If she has his DNA from the jizz on her gown, this should be pretty cut & dry based on science, right? Either she’s lying (or was hallucinating), or he is.
If she has his DNA from the jizz on her gown, this should be pretty cut & dry based on science, right? Either she’s lying (or was hallucinating), or he is.
Wait, what? I’ve had to go to the ER twice just recently, and both times, the nurses pulled a curtain across the entrance to the exam room when I was changing into and out of hospital gowns. The doctors and nurses were consistently careful to make sure that those curtains were closed and that as much of me was covered…
I appreciate very much that you say you would want more information before coming to a conclusion, because this discussion (though understandable) is making me really uncomfortable.
I’ve been in the ER at Mt. Sinai and there are lot of nooks where a patient can get lost or forgotten. I went in for stomach pains and once admitted, was left in a deserted corridor for hours. It took me literally crawling out to the nurses’ station and vomiting blood on the floor for a doctor to see me.
As I noted above, I was given morphine in the early stages of a very painful, prolonged labor, and it rendered me unconscious immediately. I stopped breathing. From one injection. I am not a small woman.
·I’m a ER doc
Well, you believe that it was the first accusation, but you don’t really know, do you? Many times, other physicians at the hospital are not privy to these things. Also, you (and your Mom, whom I’m sure is a fine person and such) may not have any knowledge of this person’s out-of-state record. The hospital could have…
Uh, no, he certainly is not. This must be a confirmatory story that the hospital was waiting to get in order to yank his privileges. Nobody loses their privileges on their first accusation. Nobody. There’s a thin white line, don’t you know?
I get where you’re going with this but if the man wanted to assault her, then it’s doubtful he’d have a nurse give her more meds. He’d do it himself to cover his tracks. Also, from what I understand, she believes it was morphine but that doesn’t mean that is what he gave her. I will agree that it does sound a little…
Let me tell you, as a struggling non-psychopathic boss who now deals with other bosses: being “successful” is nearly impossible without psychopathic tendencies. Being cold, duplicitous, manipulative, unfeeling, competitive, and false, all while keeping a perfectly curated and manicured exterior, are exactly what it…
Anecdotal, of course, but I’ve been in the emergency room several times, and each time there have been long periods of upwards of over half an hour (one time over 75 minutes — I got pissed and started clocking them) when I have been left on my own without any staff checking on me. The timing issue is a non-starter for…
A nurse came into the room and was apparently surprised that the woman was blacked out. So it seems the nurse didn’t expect that reaction from the dosage she’d given. According to the NY Daily News article, the patient was upset and left without making a formal complaint against the doctor, so it’s possible no tests…
A couple of possibilities, all of which are pure speculation:
Maybe the drug he gave her wasn’t morphine.
Also she’s only guessing it was more morphine.
The woman claims he gave her a second dose after she informed him she’d already been given morphine. This is from the New York Daily News article:
Psychopaths do surprisingly well as doctors. Seriously. Bad people don't wear "black hats."
because man.
Well, I’ve done vast quantities of heroin and can attest to the incapacitative qualities of injectable opiates! Woo doggy! I might as well have been a box of kleenex.
“The doctor has published a book called ‘Hippocrates Shadow: Secrets from the House of Medicine,’ in which he lampoons what he sees as a growing disconnect between doctors and their patients.