If you light up your watch (or phone!) during a play or movie at the theater, you're scum.
If you light up your watch (or phone!) during a play or movie at the theater, you're scum.
You guys see any Axe body spray on this list? No? Well then, STOP FUCKING BATHING YOURSELF IN IT BEFORE YOU LEAVE THE HOUSE!
I'm quite certain they were disposable just like how administrators treat nurses. I can't even begin to believe that even this useless hospital could have possibly reused ppe. That is usually a no brainier.
I have such feelings for her. Very strong. Much beautiful. Wow.
UMC
what's to stop this woman from breaking all of our arms and enslaving all of us I'm a little concerned
It's Texas. I'm surprised there's anyone left down there that can READ an article, let alone comment on it. Outside of Austin anyway.
Why won't she be able to work as a nurse? I haven't heard this before. Seems like she would be lauded as a super-nurse.
It's her fault why? Because she chose to work in health care and help save people's lives on a daily basis?
Not to mention the emotional fallout of the stigma ebola carries. No doubt she's experienced some shunning by those uninformed about the recovery and contagiousness of the disease.
I think that Ebola protocols were pretty firmly established before Duncan ever set foot in the hospital. They were definitely in a difficult position, but they can't plead ignorance if they were allowing nurses to treat him without proper equipment or training, even if those things were hard to come by.
Do yourselves a favor and don't read the comments on the Dallas Morning News article. People are calling her all sorts of horrible things on the grounds that she should just be grateful to be alive and that it's her own fault for getting ebola (ebola!) - never mind that it was the hospital's incompetence that…
It sounds like the problem wasn't that the press pried for her name but that the hospital that treated her released information about her and a video of her and portrayed it as being something she agreed to. We have medical privacy laws, and it sounds like the hospital violated them.
She should have been protected by patient privacy laws. I'm not sure why she wasn't.
The hospital was grossly negligent and irresponsible, and Ms Pham has been through a living hell as a result. I hope that she is awarded millions, and I hope that she fully recovers from this nightmare.
On Gawker, it says that the video of her in the hospital was recorded without her consent and that they (the hospital) released her information despite her requests not to. :o(
If the hospital had failed to train the staff, and did not provide proper Personal Protective Equipment, I would be angry too. Because, not only would the staff have been in danger, but any other patients those staff would've been in direct contact with would've been at risk. Jesus H. Christ.
You know... I hope she wins.
Well, yeah, I think that's to be expected. It sounds like there's some good evidence her employer was negligent, and she had to deal with weeks of hospitalization, the emotional distress that comes with knowing you might die, and what sound like long term consequences to her health.