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by vo2maxer
1453 days ago
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I’m sorry to hear this and of the incredible suffering your mother and her loved ones have had to go through. I am quite aware that there is a significant number of physicians who are careless, apathetic, rushed, eager to get home after long working hours. Many are incompetent but I would venture to say that a larger number is plenty competent. It’s just gotten to a point in their career where they are “burnt out” for whatever reason and they are aiming for speed. It becomes another consumer transaction and as the patient load increases during the night, the clinician just tries to simplify things as much as possible, taking shortcuts, working under weighty incorrect initial diagnoses. Once you’re seen by that first doctor who makes what should be a tentative diagnosis, that opinion carries a great deal of psychological force. Of course this depends on the docs seniority. In your mom’s specific case, it is inconceivable to me that any trained physician would see her post-surgical history and subsequent development of an abdominal mass and not think immediately of a hernia and possible strangulation as it grew. A first-year medical student can palpate the abdomen and readily tell there is herniation through the abdominal wall. Is it reducible or not? An abdominal CT scan should be reflexive. It’s even more maddening when more than one physician misses the obvious or at least the way it sounds to me given the information you’ve provided. Physician burnout is a real alarming phenomenon with emergency room doctors having one of the highest rates. This was already an issue pre-COVID-19. I can’t help but worry about how worse it may get. |
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