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On The Need For Hazard Pay, Part 15
Bad Behavior, Bizarre, Emergency Services, Georgia, Revolting, USA | Healthy | March 10, 2018 CONTENT WARNING: This story contains content of a medical nature. It is not intended as medical advice. (I am a brand new EMT; I’ve had my license less than six months. I am working for a non-emergency transport service that specializes in psych patients. I go to a hospital to pick up a patient going to a mental health facility for a court-mandated 72-hour hold. The nurse advises me that the patient tried to overdose on some pills after a family crisis, but has been calm and cooperative since being in the ER. My partner and I introduce ourselves to the patient, get her on the stretcher, and load her into the ambulance. I begin to assess her.) Me: “Do you have any pain anywhere?” Patient: “Yeah, my stomach is hurting from my cycle. Can you give me anything for that?” Me: “No, ma’am. I’m sorry, but I cannot give medications.” *pain medication is not within my scope of practice* (I finish my assessment and start on my patient care report. All the while, the patient continues to complain about her pain. I advise her that I will tell the receiving facility about it as soon as we get there so the doctor can give her something, but in the meantime I get a heat pack out of the cabinet and give it to her with a towel. At about the halfway point of a two-hour trip, the patient announces that she has to use the restroom.) Patient: “I have real bad diarrhea and I need to go now.” Me: “Well, I don’t have a bedpan, and we cannot stop, so I need you to hold it.” Patient: “I can’t hold it.” Me: *to partner* “Hey, we are in [Town], right? I need you to divert to [Hospital] so I can take her into the ER. She needs to use the bathroom.” Partner: “Can’t she hold it?” Me: “She said no, and I would rather not have to deal with the smell.” Partner: “Okay.” (We get another five minutes down the road and the patient manages to slip out of all restraints and stands up.) Me: “Ma’am, I need you to sit on the stretcher and put your seatbelts back on. If we were to get in a wreck or if my partner made a sharp turn you could be hurt.” Patient: “I can’t hold it anymore. I’m going to s*** my pants.” *begins to undo her pants* Me: *to partner* “Hey, pull over. She is off of the stretcher and she is about to s*** on the floor.” Partner: “What?! Put a sheet down first.” (As I put a sheet down I plead with the patient to reconsider, to no avail. The patient proceeds to force herself to defecate, urinate, and menstruate on the sheet. She does not have diarrhea and definitely could have held it. After the patient finishes, she uses her clothes to wipe herself and sits back down, half-naked, on my stretcher. I cover her with a sheet, re-secure her belts, turn on the exhaust fan, and try not to breath any more than absolutely necessary.) Me: *to partner* “Hey, I need you to get there fast; I can’t take this.” (For the next thirty minutes, the patient sits silently on the stretcher. When she realizes her previous attempt for pain meds was unsuccessful, she decides to up the ante.) Patient: “My stomach is still hurting so bad. Can you please give something now?” Me: “No. Like I said before, I can’t give pain medications.” (The patient goes on a rant for several minutes before becoming silent again. Just when I think we might get to the destination without further excitement, the patient puts her fingers in her mouth and causes herself to vomit all over the floor.) Me: “Seriously? What makes you think this is helping your cause?” Patient: “Why don’t you just give me something for pain?” Me: “I am an EMT basic. I can assess you, take vitals, and do CPR. Only a paramedic can give pain medications, and they still would not give you any, because menstrual cramps don’t qualify for narcotics use.” (The patient continues to complain, but we have no further trouble until we get to the mental health facility. The patient tries to beat up the orderly after they tell her she will have to be seen by the doctor before she can get anything for pain. As we are decontaminating the truck, my partner looks at me.) Partner: “I have been in EMS for 12 years, and I have to say, that was a first.” |
On The Need For Hazard Pay, Part 14
Australia, Criminal & Illegal, Harassment, New South Wales, Retail, Rude & Risque, Sydney | Right | October 20, 2017 (I am working in a two-storey men’s clothing store. It is almost closing time, and I am the only one working on the bottom floor, when an elderly man shuffles in and approaches me.) Me: “Hi, how can I help you?” Customer: “Uh…” *stares at me for a while* Me: “Yes? Is there anything you were looking for?” Customer: *continues staring* Me: *slightly creeped out, but keeps smiling* “Okay, well, let me know if you need anything!” Customer: *suddenly points to a pair of display pants* “Get me those in XL.” (I tell the customer to stay while I run upstairs to fetch the requested pants. However, when I come back down, the man’s pants are down and his family jewels are on full display.) Customer: *still staring creepily at me* “You’re pretty.” Me: *slowly turns around and goes back upstairs* (I quit a few days later.) |
On The Need For Hazard Pay, Part 13
Clothing Store, Golden Years, Impossible Demands, Revolting, USA, Utah | Right | October 13, 2017 (It’s a quiet Sunday morning, and I’m the only cashier. An older man who looks at least 70 hobbles up to my register and places a shirt on the counter.) Customer: “I’d like to get this shirt, and I was told you could also take the sensor tag off these pants I’m wearing so I can buy them.” Me: “Uh, the pants you have on right now? They’re from here?” Customer: “Yes. Trying them on tuckered me out, and the girl in the fitting room said you could remove the sensor tag up here at the register.” (Our sensor-removers are secured to the counter, and I know for a fact that there’s no way this man could manage holding his leg up to get the sensor tag taken off. I stammer for a moment before remembering an unattached sensor tag remover we used for our express lane on Black Friday months ago.) Me: “Right! Let me just see if someone can get us the sensor-remover we need.” (I ask over the radio and receive some confusion over why I would need it, but eventually my manager says she’ll go to the lock box in the back and get it.) Me: “All right, [Manager] is just grabbing that sensor-remover, and then you’ll be good to go!” Customer: “But I was told that you could remove the sensor tag.” Me: “Yeah, we can; it’s just that our normal removers are attached to the counter. [Manager] is grabbing the unattached one right now.” Customer: “Well, I’ve already stood here longer than I can handle. If I have to go take the pants off, I just won’t buy them.” Me: “No, it’s all right. The sensor-remover is on its way up right now; don’t worry.” Customer: “This is ridiculous. I was told the sensor could be removed. I won’t buy the pants if I have to go take them off.” (I’m taken aback by how angry the customer is getting, but thankfully my confused manager arrives at that moment with the unattached remover. I go around the counter and have to crouch down to try and remove the sensor at the bottom of the customer’s pants leg. It’s a tricky process, and I notice the man is balancing on one foot, so I tell him he can put his foot down if it would make him more comfortable.) Customer: “Actually, I have an open sore on that foot.” Me: *freezes* “Uh, where is that exactly, so I don’t bump it?” Customer: “Oh, it’s just on the bottom of my foot.” (With that gross image in mind, I was finally able to get the sensor removed from the pants. I then had to pull all the tags and stickers off of the pants, getting much closer and more touchy-feely with the customer than I would have ever wanted to. He left without so much as a “thank you,” and I promptly took a much needed break to shake off the heebie-jeebies the whole interaction gave me.) |
On The Need For Hazard Pay, Part 12
