HeartOfPhilly215

55 Followers
110 Following
372 Posts
Philly born and raised | Church Farm School | West Chester | S Jersey | N Liberties | CCP | Temple U | W Mt Airy | Worked all over this Jawn | Eagles | Sixers | Phillies | Flyers | Union |
OLB Joshua Uche speaks with the media. #FlyEaglesFly https://x.com/i/broadcasts/1…

We are a small independent bookshop in Chemnitz, Germany and were told that we have to do social media. We decided that if we had to do social media, then our first account would be with Mastodon. :) Hello Mastodon!

#books #EuropeanCapitalOfCulture #ecoc #chemnitz #booklove #ctheunseen #Bookstodon

We're all set for New Year's Eve!
...und nun zum #Spocht

just remembered @funranium's How I Got My Laser Eye Injury blog post. so good.

http://www.funraniumlabs.com/2024/07/how-i-got-my-laser-eye-injury/

How I Got My Laser Eye Injury - Funranium Labs

It has been brought to my attention that I have never actually written this story down before, merely told it in person to many students for valuable lessons and also for laughs over cocktails. It is a litany of bad ideas from several people that all came together at once to reach out and zap … Continue reading "How I Got My Laser Eye Injury"

Funranium Labs
Bye bye Washington Post.
Given Trump and Kamala's views on journalists and the free press, the Washington Post refusing to endorse a candidate is like a cow refusing to endorse either Burger King or a 100% vegan restaurant.
Our kids did this with 3 kids here in Philadelphia. A set of twins, one is clerking for a federal judge, the other is in law school. The third kid married & has an IT career. They are brothers along with their core group of friends who now all look out for each other. All of them are amazing citizens. We were not rich, but were willing to open our home and learned to make delicious 1 pot meals. It's wonderful to think that how we raised our kids led to so much good in the lives of others.

Me (in ER for issue unrelated to throat/mouth): “I would prefer not to remove my N95.”

Dr: “You’re not dictating care. I’m in charge. If you don’t like it you can leave.”

Me: “I’m extremely high risk - please let me keep it on.”

Dr: *sigh* “You’re not going to get Covid HERE”

I resent the “you’re not dictating care” line. It’s MY body. I should get SOME say in what happens to it.

I wasn’t self diagnosing or telling them how to do their job - I just wanted to keep my necessary PPE.

I would understand if examining my mouth, nose or throat was relevant to the emergency I was having - but it wasn’t. This felt like a “test” to see how compliant I would be - and it’s not right to test patients and expose them to a deadly and disabling virus.

I also loathe the emphasis on the word “here”. It’s not the first time I’ve heard it in the hospital either. Many HCWs act like the idea you might catch Covid in their care is absurd.

I feel like it should go without saying that it is NOT absurd. Hospitals and schools are consistently the places that drive community spread. The ER is arguably the highest risk setting because it’s crowded, you’re there for a LONG time and people with covid will go there if they need care. To suggest it’s impossible to catch covid there is to basically show you’re completely detached from reality.

I asked them to check my chart to see how clinically vulnerable I am (they skimmed it). I asked if there was any diagnostic reason I needed to remove my respirator (they scoffed and provided no answer). I declined.

At this point the energy in the room shifted. I was there for a cardiac emergency and up until then had been taken quite seriously. It changed on a dime. I finally asked if I could speak to the charge nurse or get a cardiology consult called down as I didn’t feel my issues were being properly addressed.

I was told “if you’re unhappy with the care you can avail yourself of MAiD”

For those not in Canada - that’s our medical assistance in death program.

To be clear - I don’t think this doctor was actually suggesting I end my life. I think they were just pissed off and trying to hurt me. That said it’s wildly inappropriate to EVER say that to a patient - and I hate that I didn’t have an advocate with me to witness that atrocity.

I ended up leaving and going to a different hospital where I was diagnosed with a serious issue - and I didn’t have to remove my respirator for them to figure it out.

Encounters like this are why I say you should always have an advocate when you’re in the hospital. It shouldn’t be necessary - it’s appalling that it is - but we have to play the hand we’re dealt.

I did lodge a complaint but as of now nothing has come of it - and based on past experience I doubt anything will.

I did wrote a guide on how to be a good advocate for a disabled patient - and it also includes what to do when you don’t have one. Though this story proves that sometimes even if you do everything “right”… you still receive horrible care. It’s one of the reasons I tell my stories and advocate for patients - I want to change things so that no one is ever treated the way I’ve been treated.

https://www.disabledginger.com/p/how-to-be-an-effective-advocate-for

#CovidIsAirborne #CovidCautious #CovidIsNotOver #CleanAir #WearaMask #Disability #LongCovid #Ableism #Denial #CleanAir #Pandemic #PublicHealth #InfectionControl #Eugenics #SafeHealthcare #N95 #Respirators #MasksWork #MaskUp #Spoonie #Discrimination #Dysautonomia #mecfs #pots #mcas #communitycare #wearamask #chronicillness #keepmasksinhealthcar

How to be an Effective Advocate for a Disabled Patient

Disabled patients are rightfully terrified of being hospitalized. We are stripped of our agency and control in a hospital environment. Having an effective advocate can vastly improve the experience.

The Disabled Ginger