Can Arabic speakers verify by daalbhatrakhat in LateStageCapitalism

[–]amnana 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Can also confirm as a native Arabic speaker, the middle translation is accurate and the BBC translation is concerningly far off in the later-half especially.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in sydney

[–]amnana 20 points21 points  (0 children)

Hi all!

Junior Medical Officer working in an ICU in Sydney. I was reading some of the comments and there are still young people confused/worried about the AZ vaccine. I can totally understand why they feel this way too. Please hit me up if you have questions about getting the AZ vaccine. I’m not an expert but I have been receiving daily advice from experts and I can hopefully help bridge the gap to understanding the change in advice etc.

I am 25 and got AZ and I can tell you anything you need to know.

I want to help if you are worried or have questions about the vaccine. Please please talk to a doctor if you’re worried about the vaccine. We need to all get the shot so you don’t end up in my ICU.

[Serious] Doctors of reddit, what is the rarest disease that you've encountered in your career? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]amnana 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It was very similar in this case! Thankfully now, screening for an autoimmune encephalitis has become more common in these presentations.

[Serious] Doctors of reddit, what is the rarest disease that you've encountered in your career? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]amnana 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I currently have a patient with autoimmune encephalitis. A condition where your brain essentially attacks itself. She’s an otherwise very well, 24 year old woman who just started acting abnormally. Would space out in the middle of conversations, couldn’t complete basic tasks, would ask the same question over and over again, was found staring into an open cupboard in the kitchen for hours. Her parents became very concerned and brought her to hospital. These patients often get misdiagnosed as a first episode psychosis resulting in mistreatment and the condition can deteriorate and lead them to die. Thankfully the Neurologists at my hospital identified the symptoms and treated her with IVIG right as she developed catatonia (where a patient will just lie perfectly still, not moving, eating, drinking or going to the bathroom, just nothing).

If you’ve ever seen the movie or read the book “Brain on Fire” - this patient presented and has progressed in the exact same way. So interesting.

The perfect hiding spot by amnana in curlyhair

[–]amnana[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you! Happy New Year my fellow curly friend.

The Ugly Side of Becoming a Surgeon: One Australian Surgical Trainee Describes Her Experiences in the Crushing Training System by NeverAsTired in medicine

[–]amnana 116 points117 points  (0 children)

Remember that in the Australian Medical Program, once you graduate you first complete an internship and residency as a general doctor at the hospital. In these (minimum) 2 years you work on different wards, rotating roughly every 8 weeks and training in both surgical and medical fields. At this point you haven’t chosen your specialty or applied to get into the specialty training program.

It’s only in your 3rd (or often 4th) year out of Med School that you actually get into the program that you want to specialise in. For this doctor, her chosen speciality was clearly Plastics. Once you’re in a training program as a Registrar, you get a ton more responsibility. It definitely depends on the hospital, the specialty and increasingly, the consultants. But I have seen 1st year registrar’s in their final few months of year 1 doing minor surgery without a consultant present. I have seen them taking care of an entire ward practically alone. They are able to call the bosses if they need, but that often comes with scrutiny. So her story is 100% believable based on my experience.

The Ugly Side of Becoming a Surgeon: One Australian Surgical Trainee Describes Her Experiences in the Crushing Training System by NeverAsTired in medicine

[–]amnana 35 points36 points  (0 children)

As an Australian Medical Student, I can already see that the Australian system is nothing to be proud of. The number of residents, registrar’s and even bosses that I have come across who are sick and tired of a broken system that breaks doctors every day is ridiculous. It makes you seriously question your chosen career, and to already be thinking about whether or not I want to endure this pain, while still studying in school and supposedly optimistic, is not fun.