Books & Reading, Library, Rude & Risque, USA | Right | August 22, 2017 (I am a reference librarian at a public library. We get a number of reference questions by phone. In particular, there is one elderly woman who as far as we know has never been in the library, but calls nearly every day to ask a question that is usually related to something in pop culture — for example, the name of an actor on a TV show she has watched. She’s a very sweet lady, so we always do our best to help her. One Saturday afternoon, my supervisor and I are together at the desk in the reference room, which is full of people but still fairly quiet. Anyone in the room could easily hear us on the phone. Our friend calls and my supervisor answers the phone.) Supervisor: “Oh, hello, Mrs. Smith. How are you? How can we help you today?” (She pauses to listen and her eyes get huge. She looks at me, looks around the room, and then suddenly GETS DOWN UNDER THE DESK and speaks very quietly into the phone, while I stare in astonishment. A moment later, she re-appears and hangs up the phone.) Me: *confused* Supervisor: *whispers* “She’s reading a book and wanted to know what a strap-on is.” |
The Kind Of Things You Say After Having Too Many Shots
Funny Kids, Health & Body, Home, Siblings, USA | Healthy | March 9, 2018 Younger Brother: *whining* “Why do we need to get shots?” Me: “Because they make you feel better.” Younger Brother: “But don’t the shots make holes in your bones?” |
All I’m Getting Is Snake-Eyes
Pets & Animals, Reception, Stupid, USA, Vet | Healthy | March 9, 2018 (I come home to find that one of my pet snake’s eyes appears to be injured in some way. Since this is my first pet reptile, and I am not sure if this is something that needs immediate attention, I call the veterinary hospital of a very prestigious vet school nearby. Since it’s relatively late in the day, all the vets have left, but there are receptionists on call 24 hours a day.) Receptionist: “Hi, you’ve called [Vet Hospital]. How can I help you?” Me: *explains problem with my snake’s eye* Receptionist: “I see. Is he blinking normally?” Me: “Um… It’s a snake. It doesn’t have eyelids.” |
Seizing Control Of The Schedule
Bosses & Owners, California, Health & Body, Jerk, Los Angeles, Office, Stupid, USA | Healthy | March 8, 2018 (I work Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday. My daughter has been having some health issues and recently started having grand mal seizures which require the school to call me to come pick her up. All my coworkers know this. My boss is trying to cover some shifts and asks me:) Boss: “Can you cover some of the Monday, Wednesday, and Friday shifts?” Me: “Sorry, I don’t think that’s a good idea. My daughter has been having seizures; she had to be picked up Thursday and Friday last week.” Boss: “So, Friday is the only day you can’t work?” Me: “No, I don’t have an emergency person to pick her up Monday, Wednesday, and Friday.” Boss: “So, she’s scheduled to have seizures on every Thursday and Friday?” Me: “No. We don’t schedule her seizures.” Boss: “Well, can you schedule them, then? We really need these shifts covered.” (Best part is, we work in healthcare!) |
A Depressing Statistic
Ignoring & Inattentive, Medical Office, Psychiatrist, South Carolina, USA | Healthy | March 7, 2018 CONTENT WARNING: This story contains content of a medical nature. It is not intended as medical advice. (I have severe ADD and take Ritalin. I have been seeing a psychiatrist every six months for over a decade because it’s necessary to keep my prescription up, but normally we don’t do anything else. He asks me if I’m having side effects, I say no, he asks how school, work, or whatever is going, I tell him, he writes me a new prescription, and we’re done.) Doctor: “And how are your classes going?” Me: “Pretty well, except for this one lab where the whole grade is based on group work and my groupmates have disappeared…” (I’m very frustrated with my classmates, and as I explain the problem with the lab, I start crying.) Doctor: “Here, take these tissues! I had no idea you were so depressed. I’m going to prescribe you some medicine, and I want you to come back in a week for a follow-up.” Me: “What? No, I’m just sleep-deprived! Your office is an hour from my house, and you get behind schedule so fast that my mom insists I book an appointment at seven am. I had to get up at 5:30 to be here! I’m a night owl; I get up at 10 or 11 if I don’t have anything I have to do earlier. I always cry too easily when I’m tired.” (He doesn’t believe me and prescribes the medication, anyway. A week later, I’m back in his office.) Doctor: “How are you feeling? If we need to, we can adjust the dosage before your next follow-up next week.” Me: “Fine, like I was before, when I had slept. I know antidepressants take a while to kick in, but I don’t think these are ever going to affect me, because I’m not depressed. And I really can’t afford to keep experimenting with them; you know I don’t have insurance.” Doctor: “I tried to find the cheapest antidepressants I could. I thought these were only about $10 a bottle.” Me: “Come here. I want to tell you a secret.” (He comes closer.) Me: “You know those nice ladies behind the window in your lobby? They make people give them money before we can talk to you.” (It had never occurred to him that visiting a psychiatrist every week instead of every six months might be a little pricey! I went off the antidepressants and am fine, as long as I don’t have to get up before dawn. Doctors, I know that lots of people really are depressed and it’s a serious problem, but people also know their own bodies, minds, and situations. It helps to listen.) |
Putting A Negative Image On Breeders
Bad Behavior, Pets & Animals, USA, Vet | Healthy | March 6, 2018 (I work as a veterinary technician. We are preparing to perform a blood draw on a dog to test for a specific disease that affects the production of hormones from the adrenal glands. The dog in question is not neutered and is likely used as a show dog.) Owner: “So, this disease you’re testing for, is it hereditary?” Me: “Yes, the factors that cause this disease can be passed on in a dog’s genes.” Owner: “So, like… If he tests positive, would you recommend not breeding him?” Me: “If he does test positive, then we don’t recommend that you breed him, as there is a chance he could pass the gene onto his offspring.” Owner: “But it’s only a recommendation, right? I could still breed him, regardless of the results?” Me: “Sir, as a medical professional, it’s a very, very strong recommendation that you should not breed a dog if it is certain that he has a specific hereditary disease. There is a very high chance he would produce more dogs predisposed to developing the disease. It would also ruin your reputation as a breeder if you did this knowingly. So, let’s just hope he comes back negative.” (The owner seemed satisfied with the answer, but it troubles me that he was still considering breeding the dog if the test came back positive.) |
They’re Actually Allergic To Self-Control
Alcohol, Medical Office, Oklahoma, Patients, Stupid, USA | Healthy | March 5, 2018 (I work at an eye institute. One day, my coworker tells me about the following exchange.) Coworker: “Do you have any allergies?” Patient: “I’m allergic to whiskey.” Coworker: “Okay… What kind of reaction did it give you?” Patient: *completely serious* “It made me throw up.” Coworker: “…” |
Sexually-Transmitted Translation
Doctor/Physician, Hong Kong, LGBTQ, Medical Office, Wordplay | Healthy | March 4, 2018 (I am a foreign college student and I need to see a gynecologist for the first time. I also need to fill out a medical information form that’s all in Chinese.) Receptionist: “Can you read Chinese?” Me: “The basics, but I have trouble with medical vocab.” Receptionist: “Okay, start filling what you can and come back when there’s no line.” (I do so and the receptionist translates while I answer.) Receptionist: “Okay, this says, ‘Are you sexually active?’” Me: *circles yes* Receptionist: “Okay, and this says, ‘What protection do you use? Check all applicable.’” Me: “Okay, does it say, ‘dental dam,’ somewhere?” Receptionist: “Huh?” Me: “Um… for oral protection.” Receptionist: “This is asking what you do to not get pregnant.” Me: “So, it’s ‘contraceptive, ’ not ‘protection’?” Receptionist: “Same thing.” Me: “No… It isn’t. Okay, where does it ask for the gender of my partner?” Receptionist: “Gender?” Me: “Yes. I’m sexually active with women, not men.” Receptionist: *long pause, looks around as if for help* “Then you put, ‘No,’ for sexually active and skip these questions.” Me: “Don’t you care about me getting STDs?” Receptionist: “Huh?” Me: “It means I can still get STDs, as I’m sexually active, but you want me to put, ‘No,’ for being sexually active.” Receptionist: *blank stare* “Uh. Let me talk to the doctor.” (I am not called back for a while, and when I am, it’s for the actual appointment.) Doctor: “I’m sorry about the form. We never get people like you. Let’s continue.” *hands form back to me* (I noticed next to the line asking about being sexually active, “lesbian” was written in, in English. She helped me fill the rest of the form, adding — in English — the details it didn’t support, with no further issues.) |
