Even though society has told me since childhood to trust doctors, hospitals, and "the science", not one single interaction with a doctor, a hospital, or the medical establishment has been good for me, or anyone I know. It's not that we only go to doctors when something is wrong, which negatively paints the experience. It's that the doctors and nurses often don't care, don't run the right tests, it takes multiple visits to find out what's wrong (if at all), and the "solution" almost always involves medication of some form or another, which just medicates rather than cures.
The only time I'll ever step foot in a hospital is if something is catastrophically wrong and I'm literally dying. Any other visit is a waste of time, money, and effort. My trust in them is that low. I can do more for myself by maintaining my own health than a doctor could ever do for me. After what happened with Covid, I don't know how anyone trusts doctors and the medical establishment any more. Covid also proved true how corrupt it all is, and that those "conspiracy theories" about the Rockefellers buying and corrupting the medical industry to push pharmaceuticals and profits, at the expense of people and health, is absolutely true.
Its because healthcare workers have such inflated egos that they have forgotten that they are in a customer service role when you boil it down. They aren't willing to act like everyone else in customer service, where they cant be assholes and politely explain situations and products instead of outright dismissing concerns and questions.
Well, you are wrong about medicine being "customer service". It was never supposed to be like that.
But erosion of societal norms, diversity, corporatization, government meddling & overreach & depersonalized assembly-line approaches have given people the impression that healthcare is equivalent to ordering off the menu at Wendy's.
No, its customer service. Doctors don't get to be assholes to their patients just because they're doctors.
They can jazz it up with "bedside manner" but at the end of the day the patient is a person, and Healthcare workers dont treat them like people. Patients are just problems to be solved with zero input on the process.
I recently finished reading Storm of Steel and the completely pointless insanity and brutality of the meat grinding trench warfare in WW1 still appears to be significantly more preferable to the hell we call current year.
No suspects? no leads? BULL FUCKING SHIT! Hospitals have cameras in all hallways, they should know who went in and out of her room the night she was murdered.
The article says the hospital took so long reporting this that all CCTV had been recorded over and all forensic opportunities were gone due to new room occupants and cleaning.
That's because you're not a jeet. Over in their filth-encrusted hellhole, being vulnerable and unconscious means you're probably gonna get raped unless a trusted family member is watching over you.
You don't have a predator mindset. They know that those victims can't get away.
They also probably have someone on staff protecting them, or participating in the rape with them to give them specific hours and routines so as to not attract attention.
Even though society has told me since childhood to trust doctors, hospitals, and "the science", not one single interaction with a doctor, a hospital, or the medical establishment has been good for me, or anyone I know. It's not that we only go to doctors when something is wrong, which negatively paints the experience. It's that the doctors and nurses often don't care, don't run the right tests, it takes multiple visits to find out what's wrong (if at all), and the "solution" almost always involves medication of some form or another, which just medicates rather than cures.
The only time I'll ever step foot in a hospital is if something is catastrophically wrong and I'm literally dying. Any other visit is a waste of time, money, and effort. My trust in them is that low. I can do more for myself by maintaining my own health than a doctor could ever do for me. After what happened with Covid, I don't know how anyone trusts doctors and the medical establishment any more. Covid also proved true how corrupt it all is, and that those "conspiracy theories" about the Rockefellers buying and corrupting the medical industry to push pharmaceuticals and profits, at the expense of people and health, is absolutely true.
Yup.
My visits with doctors have all boiled down to
If you find a doctor that actually works with you, cherish that doctor.
And will be fucking furious when you point out they prescribed the wrong dose and wrong tests
"I'm pretty sure I don't need opiates..."
"?????"
Its because healthcare workers have such inflated egos that they have forgotten that they are in a customer service role when you boil it down. They aren't willing to act like everyone else in customer service, where they cant be assholes and politely explain situations and products instead of outright dismissing concerns and questions.
They closed physical therapy during COVID.
Tells you all you need to know.
Well, you are wrong about medicine being "customer service". It was never supposed to be like that.
But erosion of societal norms, diversity, corporatization, government meddling & overreach & depersonalized assembly-line approaches have given people the impression that healthcare is equivalent to ordering off the menu at Wendy's.
No, its customer service. Doctors don't get to be assholes to their patients just because they're doctors.
They can jazz it up with "bedside manner" but at the end of the day the patient is a person, and Healthcare workers dont treat them like people. Patients are just problems to be solved with zero input on the process.
My grandfather used to say that grocery bills are cheaper than doctor bills. I've really taken that to heart over the last decade or so.
Medicine is for acute care not chronic care or "wellness" Some of the tests are useful but you should always get your own copies.
I recently finished reading Storm of Steel and the completely pointless insanity and brutality of the meat grinding trench warfare in WW1 still appears to be significantly more preferable to the hell we call current year.
That's not fair. Tourniquets are always safer and more effective than most of the pills being peddled to you.
Did you reply to the wrong comment or am I simply not getting the joke?
I responded to you with a joke. I guess it didn't land.
All right then, keep your secrets.
No suspects? no leads? BULL FUCKING SHIT! Hospitals have cameras in all hallways, they should know who went in and out of her room the night she was murdered.
The article says the hospital took so long reporting this that all CCTV had been recorded over and all forensic opportunities were gone due to new room occupants and cleaning.
So it was a cover up.
I wonder if it was initiated based upon the immutable characteristics of the suspect.
They call NHS "free healthcare" but it creates an insane model between the NHS and the hospitals that actually provide care.
There's a financial incentive to cover up crimes inside UK hospitals.
Charge the hospital administrator.
I'll bet we find the culprit within 2 hours.
They burned that shit because they don't want the liability.
Better to protect the hospital than stop the rapist-murderer.
Maybe I'm a historical outlier but it has never occurred to me to rape somebody in a hospital.
That's because you're not a jeet. Over in their filth-encrusted hellhole, being vulnerable and unconscious means you're probably gonna get raped unless a trusted family member is watching over you.
around blacks.. don't relax.
around jeets.. don't sleep.
okay.
You don't have a predator mindset. They know that those victims can't get away.
They also probably have someone on staff protecting them, or participating in the rape with them to give them specific hours and routines so as to not attract attention.