri was from 2019, 15 months ago and he just had a colonoscopy in February a month before that showed no inflammation. And they’d say, that’s besides the point lol, how’s that besides the point you don’t even know the proper time frame and current colonoscopy.

You’d think they’d mark that down so the next surgeon to walk in wouldn’t look like a complete idiot and they could also reconsider at their morning meetings.

After I believe the third surgeon the first day and my brother correcting them and them claiming the dates and colonoscopy didn’t matter my brother who’s a hospital administrator at a different hospital system(ambulance wouldn’t take him there) said anything you say after this is meaningless, you can’t even read the proper dates on the scans and keep saying 3 months, there’s a huge difference between 3 months and 15 months and a clean colonoscopy from a month ago.

The only problem besides the fluid and feeling awful was his bowels stopped working for 2 weeks, it’s usually 1-4 days tops. They tried everything, then after two weeks it started, once an hour and each do it would get slightly better. When he finally made it home it was 8 times a day, and finally 5 months later in august he got his energy back and normal bowel movements.

When he was checked in a few times at my brothers hospital system that kid was treated like a king he was 8 and 11 those times, just a little kid, nurses hung out in his room and would talk to him, would bring him stuff without asking and all kinds of other stuff.

The nurses eventually would ask him, hey you know this machine over here isn’t working or the machine in this other room isn’t working we’ve been trying to get it replaced for months can you do something about it. My nephew would pick up the phone, dial his dads extension and say dad this machine needs to be fixed or replaced and within an hour they’d have a working machine.

It got all the way down to all the shelf brackets being replaced and extra blankets on the children’s ward. New video game carts since there weren’t enough due to some being broken. They loved him, he was a mini hospital administrator and even though he was sick he’d help, that’s just the kind of kid he is, no matter how bad he feels he’ll always help someone.

[–] 1 pt

I'm glad he finally got the medical attention he deserved. Sounds like an awesome kid. One of the reasons I knew it was a scam from the get-go? 250,000 deaths per year in the USA from medical misdiagnosis. If they were so concerned with our health and safety, shouldn't that be addressed? But no. Their concern lies with making sure big pharma makes billions, while our freedoms are eroded. Enemies of humanity. Also known as CUNTS!

Did he sue the hospital for malpractice?

[–] 0 pt

No, read the other post below on how stupid their surgical team was.

He did file complaints with the hospital and medical board on every surgeon and resident who came into the room, I know at least one got disciplined. He also worked at the hospital system everyone wants to work for and they’ve been blacklisted at least while he was there.

He left a few months after covid started/the surgeon fiasco around August or September after realizing it was a scam and getting orders from the cdc and fda on how to treat patients and the bonuses the hospital would receive, the over counting of deaths, the high pcr cycles and non-treatment etc.

He didn’t want to be any part of it along with a bunch of doctors and nurses who’d been complaining they couldn’t treat the patients or try new methods. Of course you don’t hear about any of them taking a stand.

That’s why when I say hospitals should be trying everything and getting bonuses for lives saved instead of $13,000 for a positive, $39,000 a day for venting and $60,000 for a covid death. That comes from them, the first doctors and my brother who quit and didn’t think anything going on was ethical but their concerns were dismissed and they quit.

He didn’t want to be any part of it

He was smart to do this. Lots of law suits will be happening soon.