Needs To Prescribe Some Anger-Management
Germany, Jerk, Pharmacy | Healthy | March 3, 2018 (I work at a call centre for a German online pharmacy. Unlike other pharmacies, we allow customers to pre-order medicines which requires prescriptions. It should go without saying, but we’re not allowed to ship orders that contain a prescription, until the original is sent to us by a postal service. There are also no shipping costs for our customer, if there is a prescription.) Me: “Your [Pharmacy]. You are speaking with [My Name].” Customer: “I placed an order last week at your store and it still hasn’t arrived. Where is it?” Me: “Oh, that doesn’t sound so good. Could you please tell me your order number?” (The customer doesn’t have it, so I search for her by name. It takes me a while to find her, as she has a very common name and doesn’t want to give me her postal code.) Me: “Ah, there we have you. I’m afraid your prescription for [Medicine] hasn’t arrived yet.” Customer: “This is outrageous! I do not need a prescription for that order! Send them to me at once!” (I try to stay cool.) Me: “Ma’am, [Medicine] requires a prescription, by law. We cannot deliver this order until we have the original prescription.” Customer: “Then you should at least have told me so!” Me: “Our online store has classified this item as one that requires a prescription. You have also received an order confirmation that asks you for your prescription.” Customer: “No, I never received a confirmation, so don’t dare lie to me!” Me: “Uh… Ma’am, I do not understand; you received the confirmation on [date and time].” Customer: “No, I never did; I’ll show you!” (I can hear her typing and the sound of a mail program opening. She waits for a moment, and then she starts mumbling to herself.) Customer: “’Dear Mrs. [Name], thank you for your order. Please send us your your original prescription by mail, so we can continue with that order.’” (The customer wheezes angrily.) Customer: “This is way too complicated with your store! Other pharmacies will send them to me immediately!” Me: “Ma’am, even other pharmacies have to wait for your prescription, as [Medicine] requires one.” Customer: “I will never order at your store ever again! I’ve never been insulted this badly in my entire life!” (The customer called the next day. She made a new order without the prescription and asked if that was all right.) |
Isn’t Used To This Kind Of Treatment
Canada, Hospital, Jerk, Lazy/Unhelpful, Ontario, Toronto | Healthy | March 2, 2018 (I volunteer in the emergency room of a very large hospital. I’ve volunteered in other departments as well, so I’m quite familiar with the layout. I notice a woman wandering around looking lost, so I greet her and ask if I can help her find where she’s going.) Patient: “Yeah, I have some questions about some medical treatment I’m going to be receiving.” Me: “Sure. Which department do you need?” Patient: “I’m not telling you my personal medical information!” Me: “You don’t have to, ma’am. I only need to know the category of treatment so I know where to direct you.” Patient: “Isn’t there some kind of central information desk?” Me: “Yes, but you’ll have to tell them the same thing.” Patient: “Well, my medical information is confidential. Just tell me where I can get my questions answered.” Me: “In order to do that, I need some idea of what you’re here for.” Patient: “This is a very disorganized hospital.” *walks away* (I probably should have just directed her to Psych.) |
Your Timing Is Just Sick
Bosses & Owners, Health & Body, Jerk, Office, The Netherlands | Healthy | March 1, 2018 (It is evening. I feel I am getting the flu, and that it won’t be better in the morning. I let my team manager know that I will call in sick tomorrow. I stay home for two days and show up at work again. In the stand-up meeting, my manager addresses me.) Manager: “[My Name], I want to talk about how you called in sick recently. It’s a pity you did so in the evening. It was too early. You should have waited until the morning, like always, and decided then.” (Everyone in the circle nods and sighs.) Me: “I don’t understand. I mean, it is good to know it up front, so you can plan ahead with my colleagues.” Manager: “No, that is not how it works. You showed yourself weak by calling in early. Never do that again.” (As a result, from then on, those few days a year I was actually sick, I always waited until at least eleven in the morning until I called in, despite HRM wanting to know it as soon as possible every day.) |
A Cavity Search
Dentist, Jerk, Liars/Scammers, USA | Healthy | February 27, 2018 (I’ve been visiting the same dentist for about five years, and never had any issues. I’m also over thirty and have never had a cavity, so I consider myself fortunate. I go in for my six-month cleaning and let him know that as a result of a new job, I’ll be moving to a town about an hour away.) Me: “So, this is the last time I’ll see you!” Dentist: “Oh, we’ll miss you!” Me: “I’ll miss you guys, too.” Dentist: “You know, you could keep coming here. It’s not like we’re that far away, and you’ll be in town to visit your parents, since they live nearby.” Me: “Um… Well, no, I think I’d like to find a dentist closer to where I’ll be living. You know, just in case I have an emergency.” (The dentist tries for a few more minutes to convince me to keep visiting him, before giving up. He’s finally done with the exam.) Dentist: “Oh, bad news. You have eleven cavities.” Me: *completely shocked* “ELEVEN? Did you say eleven cavities? As in ten plus one?” Dentist: *sorrowfully* “Yes. Eleven. You’ll need to get those filled right away. Let’s go up front and have my receptionist schedule the first appointment; I think we should do at least two, one side of your mouth and then the other…” Me: *interrupting* “Wait a minute. I’ve never even had one cavity in thirty-one years! I brush and floss three times a day. You’ve always said how great my teeth look. Six months ago you said everything was fine, and now I have eleven cavities?” Dentist: “I know. It’s very bad. Come on. Let’s get your next appointment scheduled and [Receptionist] can tell you out-of-pocket costs.” Me: “You know, I think I’m going to hold off and get a second opinion on this. No offense, but it just seems really extreme. One or two, maybe, but eleven?” (The dentist was adamant that I needed to get it taken care of right away, but I didn’t budge, and left without making a follow-up. I moved to my new town and found a great dentist who was surprised when I told him my last dentist found eleven cavities. He didn’t find any! Ten years later, I’ve still never had one. The worst part was that a friend of mine worked for that shady dentist; I had to call and tell him what happened and he was so embarrassed. He quit a few months later.) |
Treat The Family Betta
Medical Office, Nurses, Pennsylvania, Pets & Animals, Silly, USA | Healthy | February 26, 2018 (I’m the customer in this story. It’s my first day at a new doctor, so they’re asking me standard questions.) Nurse: “Do you have any pets?” Me: “Yes. I have eight of them.” Nurse: “What kind?” Me: “Three cats, three dogs, and they probably don’t matter, but I also have a goldfish and a betta.” *pause* “Oh, wait. Actually, I have nine. I just remembered that I have a little sister.” (The nurse laughed for a good minute and a half before she could continue her questions.) |
Now You’re Just Being Cilly
California, Doctor/Physician, Hospital, Jerk, Money, USA | Healthy | February 25, 2018 (I have gone to see my new doctor because I have pneumonia.) Doctor: *after looking at my xrays* “Yeah, that’s pneumonia. I’m going to prescribe you amoxicillin.” Me: “I’m allergic to the penicillin family. Isn’t that in my chart?” Doctor: “Yeah, it is… How allergic exactly are you?” Me: “Allergic enough that I don’t want to risk it?” Doctor: “I’m just trying to save you money! The other one I can give you is really expensive.” Me: “More expensive than a hospital stay because of an allergic reaction?” Doctor: “I’m just trying to save you money. No need to get defensive!” Me: “I just want to go home and back to bed; just give me my prescription and let me worry about the costs!” (She grudgingly gave me my prescription, muttering the entire time about how she was just trying to save me money and how ungrateful I was. The non-penicillin medication cost me $15.) |
