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Message
re: Woman dies after contracting flesh-eating bacteria, Husband blames delayed diagnosis
Posted on 5/11/18 at 2:07 pm to LaBornNRaised
Posted on 5/11/18 at 2:07 pm to LaBornNRaised
quote:
2 things... 1.That’s fricking awful 2.Florida
Let me add 3. hot tub. Those things are gross.
Posted on 5/11/18 at 2:11 pm to lsupride87
quote:
The antibiotic and heating pad diagnosis screams lazy, possible negligent practice though.
How would you have treated it Dr. House?
This sounds like classic Monday morning quarterbacking. I love how people expect nothing bad to happen if a doctor is around, all while complaint that they make too much and healthcare is too expensive. life still happens. shite still happens. Do you honestly expect to never hear of someone dying from an infection?
If every doctor started culturing and treating every butt pimple with the most expensive antibiotics y’all would be screaming even louder how expensive healthcare is and medicine shouldn’t cost this much.
This post was edited on 5/11/18 at 2:14 pm
Posted on 5/11/18 at 2:13 pm to TDsngumbo
quote:
The doctor should have tested the sore on the first visit to rule anything out and to see if it was staph, so he could properly treat it.
No, they should not have. Are you an MD? Staph skin infections are rarely deadly in normal healthy adults. I cannot remember the last time I cultured an abscess...maybe a diabetic with Fournier's...but never a young healthy patient with an abscess.
Posted on 5/11/18 at 2:15 pm to LSUERDOC
quote:
No, they should not have. Are you an MD? Staph skin infections are rarely deadly in normal healthy adults. I cannot remember the last time I cultured an abscess...maybe a diabetic with Fournier's...but never a young healthy patient with an abscess.
Exactly. But people in this country want EVERYTHING. right now. Right away. With 100% accuracy and never any mistakes.
Everyone is in for a real rude awakening when socialized medicine comes down the pipe. The entitled people in this country are going to shite a brick.
Posted on 5/11/18 at 2:16 pm to DemonKA3268
My dad had this back in 93. His leg started changed colors the night he went in the water
No chance this is what killed her
No chance this is what killed her
Posted on 5/11/18 at 2:17 pm to LSUERDOC
quote:
Fournier's
The Fournier’s from bayou blue?
Posted on 5/11/18 at 2:20 pm to LSUERDOC
Also, if everyone was responsible for their own healthcare costs and this doctor asked every patient to pay for a culture and expensive antibiotic to treat every butt pimple they would be saying how greedy the doctor is.
Fact is, how an abscess is usually treated works 99.999% of the time. Should we increase our healthcare spending exponentially to never have a story like this?
It’s easy to complain. It’s hard to come up with a good solution?
Fact is, how an abscess is usually treated works 99.999% of the time. Should we increase our healthcare spending exponentially to never have a story like this?
It’s easy to complain. It’s hard to come up with a good solution?
Posted on 5/11/18 at 2:27 pm to Thib-a-doe Tiger
quote:
No chance this is what killed her
This isn't vibrio. The article doesn't say it was vibrio. All it says is necrotizing fasciitis. It can be caused by many things. Vibrio obviously has a different course that whatever caused this.
Posted on 5/11/18 at 2:30 pm to WaWaWeeWa
quote:
Exactly. But people in this country want EVERYTHING. right now. Right away. With 100% accuracy and never any mistakes.
Everyone is in for a real rude awakening when socialized medicine comes down the pipe. The entitled people in this country are going to shite a brick.
You're preaching to the choir...I see these types every single day in the ED. It's like they think they are at Burger King or something.
Posted on 5/11/18 at 2:35 pm to WaWaWeeWa
quote:
Everyone is in for a real rude awakening when socialized medicine comes down the pipe. The entitled people in this country are going to shite a brick.
Not everyone. Those of us who have had the joy of dealing with the VA are already fully aware of what's in store.
Posted on 5/11/18 at 2:35 pm to JamesLang
I did not read the article so I am not sure if it stated the pathogen, but I bet people assumed Vibrio since the lady got sick in Florida.
The most common cause of necrotizing fasciitis is Group A Strep...
The most common cause of necrotizing fasciitis is Group A Strep...
Posted on 5/11/18 at 2:36 pm to LSUERDOC
quote:I specifcally said I do not know about this specific case.
You should probably learn more about standard of care before making statements like these...
