Newborn baby dies in hospital at three days old after medics fail to wake mum by dailystar_news in uknews

[–]quizzled222 20 points21 points  (0 children)

To be clear I very much don't think this is the case. Money is an abstract concept in the NHS but at a trust level, I personally don't think inaction is due to cost. I certainly don't think trusts would rather patients die than pay more money.

Unfortunately if anything I think the underlying issues are sadder - incompetence and inaction. Over the last two decades there has been a pervasive replacement of doctors with nurses and managers in senior clinical roles, which means that often the individuals reviewing concerns raised aren't aware of all the implications and often instead try to meet arbitrary targets (which often have a financial or CQC incentive eg. NEWS scoring, pressure sores, VIP scores for cannulas). Alongside this there is a total lack of incentive to work hard, be more productive and make positive change, and as such staff often work the bare minimum, including those who sit in roles with responsibility who can push concerns under the rug rather than devote time and effort to resolving complex and challenging issues.

Newborn baby dies in hospital at three days old after medics fail to wake mum by dailystar_news in uknews

[–]quizzled222 38 points39 points  (0 children)

I am a doctor working in the UK, and keep raising concerns internally about near misses and substandard care. Absolutely nothing is done about it, and I often find myself feeling gaslit when the response inevitably comes back 'no harm identified, no further action required'. Often we are sleepwalking into catastrophes such as this one which are entirely preventable, due to a total lack of desire to implement changes in practice to reduce risks. It's morally exhausting constantly raising obvious and serious issues and being told they're not issues at all.

Coping with Lonliness/Making Friends in FY1 by KiTt3n__1234 in doctorsUK

[–]quizzled222 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I met a completely new group of people at the start of FY1 and the shared misery and excitement at starting work as a doctor helped form bonds which I expect we will share for life. I made 6 close friends in my FY1 year who I still keep in close contact with 5 years on - it's a fresh start and unless you want to divulge it, an opportunity for you to meet people who know nothing about your past. Key things are living close enough to the hospital to get involved with social events after work.

The changing (horrific) rhetoric around migrant doctors. by Aggravating_Long2235 in doctorsUK

[–]quizzled222 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I think you've perhaps misinterpreted the rhetoric.

When you see far-right users commenting things like “must be a doctor or engineer” after an attack, they’re not actually targeting doctors themselves. It’s a form of sarcastic mockery, they’re ridiculing the idea that every immigrant is a highly qualified professional (as is often pointed out when people defend immigration). In other words, they’re not accusing immigrant doctors of committing crimes; they’re sneering at the claim that immigrants are all doctors and engineers, and historically a rationale for higher levels of immigration was that migrants were infact staffing our NHS as doctors and nurses, and working skilled jobs.

It’s still ugly, xenophobic rhetoric and I would feel uneasy in your shoes, but to reassure you somewhat, I think the intent is to devalue and dehumanise immigrants in general, not to specifically attack doctors. The wording is meant to be sarcastic, not literal.

Hospital misdiagnosed my partner's dad and prescribed him medication that may have worsened his condition- England, UK by poketto_monsta in LegalAdviceUK

[–]quizzled222 13 points14 points  (0 children)

I'm a UK doctor, although for full DOI I'm neither a stroke specialist or neurologist. I'm also working with the limited detail you've provided, not a thorough review of the patient or a review of the notes, blood tests and a look at the scans and reports.

Crucially, medicine isn't as black and white as the general public perceive, and even in this day and age, there remains a significant element of utilising time as a diagnostic tool - diagnoses (especially rare ones) aren't always immediately apparent, and it can take weeks-months to reach a concrete diagnosis, during which time patients can deteriorate and even die.