That Pretty Much Covers It
Home, Parents/Guardians, Pennsylvania, USA | Healthy | February 24, 2018 (My mother is in her sixties, and while not incredibly vain, she can’t help but be a little interested in various plastic surgical procedures. Since she has gotten to know a plastic surgeon through the ballroom dance club she helps run with my dad, she goes to his office one day for a consultation. I happen to call her the afternoon after her appointment. Also note that my three siblings and I were all born via medically necessary C-sections, and my mom is ten years in remission for a mild form of lymphoma.) Me: “So, how did it go?” Mother: “It was fine. But I have to tell you, I don’t think this is for me.” Me: “Oh? What makes you say that?” Mother: “Probably the fact that I’m not in the mood to have a more extensive medical procedure just to look pretty than I did to beat cancer or have four children!” (I have no problem with anyone who chooses to have plastic surgery — it’s your body, after all — but I couldn’t fault my mom’s rationale, and it did make me laugh. Just one of the many reasons I love this lady so much!) |
Scarred By Your Parents
Hospital, Jerk, Nurses, Parents/Guardians, USA, Washington | Healthy | February 23, 2018 (I’m a nurse. I’ve been assigned to a young girl who just had emergency surgery to save her life. She has a long incision down her stomach, which will end up as a scar. Her parents come to me about a week after the surgery, but before the wound has closed or the staples have been removed, clearly upset.) Father: “When are we going to talk about reducing that scar?” Me: “I’m sorry, but your daughter has barely started to heal. Let’s get her healthy before we worry about appearances.” Father: “Excuse me? It’s bad enough she has [large birthmark]; now you’re going to add this, too?” Mother: “What about covering it in Vitamin E oil?” Me: “Ma’am, right now we’re worried about infections and how well she’s healing. We can talk about—” Father: “No! You will fix her now!” (I made up something about talking to the doctor about it and left. I truly pity this child, if that was their concern.) |
Impossible To Bring Them Up-To-Date
Medical Office, Stupid, Texas, USA | Healthy | February 23, 2018 (I work at a disability law office and part of my job is to send out requests for medical records for our clients. We routinely get calls from the records departments of the doctors and hospitals we deal with, saying they don’t have the records requested. My favorite, though, is one from a clinic down the road whose record keeper has worked there for over five years. This conversation leaves me stunned to this day.) Employee: “Hi, this is [Employee] from [Clinic], calling about the medical request you guys sent us. It says here you’re needing records from May 6th, 2016 to present date. What is present date?” Me: “Um, present date would be now. Today.” Employee: “Oh. Well, we don’t have any records for May 6th.” Me: “Okay. What about after that? The client said she had been there three times since we last requested records. Was she there June 4th?” Employee: “Let me check. Yeah, she was here.” Me: “Okay, what about August 12th and September 17th?” Employee: “Yeah, we have records for those days, but we don’t have any for May 6th.” Me: “That’s fine. We just need any records that are there between May 6th and now.” Employee: “But there aren’t any records for May 6th. She wasn’t here that day. There’s no records I can give you.” Me: “No. Look: she was there on May 5th, okay? That’s the last date of service we got here in our records. So, we are sending for records from the day after May 5th, which is May 6th, all the way up to now. We need any records the doctor put in there within that time frame. It doesn’t have to be on May 6th, just anything after that time that’s there, okay?” Records: “Okay… She wasn’t here after May 6th, though.” Me: “You just told me that she was there in June, August, and September!” Records: “Yeah, she was here on those days.” Me: “Then, clearly, I need those records, since they are all after May 6th!” Records: “Oh. Oh! You need all the records between the dates of May 6th and today?” Me: “Yes, that is what I need!” Records: “Okay, I’ll have them done today and brought over to you.” (It took her another month to get us the records, and the clinic is right down the road.) |
Literally The Walking Dead
California, Doctor/Physician, Medical Office, Silly, USA | Healthy | February 22, 2018 (When I am 20, I trip over a log and twist my ankle. It never heals right, and for years I have pain every time I take a step, stood, or put any weight on my leg. When I am 25, I get medical insurance, and my doctor sends me to a specialist to look at my ankle. It’s December, and this my first meeting with the specialist. The doctor comes in and pulls out the MRI of my ankle. He looks at it and then looks over at me. Then, he looks back at the MRI, and then back at me, with a small crease forming between his eyebrows.) Doctor: “How do you even walk?” Me: “Painfully?” Doctor: “Yeah, you would have been better off breaking your leg. There is a bunch of scar tissue wrapped around the tendons in your ankle, but the real problem is your ankle bone.” Me: “What’s wrong with it?” Doctor: “It’s pretty much no longer there.” *he shows me my MRI* “You see that spot on your ankle, the size of a quarter? That is the part of your ankle that is missing.” Me: “Well… That seems… bad.” Doctor: “Yeah, if you hit it hard enough, you could just shatter the entire thing.” Me: “So, what are my options?” Doctor: “We can either take bone from your hip and use it as a filler to fill the hole, or we can use cadaver bone. I recommend using cadaver bone so that we don’t further damage your skeleton. Unlike organs, we don’t need to really worry about rejection or shortage. Bones are good for up to five years after donation. “ Me: “Ooh, I can be part dead person?” Doctor: “Yes, we can use cadaver bone.” Me: “I want dead person!” Doctor: “Cadaver bone.” Me: “What is the difference between dead person and cadaver bone?” (The doctor just looks at me for a minute and then starts to laugh.) Doctor: “Nothing. Nothing is the difference.” Me: “I’m going to be part zombie!” (From then on, he called it dead person bone. I was scheduled to have the surgery at the end of January, but he called me the first week of January to tell me he had found me a fresh dead person to use, instead; apparently, it takes better. So, we moved up my surgery. It’s been eight years now, and I’m virtually pain-free thanks to a wonderful person and their family, who looked past a tragic time in their lives and thought to help others. I like to use my ankle to help start conversations on the importance of donation, and I have let my family know to please donate all parts of me that they can. I hope that one day I get to help someone be part zombie, too.) |
Usually The Other Word Autocorrects To Duck
Farm, Montana, Non-Dialogue, Wordplay | Healthy | February 22, 2018 My friend has talk-to-text and it is generally okay. Or at least, we’ve all become good at translating. One day we had a limping duck that had a swelling on her foot. Knowing it could be bumblefoot, which is possibly life-threatening even if treated aggressively and quickly, we took a picture of it and sent it to the vet with the following text… Text: “Dr. [Vet], the following picture is our duck’s foot. We are concerned it might be bumble f***. Please advise treatment. We can get her to the office this afternoon, if needed.” |
You Need The Nurses To Come Back
