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HeadSet saysBeautiful, young, lots to live for. Sounds suspicious.
49 is young now?
mell saysWho the fuck sends a recovered top doc home who wants to work?! Leftoids.
There are protocols in medicine. If an employee hasn't recovered sufficiently, he/she can't return to work. It's actually no different than a situation where a patient needs surgery to survive, but for whatever reason the patient doesn't meet either insurance or clinical criteria required.
It's very sad that this person felt that her only option was to kill herself.
mell saysLikely so - but that's not the point. She was amongst the most knowledgeable people in her hospital and gets sent home, denied the right to work? WTF is this.
Doctors are people too. People get sent home for being symptomatic, asymptomatic but exposed, etc. Happens every day - y'all got too much time on your hands and only your fellow conspiracy theorists to play with.
The MD works with CV-19 patients in a setting where CV-19 is around - why can't she go back with a mask and do what she's best at?!
Until then we're paralyzed by "administrators", hospitals will keep going bankrupt because no patients can be seen nor surgeries performed because a 101 year old geezer coming in for a routine colonoscopy could catch CV-19 and croak. What a joke.
But I mean seriously WTF is going on here when grown up people that know more than those who make decisions for them are being denied the right to work.
everyone knows the risk of the field they entered.
Hillary Clinton created COVID virus and then when it didn't kill fast enough, she drugged an ER doc and killed her, making it look like suicide.
shit is real. Very, very real. And if we don't respect that, we're all fucked.
mell says
The MD works with CV-19 patients in a setting where CV-19 is around - why can't she go back with a mask and do what she's best at?!
The MD was sick. Her employer had not yet cleared her to return. Just curious - would you want to be treated - or have your family member treated - by a doctor who was not yet recovered from being sick? A virus that has side effects such as hallucinations?
mell saysUntil then we're paralyzed by "administrators", hospitals will keep going bankrupt because no patients can be seen nor surgeries performed because a 101 year old geezer coming in for a routine colonoscopy could catch CV-19 and croak. What a joke.
Sure, one of the reasons that they stopped elective procedures was to keep those patients from being infected themselves. Another reason was to ensure that hospitals were ready to accept an unknown amount of patients for however long the flood might last. And, of course, with limited amounts of available supplies (I'm living it), a third reason to stop elective procedures was to preserve supplies.
I know you probably don't believe me, but my co-worker/friend was out sick the 25th of March with COVID-19; he was back at work on the 20th of April. He is still tired; today he was nodding off at lunch. He's a very healthy middle aged...
obviously she was well enough to return to work, i.e. without fever.
Absolutely if the family member was sick with Covid-19 - she's the most qualified.
The units are separated
you'd think a top MD would know best when they're fit or not, not some administrative paper pusher.Again, not sure you're understanding that an administrative paper pusher did not make this decision. A physician made this decision - the one who supervised her. Really.
Leftoids.
mell saysAbsolutely if the family member was sick with Covid-19 - she's the most qualified.
So, if you have cancer, does that mean your MD should have active cancer in order to treat you? mell saysThe units are separated
mell saysyou'd think a top MD would know best when they're fit or not, not some administrative paper pusher.Again, not sure you're understanding that an administrative paper pusher did not make this decision. A physician made this decision - the one who supervised her. Really.
So, if you have cancer, does that mean your MD should have active cancer in order to treat you? mell saysThe units are separated
No, actually they are not completely separated. They share common air, plumbing, & electrical systems, labs, pharmacies, central supply. Staff move from floor to floor. Even in the most closed systems, the potential for cross-contamination exists.
"She went back to the most horrific, unimaginable conditions," Feist said, describing her sister as "somebody whose life's calling is helping people, and she just couldn't help enough people."
Staff move from floor to floor. Even in the most closed systems, the potential for cross-contamination exists.
Are you saying the lockdown is useless? If we are not safe from Covid in the hospital where would we be safe?
elliemae saysStaff move from floor to floor. Even in the most closed systems, the potential for cross-contamination exists.
Are you saying the lockdown is useless? If we are not safe from Covid in the hospital where would we be safe?
Onvacation saysAre you saying the lockdown is useless? If we are not safe from Covid in the hospital where would we be safe?
In your home. Away from crowds and sick people. Does that sound "useless?"
Did you know that the Covid can live on plastic for three days
What makes this cold more dangerous than the annual mutation of the flu?
Who the fuck sends a recovered top doc home who wants to work?! Leftoids.