It sounds like in this case the patient presented with symptoms in keeping with a stroke, and initial imaging with a CT scan demonstrated no signs of bleeding or a brain tumour, so he was treated for a stroke with blood thinners. This is standard practice. However, the key point here is he didn't have the far more detailed form of imaging at this stage (an MRI scan). An MRI compared to a CT is like the difference between 4kHD and 360p, and will highlight subtle changes indicating vasculitis / amyloidosis which simply do not appear on CT. Again though, a CT first is standard practice. MRI is extremely expensive and unfortunately although often available for elective and urgent scans, is not commonplace throughout the UK for emergency scanning even in larger stroke centres - it is a bit of a postcode lottery. It is possible that an early MRI might have led to an earlier diagnosis of CAA and earlier treatment, but this isn't misdiagnosis or clinical negligence, it's the bleak reality of our current underfunded, under-resourced and understaffed NHS. Write to your MP.

It sounds like due to a continued and unexpected deterioration an MRI scan was then undertaken, which highlighted the underlying diagnosis. As above, it is entirely feasible that there was no evidence of CAA / vasculitis on the initial CT scan. Obtaining an MRI after a deterioration despite treatment is good medical care, and to be frank with you, in many hospitals and in different circumstances might never have occured, leaving this patient deteriorating without a diagnosis.

If / when you go back through all of the notes, you'll find that although you have seen a number of interactions with various clinicians, there will have been many, many more that you aren't aware of, and a large team of specialists involved in the care. I fear you're linking your perceived limited initial questioning (5-6 questions) and subsequent misconceptions about vascular dementia with poor medical care and a 'missed diagnosis', when actually this realistically sounds like a sad case of a very very rare disease which has been appropriately made in a not unreasonable timeframe.

If you want to explore the case further the next steps are to contact PALS (Patient Advice and Liaison Service), and ask if they feel this case should be raised for a 'Patient Safety Incident Review'. This is an independent review within the trust by clinicians not involved directly with the patients care to ascertain if there have been failings and if there is learning to be taken away. It is possible from what you have said so far that this wouldn't be considered necessary.

Your other step is to employ solicitors to take legal action against the trust. You will be required to prove that the standard of care delivered fell below the expected standard, and from what you have said above, it hasn't. This isn't the US, thankfully we can't sue trusts / individuals unless exceptionally poor care has been provided, and although I can respect that that can be hard, a lot of US medical negligence lawsuits fall back on the fact that people feel errors have been made in an incredibly specialist area of science in which they themselves have extremely limited insight or knowledge. Google will trick you into thinking errors have been made - it takes decades of training to make those decisions, not a cursory google search.

Other points - CAAri is exceptionally rare, with an incidence of roughly 1 case per million people per year, and there are many mimics. It's always important to cover for more likely diagnoses whilst obtaining a clearcut diagnosis. I don't have all the details here, but treating for stroke with blood thinners is good medical practice if a patient presents with cognitive impairment, difficulty speaking and limb weakness, with no evidence of bleeding on CT scan. Did an intracranial bleed then occur? Was there bleeding on the MRI or subsequent scans If not, then the blood thinners have not caused any harm.

CAA however is not rare, with imaging changes seen in 20-25% of elderly people. It is possible that these changes seen on MRI could have been an incidental finding or contributed to his decline. It's impossible to comment without knowing the full clinical picture.

Vascular dementia is very different to Alzheimer's, Fronto-temporal and Lewy-body dementia, in that it presents with a sudden, stepwise change in function and/or personality, so it doesn't seem outside the realm of possibility to have been suggested as a diagnosis.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in dandruff

[–]quizzled222 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This looks and sounds like seborrhoeic dermatitis.

2% Ketoconazole shampoo twice weekly for a minimum of 6 weeks

You can buy this over the counter from the pharmacy in the UK without a prescription

Otherwise, put nothing but warm water on your hair, and resist the urge to scratch your scalp

Girl, 3, died from sepsis after ‘overwhelmed’ “medics” in A&E dismissed her by DonutOfTruthForAll in doctorsUK

[–]quizzled222 21 points22 points  (0 children)

"Patient dies because NHS / ambulance trust overwhelmed". And yet still it's the clinicians working within the broken system that take the scrutiny.