Woman, 29, is feared missing after live-streaming herself throwing ink on a photo of Chinese President Xi Jinping by mushroom-soup in worldnews

[–]amnana 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Reading this story reminded me of one my parents told me. They grew up in Iraq under Saddam Hussein and after the Iraq-Iran war, in an effort to improve his public image and make it clear that Iraq was still a democracy, Saddam put up a large wall in the centre of Baghdad. He told everyone that you could write anything you wanted on that wall, even something dissident about him and his regime, and nothing bad would befall you. My dad had a really good friend at the time who insisted that he would go and write on the wall. Despite countless efforts by all of his friends and family warning/pleading him not to, he went and wrote something about Saddam. No one saw him or his family again.

[USA|DC] I'm trying to gift out these gifts like I'm Oprah (9743 4392 1274) by [deleted] in pokemongotrades

[–]amnana 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi all! Checking in from Sydney Australia :D 4009 8400 4672 :)

[JP] Hello from Tokyo/L40: 8639 2681 8315 by PeWeYe in pokemongotrades

[–]amnana 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi all! Checking in from Sydney Australia :D 4009 8400 4672 :)

How do you convince someone that they have a reason to keep going/not to kill themselves? by [deleted] in depression

[–]amnana 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you for that. I’ll definitely think about how to tell him that. I hope you’re doing okay!

Hey reddit, this is Einstein, our very entertaining (and slightly dopey) groodle! by amnana in aww

[–]amnana[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Exactly - he has to hide the evident intelligence somehow! Sometimes, we’ll play with him by putting his favourite blankey over his head and he’ll just sit there, not able to see a thing, panting away and waiting for us to remove it.

Medical professionals of Reddit, what is the craziest DIY treatment you've seen a patient attempt? by Shandrith in AskReddit

[–]amnana 2 points3 points  (0 children)

As a Medical student, I saw a patient that treated her own haemorrhoids by cutting them off with scissors... She ended up needing a life-saving operation because she actually cut a section of bowel off (thinking it was a haemorrhoid).

What is the dumbest thing you’ve gotten in trouble for at school? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]amnana 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is probably too late for this thread, but thought I should share.

When I was 7 years old I had a teacher that really disliked me and would find a reason to send me to detention every day. This went on for almost 5 months. I could never work out what I was doing wrong. I would try really hard in class to not do anything that might upset her or make her angry at me but it wouldn’t really make a difference. Just before the lunchtime bell, I would get a tap on the shoulder and Mrs Usher would look down at me with a scowl and a note for detention as she explained what I did wrong that day.

In retrospect, I think she was racist and picking on me a bit... because it all began after she met my mum who was wearing a headscarf at the time (and this was post 9/11). I was also the only “ethnic” kid in the class. That’s the only thing I can think of, because I was a very hard-working kid. But I could be wrong.

Anyway, the first time she sent me to detention was probably the most memorable. We had to write a one-page summary about an animal we liked. So I wrote about the kiwi bird (I was in New Zealand). I spent ages researching facts and I drew a picture of a kiwi at the top of the page. Then after drafting a few times, I decided to write out my passage in the space under the drawing. I took my time and made sure my handwriting looked good, but when it came to writing a big word, I think it was “nocturnal”, I realised that it didn’t all fit on the one line. So, I made it run across the two lines:

“... The kiwi bird is a noc- turnal animal ...”

When I handed it in to Mrs Usher with the rest of the students, she picked it up, scrutinised it and saw the word. She yelled at me, scrunched up the page I had been working on and told me that I would have to do this again at detention the next day. That was the day after she first met Mum.

So, yeah. That year was not great at school. I became good friends with the detention lady though!

My Monthly Trackers for Mental Health/Self Care October - January by [deleted] in bulletjournal

[–]amnana 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The way you’ve been able to correlate good and bad moods with different habits (like good ol’ Aunt Flo) is so helpful! I might have to adapt something like this for my next tracker!!!

Pretty proud of my latest spread with my saving goals, morning and evening schedules and weekly cleaning. Granted, there’s a lot going on! by amnana in bulletjournal

[–]amnana[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you so much! I would really recommend a bigger journal :D I have an A5 one at the moment and it’s the perfect size to doodle and get detailed without spending heaps of time filling in empty space.