But I am an auditor for a large healthcare system.
doctors lazily handing out antibiotics is alway a hot topic issue we have
I am simply saying it is a flag to me when I hear an antibiotic was given. However, in this case, it may have 100% correct protocol. Which I even stated in my original posts
But I am not surprised a few doctors in here blew by this. Doctors getting angry at non MDs saying anything about medicine is pretty standard I am used to them wanting to kill me and anyone else in management
Posted on 5/11/18 at 2:38 pm to WaWaWeeWa
quote:I dont know Dr. DidntRead, which is why I put this in the same post you quoted
How would you have treated it Dr. House?
quote:
possible negligent practice though.
Not necessarily though
I also said this right after Dr. DidntRead
quote:
In this specific case it could have been perfect practice though. Ill leave that to the doctors in here to discuss
This post was edited on 5/11/18 at 2:40 pm
Posted on 5/11/18 at 2:45 pm to lsupride87
quote:
I am simply saying it is a flag to me when I hear an antibiotic was given. However, in this case, it may have 100% correct protocol. Which I even stated in my original posts
But I am not surprised a few doctors in here blew by this. Doctors getting angry at non MDs saying anything about medicine is pretty standard I am used to them wanting to kill me and anyone else in management
LoL...it's a flag when an antibiotic is given? News to me...I will call you as an expert witness when I am sued for not giving grandma antibiotics for her pyelonephritis.
And I am not angry...I just get aggravated when ignorant people post their ignorant opinions about medicine. You're an auditor, not an MD. Your comment was ignorant and condescending...but I have come to expect that on this board.
Carry on.
This post was edited on 5/11/18 at 2:46 pm
Posted on 5/11/18 at 2:47 pm to LSUERDOC
quote:Good night.
And I am not angry...I just get aggravated when ignorant people post their ignorant opinions about medicine. You're an auditor, not an MD. Your comment was ignorant and condescending...but I have come to expect that on this board.
This is why running a business with MDs is so difficult. The most sensitive group of humans alive
We literally have seperate policies across the board for the MDs because they are so coddled
From the beginning I said I have no clue about the medicine behind this case. Simply that giving antibiotics to treat everything is an issue with medical practices in this country
Scruffy even agreed
Team Scruffy
He is the type of Dr that makes my job possible
Posted on 5/11/18 at 2:51 pm to lsupride87
quote:
From the beginning I said I have no clue about the medicine behind this case. Simply that giving antibiotics to treat everything is an issue with medical practices in this country
quote:
The antibiotic and heating pad diagnosis screams lazy, possible negligent practice though. Not necessarily, but it is like the highlights of a lazy diagnosis
quote:
True. Was it a misdiagnosis due to the nature of medicine not being a perfect science, or was it a misdiagnosis because the physician was lazy and prescribed an antibiotic and sent her on her merry way
That is not what you said...you implied that this doctor was lazy and incompetent.
Posted on 5/11/18 at 2:54 pm to LSUERDOC
quote:No
That is not what you said...you implied that this doctor was lazy and incompetent.
I implied that the indicating triggers in my head went off for a lazy diagnosis
When I hear antibitic given, go home, I immediately perk up due to the nature of my job.
I am fully aware that is 100% proper protocol in some cases. I am just also aware it is simply what some doctors/clinics do because they want to treat everything quickly
I in no way know jack shite about medicine. Which is why I blindly let a doctor give my child zithromycin for a simple wheeze when he inhaled
Posted on 5/11/18 at 2:54 pm to LSUERDOC
quote:
I did not read the article so I am not sure if it stated the pathogen, but I bet people assumed Vibrio since the lady got sick in Florida. The most common cause of necrotizing fasciitis is Group A Strep...
Yea it was necrotizing fasciitis which could be a bunch of different bacteria. There is no guarantee that culturing it earlier would have even helped. What is the culture came back regular old staph aureus? Doubtful they change anything. Not to mention cultures take time to come back. This was just an unfortunate freak thing that they turned into a clickbait article
Not to mention....
quote:
They finally decided to do a biopsy of the area after the third trip. That's when they found out it was the flesh-eating virus, bacteria," Martin said.
Wtf is a virus bacteria? Martins probably not the best person to be asking about the medical history or what was done wrong
This post was edited on 5/11/18 at 2:56 pm
Posted on 5/11/18 at 2:59 pm to lsupride87
quote:
Which is why I blindly let a doctor give my child zithromycin for a simple wheeze when he inhaled
Yeah...that is ridiculous. You should have taken the child to the ER. He was not wheezing...he had inspiratory stridor, which can get ugly very quickly in a young child.
Posted on 5/11/18 at 3:01 pm to LSUERDOC
quote:Correct
he had inspiratory stridor
quote:It was very minor though
You should have taken the child to the ER.
Went to his primary peds the next day when we returned home from vacation
He said it was croup and no big deal. And he recovered a few days later
But now you have me freaked out and if I hear it again should I really go to ER? My pediatrician said it wasnt a big deal
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