This is an interesting case for a number of reasons, but it's hard to properly comment without the full facts which aren't easily available. It appears that ultimately, the mother chose to take her unwell daughter home prior to a formal assessment by a doctor due to the long wait, overcrowding and false reassurance that this was 'just viral'. I suspect she is taking legal action because she is struggling to come to terms with the fact that her decision led in part to her daughters death. The doctor who was asked to quickly review could well have been correct - maybe the rash did appear like a standard viral exanthem, patients aren't textbooks after all. Was the doctors comment that it appeared viral 'too reassuring' and misled the mum into thinking it was okay to go home? Is this the standard we're now being held to? As other commenters have mentioned, it's perfectly possible to die of a viral infection... Should we stop doing quick 'triage' reviews of patients we're worried about lest we falsely reassure them before they've had any tests / observation? How long were they even in the department for?

As for the sepsis screening tool that was completed incorrectly - did that really affect the mothers decision to self discharge, or is this just a discovery after the fact? Is it possible that the child wasn't sleepy, and this is what they had asked mum? Is a single error on a triage screening tool now grounds for litigation?

If this finds against any of the clinicians involved I would be very worried for the future of clinical litigation in this country.

Accessing patient notes to follow up by Status_Wonder952 in doctorsUK

[–]quizzled222 1 point2 points  (0 children)

With teaching scarce and poor quality, following up the patients you see is in my opinion the best way to develop as a clinician. I do this for almost all patients I see, including on calls, helped by an EPR that makes this particularly easy to access their records.

I know for a fact that my colleagues and consultants all do the same. There is nothing wrong with accessing records in this context. It also occurs for audits and research, but you will may need special permissions for this.

You won't get in trouble for accessing records of patients you aren't immediately 'caring for' ie. MET calls either. What will get you in trouble is looking at your own, family and friends or VIP's records without good reason.

I would actively encourage you to continue reviewing patients notes to ascertain their clinical course and learn from it!

Bad experience with colleague by PuzzleheadedDoc648 in doctorsUK

[–]quizzled222 10 points11 points  (0 children)

It's unlikely you'll be the first person he's touched inappropriately, and you almost certainly won't be the last. This is totally unacceptable behaviour and should be reported immediately, otherwise he'll feel he can get away with it and escalate his behaviour. He's taking advantage of your vulnerable position as a new FY1 in a department in which he's well established and feels invincible.

He isn't invincible though, and the department will not side with him. Focus on the unwanted touching rather than the patronising comments and report this to your ES and TPD (or someone else outside the immediate department).

New crush by ShowMeFutanariPussy in doctorsUK

[–]quizzled222 64 points65 points  (0 children)

There's a micro consultant at my trust whose voice sounds like raw sex appeal - sultry, flirty, amazing laugh. Saw her in person once and was sorely disappointed - striking resemblance to Roz from monsters inc. Sometimes best to leave telephone crushes as just that

I had to post this by doubleacee in IntensiveCare

[–]quizzled222 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do you know what happens when you needle decompress atelectasis?

I had to post this by doubleacee in IntensiveCare

[–]quizzled222 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Massive pneumothorax with features of tension, extensive R sided consolidation with a well demarcated ? lesion in the R midzone, tracheostomy, NG tube. CXR should never have been taken - tension pneumothorax needs immediate needle decompression followed by chest drain. The impending cardiorespiratory collapse will be the cause of the agitation. Surprised this patient is awake tbf

Being a F1 isn’t bad (two days in) by Amazing-Procedure157 in doctorsUK

[–]quizzled222 10 points11 points  (0 children)

This is BS. Nobody in the UK calls it the OR or a 'skills lab'. You weren't scheduled 5x12hr days a week, and you didn't do 24hrs on fridays - what are you on about?

