Pretty scuffed. Cliff notes:

  • patient presents to hospital reporting agony in tummy
  • doctor finds out he uses cannabis
  • diagnoses with cannabis hyperemesis syndrome (some people after heavy use suddenly develop persistent nausea, recently identified, rare and is a diagnosis of exclusion)
  • patient is sent home
  • patient dies due to severe stomach ulcers

Seems pretty concerning to me.

  • tristan
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    3 months ago

    When I had an ulcer, I called an ambulance at 3am because the pain was so bad I could hardly breath

    The ambo driver didn’t want to take me to the hospital and said it was probably just heartburn, but after I insisted they took me… He even made a joke that I must have been fine because I brought a battery pack and people who are having “true emergencies” don’t think of those things

    At emergency, they kept insisting it was heartburn despite me telling them I know what heartburn feels like

    They gave me medicine for heartburn that made the pain so much worse… It was only at that point when I was literally screaming in agony that they decided they better actually investigate

    Half hour later I was on a helicopter to Sydney for surgery

    They wasted well over an hour telling me I just had heartburn before they even decided to start investigating it.

    I can only imagine the pain this poor man went through at home after the drs Palmed him off

    • NaevaTheRat [she/her]@vegantheoryclub.orgOP
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      3 months ago

      Holy shit mate that’s awful. I haven’t had anything that bad but have had problems with spine arthritis constricting nerves.

      Spent 2 years begging doctors to take me seriously, idk why but everyone seemed to assume I was exaggerating or hanging out for drugs. It sucked hard, I pretty much lost 2 years of my life to crying on a sofa and drinking through the worst pain.

      Idk why this idea of people faking shit is so prevalent.

  • melbaboutown
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    3 months ago

    That checks out. I’ve had some really bad experiences seeking help.

    Denial of care and misdiagnosis seems really common in an underfunded and overstretched public healthcare system and compassion fatigue seems rife.

    Australia is also a systemically racist country where indigenous people are denied access or receive substandard healthcare - which can be due to such assumptions.