Arkansas, Hospital, Nurses, Silly, USA | Healthy | February 21, 2018 (My husband is admitted to the local Veterans Administration hospital for heart problems. After hours in the ER, he finally gets a bed on the ward. His nurse comes in to introduce himself, check my husband’s vitals, retake history, and so on.) Nurse: “Is there anything else I can get for you, sir?” Me: *knowing what’s coming, I silently plead* “Oh, no… Not again.” Husband: “Yes. Two weeks vacation, a raise, some sanity, and winning lottery tickets, please.” Nurse: *dryly* “Sorry, sir. You’ll have to see the Travel and Disbursement clerk for those.” (My husband has been replying that to ANYONE who asks him if they can get him anything — waitstaff, clerks, medical personnel, etc. — for the entire 30 years I have known him. This is the first time I have heard a really good comeback.) |
Your Cold Is Not Worth Braving The Cold
Jerk, Medical Office, New York, USA | Healthy | February 21, 2018 (I work for a small general practitioner’s office, running the front desk. On this particular day we are having a bad snow and ice storm, leading to a lot of accidents. One doctor calls in that she just isn’t coming in, and the other doctor decides that we will be closing early for the day. The following patient calls in. This is the middle of a very bad flu season, so we are swamped with sick patients.) Patient: “Good morning. I was hoping to see the doctor today for a cold. It’s not bad but I want to make sure it’s not leading to anything.” Me: “Unfortunately, we are closing early today because of the weather, but I can put you in tomorrow morning first thing.” Patient: “What do you mean you’re closing early? I took off today because of the snow, and I decided to see a doctor. Well, fine. If you’re not going to see me, I’m going to an urgent care.” Me: “That may be your best bet to be seen today, sir. If you would like to come in tomorrow, don’t hesitate to call us.” Patient: “I just don’t understand why you wouldn’t stay open for me.” *click* Me: *looking out the window and hearing the radio reports of several large car accidents, to my coworker* “If he called out of work because of the bad weather, why would he expect us to risk our lives for his cold?” |
Bag That One For Later
Health & Body, Junior High School, Nurses, Pennsylvania, Revolting, Students, USA | Healthy | February 20, 2018 (Both the flu and a stomach bug have been going around my sister’s school and about a quarter of the population ends up sick. She ends up going to her nurse with the stomach bug after throwing up in the hallway, and my dad has just come to pick her up.) Nurse: “Here’s a bag for the car ride home, in case you have to throw up again.” (A random kid runs in from the hallway, grabs the bag from her hands, and throws up in it.) Nurse: “Okay, I’ll get you another bag and throw this one away.” (This repeated two more times with another student who was already in the nurse’s office and one of the history teachers, before my sister finally got her own bag to go home with. We’re all surprised they didn’t just quarantine the entire school at that point.) |
Time To Exterminate That Joke
Funny Names, Medical Office, USA, Wordplay | Healthy | February 20, 2018 (This is my first time at a clinic with more than one doctor, and we’re not sure which one will see me.) Me: “This is going to be fun. Who’s going to be my doctor?” Dad: “Doctor Hu?” Me: “Yeah, who?” Dad: “You can say you saw Doctor Who when you actually mean Doctor Hu!” Mom: “I’m sure Doctor Hu is sick of this. He has to know by now.” Dad: “He’s Chinese; he’s not going to know.” Mom: “I’m sure he does.” (I do end up being seen by Doctor Hu.) Dad: *big grin, with a singsong voice* “Doctor Hu.” Doctor Hu: *frowns* “No Doctor Who jokes, please.” Mom: “Exactly.” Me: “Sorry.” |
You Can’t Just Take It On The Chin-Chilla
Germany, Jerk, Lazy/Unhelpful, Pets & Animals, Vet | Healthy | February 19, 2018 (It’s a Saturday evening. We are at home trying to have a relaxed evening when our chinchilla starts having a seizure. She has had them before; her liver is severely damaged because of pain medication she was on some years before. Our vet told us that if she had a seizure again, we would have to put her to sleep. Because the cramps stopped after about an hour and a half the last time this happened, we decide to wait and hope she’ll get better soon. But after two hours pass and there is no foreseeable recovery, we decide with a heavy heart that this will be her last evening. Because we don’t feel too comfortable driving to a vet with a wriggling chinchilla in our hands, we start looking for an emergency vet who does home visits, to have her put to sleep. I find one and give the telephone number to my dad. He puts the phone on loudspeaker so we can help him explain.) Vet: “[Vet].” Dad: “[Dad] speaking. Good evening. We are having problems with our chinchilla. It is having—” Vet: *interrupting* “I’m not handling emergencies anymore. Call [Animal Clinic], instead.” Dad: “They don’t offer emergency services anymore. Please, we just need to have it—” Vet: *interrupting again* “Go and call [Animal Clinic]. Good night.” *hangs up* (We just looked at each other in disbelief. Desperate to relieve our poor pet, we had no other choice but drive over 20 miles to a different vet that had emergency services, in the middle of the night, in a snowstorm, with a severely cramping chinchilla in our hands. To this day, I can’t believe that a vet, who explicitly offers emergency services on both his website and answering machine, refused to even listen to what we wanted.) |
A Vision Of Incompetence
Chicago, Doctor/Physician, Illinois, Lazy/Unhelpful, Medical Office, Nurses, USA | Healthy | February 18, 2018 (I am a college student. I have learned of a summertime job, as a “gopher” — office boy — with a local railroad. I arrive at the office where I receive initial training in my duties, and then I am given a piece of paper — ordering a pre-employment physical — that I am supposed to take to the railroad’s doctor’s office. Since I recently passed my college physical, I have no qualms about the pre-employment physical. I drive to the doctor’s office. I note that the waiting room is empty, and there seems to be nobody around.) Me: “Hello, is anybody here?” Nurse: *a few minutes later, while eating an apple* “The doctor is out having lunch. What do you need?” Me: “I am here for a [Railroad] physical.” Nurse: *chomps on apple* “Okay. I can start that. Sit in the exam chair, and read the eye chart on the wall.” *chomp* Me: “Do you want me to do that with my glasses on or off?” Nurse: *chomp, chomp, long pause* “Um, take your glasses off.” Me: “Should I do this with both eyes open?” Nurse: *chomp* “Um… Take this thing and cover your left eye.” Me: “Okay… E.” Nurse: “Can you read any more?” Me: “No, I am near-sighted, but my distance vision is 20/20 or better with each eye with my glasses on.” Nurse: *another long pause, throws away apple core* “I hear the doctor. You must see him now!” (I then put my glasses on and walk out to the waiting room, where the doctor is apparently reading my physical report. The doctor takes out a pencil with red lead at one end and blue at the other…) Doctor: “What color is this?” *making a red line on the back of my physical report* Me: “Red.” Doctor: “And what color is this?” *making a blue line on the same piece of paper* Me: “Blue.” Doctor: “Okay, you can go home now. The railroad will call you later.” (A day goes by, and I get a call from the railroad.) Railroad Guy: “Sorry, we can’t hire you.” Me: “Why not?” Railroad Guy: “You failed your physical. You can’t see well enough to work here.” Me: “My vision is corrected to 20/20 in each eye, but the nurse never checked that.” Railroad Guy: “Maybe so, but you could be hit by a train if your glasses fell off while you were crossing the tracks.” (I guess I never was qualified to be “workin’ on the railroad,” but I got a better summer job soon after, and not all was lost.) |
The Hippokkkratic Oath
Bigotry, Hospital, Instant Karma, Nurses, USA | Healthy | February 17, 2018 (I work at a detention center, and we are holding two big-name KKK leaders. Both were on TV after their arrest, since they have supposedly attacked one of their own. One of them has to be taken to the hospital for something and he has two male officers escorting him. They are seen in the ER by a tiny nurse.) Nurse: “Mister… [Inmate]?” Inmate: “Yeah?” Nurse: “I see one of your vaccines hasn’t been updated; did you want to take care of that?” Inmate: “Yeah, why not? The state’s paying for it.” (The nurse starts humming as she prepares the injection and then proceeds to clean a site on his leg.) Nurse: “Ready?” Inmate: “Go for it.” (The nurse suddenly stabs the needle into his leg, making both the officers cringe in sympathy as the man howls.) Nurse: “There we go! All done.” Inmate: “What kind of nurse are you?” Nurse: “A loving Christian woman who doesn’t judge one’s skin color.” (It was then that the inmate realized she had seen his face on the six o’clock news.) |