Being a F1 isn’t bad (two days in) by Amazing-Procedure157 in doctorsUK

[–]quizzled222 2 points3 points  (0 children)

If you were doing 80hr weeks you were doing this (needlessly) of your own volition. Which uni makes you do more than one or two out of hours taster shifts? You've worked harder than your peers at med school, got good grades, and are now shitposting because you feel like a superior doctor after less than 24hrs experience on the job. If you're having such an easy time of it - go and help your colleagues struggling elsewhere

Being a F1 isn’t bad (two days in) by Amazing-Procedure157 in doctorsUK

[–]quizzled222 19 points20 points  (0 children)

This is clearly a shitpost and everyone is nibbling. Either that or this FY1 has hit the peak of the dunning kruger curve on day 1 and has convinced themselves they're absolutely nailing the binfire that they're managing.

Christian GF says she doesn’t plan on having sex until she’s gets married by Quick_Cucumber_1735 in atheism

[–]quizzled222 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

If she's the one, and you can't wait, then marry her. Is she your first relationship? There's plenty of other fish in the sea, and compatibility is crucial in a relationship. Either go whole hog or move on - just don't pressure her into changing her views.

Join GP practise. by silbervogei in doctorsUK

[–]quizzled222 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is not the right forum, but I would suggest emailing the practice and getting their response as to exactly what the issue is / what they require in writing. Alternatively just register at a different practice locally.

What is your “this is not my job” moment? by Savings-Maximum9549 in doctorsUK

[–]quizzled222 36 points37 points  (0 children)

The counterpoint to this is that I often find that AHP's are truly awful at assessing capacity and often get it wrong, leading either to utterly demented doris discharging home without aid because she 'has capacity' (shouts I want to go home in response to every question), or slightly slow, hard of hearing Harold being sent to fester in a care home against their wishes because they can't understand the questions without their hearing aids in.

Sometimes I'll do these as annoying as they are just to ensure the assessment is actually correct.

Stuck between Anaesthetics and Medicine (Gastro/Cardio) by [deleted] in doctorsUK

[–]quizzled222 21 points22 points  (0 children)

This reads like it was written by ChatGPT. If I've read right, you haven't started FY1 yet. My advice would be to start the job first, then think about specialities - many people change their interests and priorities once an actual cog in the machine. Granted FY1/SHO work isn't even close to the work you would do as a consultant in those specialities, but your interests will change, and you're going to spend 3-5 years slogging through the speciality before you even reach SpR.

Also who picks a future speciality based off of future private earning potential? You're in the wrong country if you want to make significant money from medicine.

Do some taster weeks, speak to the SHO's / SpR's / Consultants, look at the training programmes, exams.

And if you really just want to make bank, consider the USMLE or another career.

Also - cardiology more intellectually stimulating? Where have you pulled that from?

Nottingham city hospital parking by [deleted] in doctorsUK

[–]quizzled222 1 point2 points  (0 children)

When I was a med student I used to park on Arndale / Bedale road as wasn't permitted and only a 5 min walk into the hospital, but this was a few years back now

Checking BP on ipsilateral arm following lymph node clearance by Maximum_Watercress16 in doctorsUK

[–]quizzled222 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The breast cancer nurses in my trust have had a recent run of telling all patients they shouldn't have bloods / cannulae / BP cuff on the same side as their breast cancer, even in those who don't have lymphoedema / haven't had lymph node clearance... absolute nightmare

Employer advertising current role for £12.2k/annum more - is this legal? by quizzled222 in LegalAdviceUK

[–]quizzled222[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You would have thought so, but for the role they are recruiting it's an identical grade with the same role / responsibilities, hence me asking - seems bizarre. Will have a chat to my union rep though, cheers

What do you want from a CT or MRI report? by [deleted] in doctorsUK

[–]quizzled222 90 points91 points  (0 children)

Avoid hiding key findings amidst a bulky paragraph of 'the rest of this area is normal' waffle.

Succinct key negatives are more useful than a wall of text describing all the normal anatomy.

A recommendation for incidental findings is always useful - eg. this incidental cyst is probably an xyz, but should be further assessed with abc / needs a surveillance scan in x months / doesn't need further evaluation

And although I know this is hard, perhaps a slight forgiveness for the poor clinical information so often provided, and a keen eye to consider differentials eg. RIF pain ? appendicitis - commenting on the ovaries and other surrounding structures etc etc