Posted on 06/24/2015 1:39:32 PM PDT by canuck_conservative
What I don’t get is why the patient thought he had to record everything. All Patient Instructions are printed up anyway. I was just in the hospital for a few days last week, and upon my discharge, I received Discharge Orders from the attending physician. As I always do. All instructions would have been written down, printed, stapled and presented to the patient. Most times, the Discharge Orders are given as soon as a decision to discharge has been reached. This allows your nurse to go over the report with you. Some people are not fully literate, or may remain a little unfocused, so a good hospital prepares for this.
Good thought - medical folk want to record everything about us? OK, fine, we record everything about them. Audio record every procedure, photograph every office and procedural room. Take everyone’s names. Do it every visit. Works for me.
Good thing he did record it. Show these arrogant aholes (no pun intended) that their little laugh was over the line.
Don’t let them drug you for a colonoscopy, of course they don’t like that.
Hmm...did this patient set this up by being a complete jerk, with the recorder ready, so he could sue? If so, the doctors certainly took the bait.
Hey they are just following Obamacare guidelines for professionalism.
“Dont let them drug you for a colonoscopy”
____________________________
You want to be awake during a colonoscopy?
Do you also fantasize about prostate exams? LOL
When you drive yourself, you can’t be drugged.
Needing to be knocked out for everything seems a little lame.
Maj. Tiffany Ingham, an anesthesiologist from the 920th Aeromedical Staging Squadron at Patrick Air Force Base, Fla.,
http://www.123aw.ang.af.mil/photos/mediagallery.asp?galleryID=8052&?id=-1&page=1&count=24
You won’t, either. My oncologist refused to be drugged because he wanted to play golf later that day.
He said that it was agonizing.
That reply seems off-base.
A small but real fraction of doctors behave this way, and getting it on record, or being awake, is not a silly choice.
What is off base about the desirability of being knocked out for a colonoscopy? Have you had one?
Good little government employees!
The lab I went to would not accept you if you drove yourself, as being knocked out was mandatory.
What are Canadian laws on wiretapping? Seems like the patient would be in more trouble than the doc.
Moot point. This was in Virginia, not Canada.
Actually, this happened in Virginia, and since the recording was central to the case -
“...The doctors attorneys argued that the recording was illegal, but the mans attorneys noted that Virginia is a one-party consent state, meaning only one person involved in a conversation need agree to the recording.”
Hmm...did this patient set this up by being a complete jerk, with the recorder ready, so he could sue? If so, the doctors certainly took the bait.
The one and only time I had a colonscopy I asked for them to videotape what they saw and they didn’t say no. Afterwards they said the found nothing wrong and the camera didn’t work.
I hate having to 110% trust a once in five year doctor and staff.
Six months later someone in thst office started billing me for a $50 copay fee for a procedure that was accepted from the get go as being preventive and 100% covered.
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