Thanks! One of the things I hate doing is going to my doctors office and sitting in that "little room" waiting, not knowing who was in the room before me. Yikes! I know they don't sanitize those rooms after each patient. Also, in hospitals, they use those on-the-wall hand sanitizer stations when they cone into your room but what about their shoes etc tracking in God knows what, lol. Oh well....👍👍
Hospital floors are fucking scary. I never let anything that has touched the floor touch anything that I or a nurse is going to interact with without being disinfected. It pisses me off that so many nurses and nurse assistants treat the hospital floor like it's the floor of their living room and not a cesspool that arbors everything every patients in the ward has.
What is the bacterial infection that I got from surgery that I can’t spell, but it’s like pseudomonas areugonesa? I was so sick and in excruciating pain for 7 weeks post-op, and no one would believe me until my incision festered and they drained it and did a culture. They then called me and said to go to my doctor ASAP. The surgeon ignored this problem.
Is there any legal action anyone can take against the hospital? I have had a slew of medical blunders done to me, and this is only one. I almost died in the table in this operation, and I’m dead broke because of all my medical bills. 😢
I think it's interesting that for all we care, disbiosis might simply mean 'not enough bacteria'. Forget about all the complexity of what exactly they are doing, the species, the whole gut biome research never getting anywhere, etc. It might just be do you or don't you that matters, and antibiotics getting you to the wrong end of that. On staph infections, they are only superbugs insofar they are antibiotic resistant. The question is why do they occur so often in hospital settings and why does the immune system not deal with it. Probably much more likely in my mind the hospital is directly responsible for either drugging and lowering immune system, or getting the bacteria directly into the blood bypassing the normal defenses.
Thanks! One of the things I hate doing is going to my doctors office and sitting in that "little room" waiting, not knowing who was in the room before me. Yikes! I know they don't sanitize those rooms after each patient. Also, in hospitals, they use those on-the-wall hand sanitizer stations when they cone into your room but what about their shoes etc tracking in God knows what, lol. Oh well....👍👍
Hospital floors are fucking scary. I never let anything that has touched the floor touch anything that I or a nurse is going to interact with without being disinfected. It pisses me off that so many nurses and nurse assistants treat the hospital floor like it's the floor of their living room and not a cesspool that arbors everything every patients in the ward has.
What is the bacterial infection that I got from surgery that I can’t spell, but it’s like pseudomonas areugonesa? I was so sick and in excruciating pain for 7 weeks post-op, and no one would believe me until my incision festered and they drained it and did a culture. They then called me and said to go to my doctor ASAP. The surgeon ignored this problem.
That is right, it's Pseudomonas
Thank you very useful for my exam 🥰
Is there any legal action anyone can take against the hospital? I have had a slew of medical blunders done to me, and this is only one. I almost died in the table in this operation, and I’m dead broke because of all my medical bills. 😢
I think it's interesting that for all we care, disbiosis might simply mean 'not enough bacteria'. Forget about all the complexity of what exactly they are doing, the species, the whole gut biome research never getting anywhere, etc. It might just be do you or don't you that matters, and antibiotics getting you to the wrong end of that.
On staph infections, they are only superbugs insofar they are antibiotic resistant. The question is why do they occur so often in hospital settings and why does the immune system not deal with it. Probably much more likely in my mind the hospital is directly responsible for either drugging and lowering immune system, or getting the bacteria directly into the blood bypassing the normal defenses.
If I could study my nursing modules like this I would have a better chance remembering the information during my tests/exams
Very informative.
thanks 🙏
thank u
My daughter just died from Serratia…I know it came from the bath she just had…then on skin and then she had a urine cathader
What about Serratia!
thank uuuuuuuuuuuuu