You Could Be Having A Ball
Doctor/Physician, Edinburgh, Hospital, Rude & Risque, Scotland, UK | Healthy | February 16, 2018 (I am about to have a vasectomy, under a local anaesthetic. The female surgeon and I having been making general chat, and she now approaches with the needle to inject me with the anaesthetic.) Me: “No jokes about ‘just a little prick’?” Surgeon: “I’m not allowed to… anymore.” |
Has A Sudden Lens Flare
Cape Town, Doctor/Physician, Ignoring & Inattentive, Medical Office, South Africa | Healthy | February 15, 2018 (I have just moved to a new area, and I decide to try out the local optometrist to get new contact lenses. I book the appointment, and the doctor asks me to come in with my current prescription and their respective casings. The day of the appointment, I wake up with the most horrible stomach pain, but I decide to suck it up and go to the appointment. The doctor is very cheerful and friendly. She asks if I’m currently wearing my lenses while she looks at my old prescription, and I tell her I am. A few minutes into my eye test, she sighs in wonder.) Doctor: “I don’t understand why your previous doctor has you on such a high prescription! You should be on a -1, at most!” (I’m quite taken aback, as my previous doctor in my hometown is one of the most acclaimed optometrists in the country, and I have been wearing -3 prescription lenses for over a year without any problems.) Me: “That’s really weird. I’m blind as a bat without these lenses. Even when I started wearing glasses, I was at least a -2.” Doctor: “You shouldn’t be able to read this chart at all with your eyes. I’m really not sure what’s going on here.” Me: *pause* “You are aware I’m still wearing my lenses, right?” Doctor: “…” Me: “…” (Turns out we were having such a nice chat that she’d completely forgotten to ask me to take them out, and I was so focused on my stomach pain that I hadn’t thought to ask. We had a good laugh about it, and the rest of the test went smoothly! She’s one of the nicest doctors I’ve been to in a long time, and she gave me a good chuckle on a bad Monday morning!) |
Seriously Off Her Meds
Bad Behavior, Bizarre, Massachusetts, Pharmacy, USA | Healthy | February 14, 2018 (I’m a pharmacist at a small, but very busy, chain store. I am working the register along with one of the technicians, due to us being understaffed.) Me: “Hi! How are you doing today, ma’am?” Customer: “Israel!” Me: “Pardon?” Customer: “Israel!” (At the pharmacy register, in order to pick up a prescription, we must be provided with the first and last name, along with the date of birth.) Me: “Is that your name, ma’am?” Customer: “Israel!” Me: *getting frustrated since there is a line behind her going up two aisles* “May I please have your name?” Customer: “Israel! My name is Israel!” Me: “Okay, thank you. May I please have your last name?” Customer: “Israel!” Me: “I’m sorry, ma’am. I misunderstood. I thought your first name was Israel. Could I please have your first name, then?” Customer: “Israel! My name is Israel! What do you not understand? This is ridiculous! I demand to speak to the pharmacist!” Me: *trying not to scream* “I’m very sorry, ma’am. I am the pharmacist. I just need your first and last name in order to view your profile. Could you please give me your first name followed by your last?” Customer: *she is now screaming at this point* “This is unbelievable!” (She looks at the people in line behind her for support. They all give me a sympathetic look, instead.) Customer: “From now on, I’m taking my business to [Other Retail Chain Pharmacy]!” Me: “I’m very sorry for the inconvenience, ma’am. Could I please have your first and last name, in order to speed up the transaction? We are quite busy today.” Customer: “Israel! My name is Israel! Israel [Last Name].” (Now that I finally have her first and last name in the system, I am prompted with the screen that asks for the date of birth.) Me: “Thank you, ma’am. And could I have your date of birth, please?” Customer: “What kind of pharmacy is this?! What will you want next? My social security number?!” Me: “That won’t be necessary, ma’am.” (By this time, the technician at the register next to me has gone through about three patients, while I am still with this lady.) Customer: “My birthday is [date]!” Me: “All right, thank you. It looks like we have three prescriptions ready for you. Let me go get those for you.” *I fetch the prescriptions and finish the transaction fairly normally* “All right, ma’am. Before you leave, do you have any questions about the medications?” Customer: “Yes. I would like to speak to the pharmacist!” Me: “I am the pharmacist, ma’am.” Customer: “No, you’re not!” Me: “I can assure you that I am, in fact, the pharmacist, ma’am.” Customer: *all disgruntled* “Well… Well… I want to speak to the pharmacist who was here yesterday! Where is he?!” Me: “That was our other pharmacist.” Customer: “Well, I demand to speak to him! Go fetch him!” Me: “I’m sorry, ma’am. He isn’t here today.” Customer: “This is ridiculous! I have nothing but trouble at this store!” Me: “I’m sorry that you feel that way, ma’am. I can answer any questions that you have about the medication, though.” Customer: “No! I’ll just die! No one can tell me how to take this medication! You don’t even have a pharmacist here! I’m going to die because of your incompetence!” Me: “Ma’am, as I’ve said, I am the pharmacist, and I would be more than happy to walk you through the proper way to take your medications. If you would like, you can come back tomorrow, too, and the other pharmacist will be here.” Customer: “Fine! Show me, since you think I’m too stupid to take my own medications!” Me: “I never said you were too stupid, ma’am.” Customer: “Yes, you did! But whatever. Show me!” (I instructed the lady on how to take her medications, and she finally walked away. Shortly after, the store manager came down to the pharmacy asking what happened. I asked what he was referring to and he stated that a lady was complaining that I “verbally and mentally abused her.”) |
Water Difference That Makes
Hospital, Liars/Scammers, Nurses, Teenagers, USA | Healthy | February 13, 2018 (I am a medical lab scientist. I receive a urine sample from the ER to test only for drugs, marked as belonging to a fifteen-year-old boy. The sample is quite clear — if someone is really hydrated that can happen — and it’s cold. We usually receive urine still warm, but sometimes it sits while they decide if they want to test it for anything. It’s negative for all the street drugs we test for. I release the results and then, a bit later, I get a call from a nurse.) Nurse: “Hi. I was just wondering about the drug screen for [Patient].” Me: “Sure. What do you need?” Nurse: “Well, it was cold when he gave it to me, and I just don’t quite believe it’s negative. Is there anything you could do to find out if it was water?” (I think for a moment and come up with a few fast things that I could do to find out whether or not it is water.) Me: “Yeah, let me grab it and try something.” (I do a really quick test and come up with something you would not expect for pee.) Me: “Either this kid is in very severe kidney failure, or this is water.” Nurse: “Thank you. I just graduated and passed my boards, so I’m still learning knowledge-versus-wisdom. Now I know when I feel like the urine feels cold, I should do something about it.” Me: “Did you want me to credit those charges?” Nurse: “Yes. We will be recollecting. And there will be a male care tech going in that bathroom with him.” Me: *laughing* “I would imagine.” (Once I get off the phone, I do some more chemical testing and learn that this sample has none of the chemical properties of urine. This kid didn’t even think to try the one where you dilute your actual pee with water — which we can also catch — or even to just put WARM water in the cup. It was straight, cold, tap-water. I walk across the lab to tell this one to the other lab scientists, one of whom is known for being extremely cynical about everything.) Cynical Coworker: “That nurse is way too nice. I’d catheterize the kid. Teach him to never do that one again.” (We then started a prizeless pool, guessing what the kid was on that he was trying to hide. In the end, the actual urine arrived, and it was positive for marijuana.) |
