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‎01-08-2014 04:08 PM
I did not want to post on that thread because I did not want to take a chance of that topic being hijacked.
My girls have lost all of their aunts now. My beloved sister died two and a half years ago in a hospice where she was well cared for.
My girls are this minute in Delaware at the memorial of one of their aunts on their father's side, who had been in/out of the ICU at the hospital and died on January 2, just a few days after coming home from the hospital. Her sister, my girls' other aunt on their father's side, died several years ago, four days after coming home from heart valve surgery which was deemed successful. She had contracted MRSA and no one had noticed.
I also had two very close calls with two of my children, one in a dentist's chair (she took inordinately long to come out of the "twilight sleep" he had put her in). As I waited and waited with my other children, who had procedures also, but were fine, I was a wreck about my little daughter who was still unconscious. He kept reassuring me that "some children just take a little longer," and I was thinking "he gave her too much." She finally did wake up, but I never went back to that dentist again. I told my then husband about it, but he didn't want to take any action. She was alive and it was over and done with, was his position.
Many years later, my 18 year old daughter had to have a tonsillectomy. I was in the waiting room when the doctor came and told me, "she made quite a fuss, but she's in recovery" and someone would come for me soon and take me to her. And he promptly left the hospital. It was over an hour later that I finally stopped an orderly in the hallway and asked where my daughter was. He took me to her bed which was in a hallway, and where she was still bleeding from the surgery, and there was not a soul around, no one. She stared at me with frightened eyes, but she could not speak. I had to keep my hand over my mouth to stop myself from screaming.
We were taken upstairs to a room where they made me wait while they cleaned her up. When I finally got to her, she was crying and furious at the same time. She told me the anesthesia had worn off and she was trying to fend off the doctor because he was intent on pulling her tonsils out of her throat while she was trying to tell him that she could feel everything. He called that "a fuss" when he spoke to me.
They decided to keep her overnight and I planned to stay with her, but she told me to go home, as "what good are you anyway?" I was filled with guilt and grief over what had happened to her. I should have taken action much sooner than I did. They committed malpractice, but I was culpable too, I trusted she was being taken care of, but she wasn't.
I typed out the entire incident and took it to an attorney whom I knew, in fact, used to work for. He said as long as she was fine now, had no permanent injuries, there would be no way her word would be taken over the doctor and the staff and I should try to forget it and not take any action. What I heard was "she's not dead." I guess her emotional and mental anguish did not count, but I did not pursue it further. I don't think she has ever forgiven me for that incident and I don't blame her.
I was lucky, I did not lose my children. As for my girls' aunts, I suppose it was/is up to their families if they had/have any doubts about why their mothers came home from the hospital and died just days later.
The moral of the story is not to assume that these professionals know what they're doing or are paying attention. If one has any doubts, don't worry about being thought of as "uncooperative." Look after your loved one, no matter what.
‎01-08-2014 04:28 PM
I am sorry you experienced that. It had to be very frightening.
In is so wrong.
I get your point that it can and does happen....why don't people get that and blame families/patients? Your examples show that.
Wait till it happens to them.
‎01-08-2014 04:31 PM
Thank God your daughter is ok, shame on the hospital and doctor. I hope the naysayers on the other thread read about your ordeal. 
‎01-08-2014 04:32 PM
On 1/8/2014 Melania2 said:I am sorry you experienced that. It had to be very frightening.
In is so wrong.
I get your point that it can and does happen....why don't people get that and blame families/patients? Your examples show that.
Wait till it happens to them.
You are so correct, cover ups happen every day. 
‎01-08-2014 04:32 PM
Ford, what happened to your family was so scary, but I'm happy that it turned out okay for you.
‎01-08-2014 04:33 PM
OMG, ford, what a nightmare.
The more stories I hear about doctors and hospitals, the more I want to steer clear of both.
‎01-08-2014 04:34 PM
On 1/8/2014 Melania2 said:I am sorry you experienced that. It had to be very frightening.
In is so wrong.
I get your point that it can and does happen....why don't people get that and blame families/patients? Your examples show that.
Wait till it happens to them.
One of my daughters has worked in hospitals for 16 years. She is not a medical professional, she is in the IT Department which runs their computer systems. But she hears a lot . . . news travels fast in these hospitals, especially bad news. There is a "closed mouth" policy, but they do talk among themselves. There are many incidents with unaware patients that never get reported to the families, let's just say that.
It is being said more and more, a hospital is not necessarily the safest place to be anymore. One has to be one's own advocate, if possible . . . or the family must know they have to be alert to what is going on at all times.
‎01-08-2014 04:34 PM
I agree with both of you. I was thinking of both of your words and it reminded me of something lately, which I just think is sad and tragic. I won't say,I haven't been on in awhile and I don't want to have your thread deleted. But, I do agree. It is almost like you have to have more knowledge at times than the professionals.
‎01-08-2014 04:34 PM
What about people who have no one looking out for them?
Very scary.
‎01-08-2014 04:35 PM
I don't think anyone is denying mistakes happen in hospitals. And most have said if the hospital was at fault, they need to be held responsible.
However, the fact remains that only one side of this story has been told. That's the point many are trying to make.
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