The Bank Wants Your Money And Your Blood
Bank, Emergency Services, Health & Body, Non-Dialogue, USA, West Virginia | Healthy | February 12, 2018 I work as a bank teller. One morning a customer walks in, and I notice that he is both extremely pale and has a rasping cough as he approaches me to make a withdrawal. Just as I grab his money and begin to count it out in front of him, to my horror, he suddenly turns his head to the side, coughs violently, then begins to vomit a large amount of blood. My coworkers quickly move to get the customer a chair to sit in as I call 911. During the commotion, an apparent acquaintance of the customer rushes in and helps hold him upright to walk him to the chair Less than five minutes later, an ambulance arrives and takes the customer away. We learn the acquaintance is actually the customer’s neighbor. The customer had been feeling very unwell the last few days, and the neighbor had agreed to take him to the hospital, but he wanted to stop at the bank first to make sure he had some cash on hand if necessary. We block off my teller station and call in professional cleaners to come and clean up the potentially hazardous blood. A few months later, I am working at my usual station again when I call for the next in line and suddenly realize I am talking to this same customer. I almost don’t recognize him, as he has much more color to his face and appears to have put on some necessary weight. He also recognizes me, and apologizes again for the incident. It turns out the pain he was experiencing was from his appendix, which actually ruptured as I was waiting on him. He says that the doctors have now given him a clean bill of health, and then he leaves, after jumping up and down a few times to show how much his health has improved. |
Your Mouth Is A Pest
Dentist, New York, Silly, USA | Healthy | February 11, 2018 (I’m getting my teeth cleaned when the dental hygienist strikes up the following conversation.) Hygienist: “How was your weekend?” Me: “Well, I had to work Saturday, but Sunday was okay.” Hygienist: “Do you always work six-day weeks?” Me: “I work every other Saturday.” Hygienist: “What do you do?” Me: “I do pest control.” Hygienist: “Ooh! I couldn’t do that! That’s just… yuck!” Me: “Well, you stick your fingers in other people’s’ mouths all day.” Hygienist: “Oh. Yeah.” |
You’re Not In Good Shape
Bizarre, Dentist, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, USA | Healthy | February 10, 2018 (I am at the dentist’s for a general cleaning, with a hygienist I haven’t been with before. Things are going normally until this happens.) Hygienist: “Oh, wow. Wow. This is really unusual.” Me: “Is… Is something wrong?” Hygienist: “Let me get the dentist. I have never seen this before.” (By now, I am panicking in the chair a little. The hygienist leaves, then comes back with the dentist, and they both look into my mouth.) Hygienist: “Look at her uvula. Isn’t it a weird shape? I’ve never seen that before.” Dentist: “It just has a bit of an indent in the middle.” Hygienist: “Her uvula looks so weird. I’ve never seen that before.” Dentist: “All right, [Hygienist], you can go now. I can finish up this cleaning.” (The dentist told me it was nothing to worry about and barely noticeable, then finished the cleaning without issue. No dentist or hygienist had ever told me I had a weird uvula before.) |
Symptoms of omicron may be different than those of previous strains. But it's still Covid, and it can still cause severe disease.
Image: Health workers administer COVID-19 tests in a free public testing site in Washington A health worker administers a Covid-19 test in a free public testing site at Farragut Square in Washington on Dec. 23, 2021.Evelyn Hockstein / Reuters Dec. 21, 2021, 5:23 PM EST / Updated Jan. 10, 2022, 8:33 AM EST By Erika Edwards and Berkeley Lovelace Jr. The dizzying speed of omicron's spread has left Americans questioning much of what they know about Covid-19. Though much remains uncertain, experts are beginning to understand more about the variant and how it affects people who are vaccinated, unvaccinated or who have had a Covid infection. For example, people who are exposed to omicron appear to get sick faster and may have symptoms that are different than those of other variants. Diagnosed with Covid? Here's what to do next. DEC. 21, 202101:34 What are the symptoms of omicron? Early evidence suggests that for most people, at least those who are up to date on their Covid vaccines, omicron appears to cause milder illness that can resemble the common cold, another form of the coronavirus. For full coverage of the coronavirus pandemic Dr. Katherine Poehling, an infectious disease specialist and vaccinologist at Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist in North Carolina, said that these appear to be the prominent symptoms from omicron: Cough Fatigue or tiredness Congestion and runny nose Sore throat Headache “We’re seeing a lot of sore throat, runny nose, fatigue and mild headache,” said Dr. Rahul Sharma, the emergency physician-in-chief at the NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center. Unlike in previous variants, the loss of taste and smell seems to be uncommon, doctors say. But Poehling, who is also a member of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, which helps guide the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s decisions on vaccines, and others stress that those symptoms are based on early reports of omicron cases, not scientific studies. "Anecdotal reports represent just one person," said Dr. Bruce Y. Lee, a professor of health policy and management at the City University of New York School of Public Health. "We have to take them with a grain of salt." What's more, they may only reflect certain segments of the population: young and otherwise healthy, as well as those who are fully vaccinated. "It is clear that if you're vaccinated, particularly if you’ve had a booster, omicron tends to produce milder infections," said Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease expert at the Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tennessee. "What we haven't seen yet is a substantial body of information about what omicron will do in unvaccinated people," he added. Indeed, at least one person who was not vaccinated is reported to have died of omicron. Officials in Houston announced in December that the unvaccinated man in his 50s succumbed to the virus. For people who have been vaccinated, but have not had a booster, typical symptoms include more coughing, more fever and more fatigue than those who have received an extra dose, said Dr. Craig Spencer, director of global health in emergency medicine at New York-Presbyterian/Columbia University Medical Center. Does omicron cause less severe illness? There is also emerging evidence that omicron tends not to burrow deep into the lungs as much as previous variants. A study, which was posted online by the University of Hong Kong and not yet peer-reviewed, found that while omicron is less severe in the lungs, it can replicate faster higher up in the respiratory tract. In this way, omicron may act more like bronchitis than pneumonia, said Dr. Hugh Cassiere, director of critical care services for Sandra Atlas Bass Heart Hospital at the North Shore University Hospital, on Long Island, New York. "Usually patients with acute bronchitis tend not to be short of breath. They tend to cough and produce sputum," he said. "Patients with pneumonia tend to be short of breath and feel more fatigued than bronchitis in general." A small study from the CDC found that people who had Covid and are later reinfected with omicron may experience fewer symptoms than they did during their initial bout with the virus. Still, it's virtually impossible for people to rely on symptoms to self-diagnose an illness. In addition to omicron, the delta variant continues to circulate, along with increasing cases of the flu. For these reasons, doctors urge people who have any cold symptoms or flulike symptoms to get tested. How quickly do omicron symptoms start? According to early data, the time it takes for an infected person to develop symptoms after an exposure may be shorter for omicron than for previous variants — from a full week down to as little as three days or less. While much more research is needed, it makes scientific sense that a highly contagious virus like the omicron variant would have a shorter incubation period. Its goal, after all, is to infect as many people as possible, as quickly as possible. Recommended CORONAVIRUS Omicron-specific vaccines could be ready by March. Will we need them? CORONAVIRUS Covid booster shots are rolling out. What does that mean for you? "That's why the spread is occurring at a much faster pace," said Dr. Anita Gupta, an anesthesiologist and critical care physician at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. She added that it's possible the incubation period could be shorter or longer depending on a number of variables, including age, underlying health problems and vaccination status. "There is no hard and fast rule here." How long do symptoms last? Symptoms appear to last three to five days for most patients, said Sharma. "A lot of these patients are not having the symptoms for the 10 to 12 days that I saw when there were no vaccinations," he said. He noted that, in general, symptoms appear to be shorter and milder in the vaccinated compared to the unvaccinated. For the vaccinated, emergency room or hospital stays are also typically shorter. "What I can tell you is that patients that are unvaccinated are definitely our sicker patients," Sharma said. "Those are the patients that are more likely to go to the ICU. Those are the patients that are more likely to be admitted to the hospital." Dr. Ryan Maves, an infectious diseases and critical care physician at the Wake Forest School of Medicine in North Carolina, agreed, saying the overwhelming majority of Covid patients he sees in the ICU are unvaccinated. When should I get tested for Covid? Given the potential for a shorter incubation period, Vanderbilt's Schaffner advised that anyone who has been in contact with an infected individual get tested about 72 hours following the exposure. "If you've been exposed and now you're asking yourself, 'When should I get tested?' I think you would best wait at least three days to see if you've turned positive," he said. For the millions of people without any known Covid exposure, but who are getting together with friends and family, Schaffner said, it would be prudent to get a rapid test the day of the gathering. What you need to know about rapid antigen tests and the omicron variant DEC. 31, 202103:30 Dr. Anthony Fauci, chief medical adviser to President Joe Biden, agreed. "By all means, go the extra step, go the extra mile to get tested" to alleviate any concerns about gatherings, he said on NBC's "TODAY" show last month. Could omicron lead to long Covid? Though much remains unknown about omicron, experts say the variant could lead to long Covid, even with a mild case. Patients with long-term symptoms can experience crushing fatigue, irregular heart rhythms and other issues months after their initial Covid infection. This occurred during the first wave of the pandemic, and has continued to lead to long Covid issues through the delta wave. "We should assume that this variant can do the same thing that previous variants have until proven otherwise," Lee, of CUNY, said. Previous research, however, suggests that vaccination can greatly reduce the risk for long Covid. How worried should I be about omicron? The omicron variant accounts for about 95 percent of U.S. samples and the delta variant makes up the rest, according to recent CDC projections. Since omicron has hit almost every area of the U.S., “the question is, how much disease will it cause?” said Dr. Michael Saag, an infectious disease expert and associate dean for global health at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. Experts continue to urge people to get vaccinated and get a booster shot to reduce the risk of severe illness. Follow NBC HEALTH on Twitter & Facebook. |
Not Applying Any Military Intelligence
Doctor/Physician, Jerk, Medical Office, Military, USA | Healthy | February 9, 2018 (My military career has me outdoors most of the time, usually in very hot and sunny places. Several years later, I develop a rough patch on my face and am referred to a specialist who listens to my history and diagnoses a precancerous lesion. He recommends that it be removed right away, during this visit, and I agree. He leaves the exam room, and I overhear him giving instructions to the nurse.) Nurse: “So, what kind of local do you want for her?” Doctor: “We can do this without it.” Nurse: “Without anesthetic? Are you sure?” Doctor: “She was a Marine. She can take it.” (Gee, thanks, Doc!) |
A (Gentle) Giant Difference Between Them
Children, Medical Office, Missouri, Nurses, Siblings, St Louis, USA | Healthy | February 8, 2018 (My younger sister and brother are due to get their polio vaccinations. Despite being two years younger than her, my brother is several inches taller and 40 pounds heavier than our sister. But, as she’s older, she gets to go first.) Mom: “She has a fear of shots, just to warn you.” Nurse: “Oh, that’s no problem. I know nobody likes shots.” *turns to my sister* “Now, I’m just going to clean the skin on your leg for the shot.” Sister: “It’s cold!” Nurse: “Yes, it is. But it will warm up again in a minute. Now, you’re just going to feel a pinch…” (My sister sees the needle and flips out, screaming, crying, and flailing. She even manages to kick the nurse in the face before my mom is able to hold her down.) Nurse: *finally gets the shot in* “I’m sorry, sweetie. I know that hurt. I promise, if you relax, shots don’t hurt so much. Would you like a sucker?” (My sister won’t stop crying; she’s in full panic mode.) Me: “Mom, if you want, I can take [Brother] to another room and help him get his shot.” Mom: *still trying to control my sister* “Please, do.” (I gather up my hefty little brother and follow the nurse to the exam room next door.) Nurse: “Go ahead and put him on the table, please.” Me: “Sure thing. Here you go, buddy! You doing okay?” Brother: “Yeah.” *with the implication of “why shouldn’t I be?”* (The nurse looks him over, and then leaves without a word. A few minutes later, she comes back in with not one, but three orderlies, all strong-looking men, to hold my brother down. One orderly stands behind him and holds his arms around my brother’s arms and torso, while the other two each secure a leg.) Me: “He’s not going to go crazy like [Sister] did. He’s our gentle giant, I swear.” (The nurse ignores me, cleans his leg, and then counts to three for his shot.) Brother: *frowns* “Ow.” Nurse: *stunned* “Ow?” Brother: “That hurt. Can I have a sucker, now?” (He didn’t so much as twitch, and he accepted his treat with a smile. [Sister] was still crying a river, and didn’t stop until we were halfway home.) |
Making You Go Psycho
England, Hospital, Ignoring & Inattentive, London, UK | Healthy | February 7, 2018 (I have a psychologist assigned to me at my hospital, where I am a frequent visitor and inpatient due to a chronic illness. She’s not very good at her job, at least when it comes to me; every conversation I have with her ends in frustration for me, and a completely warped assessment of my emotional and mental state for my doctor. Eventually, I get tired of it, and ask not to see her anymore, since I think she misunderstands and/or misrepresents my mental health. This is the last conversation I have with her, during a week-long hospitalisation.) Me: “I’m sorry, but considering that I asked you not to come today, and you came anyway, and once again you haven’t really understood what I’m saying, I’m going to ask the doctors not to send you to me anymore. Psychologist: “Oh… Well, I still have one more visit planned for the day before you leave.” Me: “Please cancel it. I appreciate your help, but I just become too frustrated.” Psychologist: “Well… if you change your mind, please let– Me: “I’m not going to change my mind.” Psychologist: “Well, if you do, just tell one of the day nurses and—” Me: “I’m sorry, but I’m not going to.” Psychologist: “Well, just in case you do—” Me: “I’m not.” Psychologist: “I know you think that now, but I’ll be here if you want to chat.” Me: “I promise you, I won’t.” Psychologist: “Well, if you change your mind…” (Then, she just stood there smiling. I stared at her in disbelief until she left.) |
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