Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was about to have a minor medical procedure and discovered that they were going to use Fentanyl to "put me under." By coincidence, the newspaper that morning had a front page article (above the fold) about overdoses in the DMV. When I raised this issue with the anesthesiologist, I got a nasty earful about how I was not to question the doctor's expertise. Thanks, Doc.
Because your questioning was asinine--did you think they were going to overdose you on a drug they bought off the corner?
Anonymous wrote:I was about to have a minor medical procedure and discovered that they were going to use Fentanyl to "put me under." By coincidence, the newspaper that morning had a front page article (above the fold) about overdoses in the DMV. When I raised this issue with the anesthesiologist, I got a nasty earful about how I was not to question the doctor's expertise. Thanks, Doc.
Anonymous wrote:I was about to have a minor medical procedure and discovered that they were going to use Fentanyl to "put me under." By coincidence, the newspaper that morning had a front page article (above the fold) about overdoses in the DMV. When I raised this issue with the anesthesiologist, I got a nasty earful about how I was not to question the doctor's expertise. Thanks, Doc.
Anonymous wrote:It doesn't help that the police perpetuate stories that they got sick from touching a single microscopic grain of fentanyl or by even being in the same room as it. It makes it seem like it is dangerous to even be around.
My mom died of cancer. At the end she had a fentanyl patch. It helped her. I was grateful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It was designed to keep cancer patients comfortable and pain free at the end of life. Used appropriately it can still perform that function.
No, this is not the answer. Morphine drips are what you're thinking of
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good question.
If knives are so dangerous, why do they use THEM in hospitals??
Wait till you hear about radiation, barium, and nuclear medicine.
Anonymous wrote:It was designed to keep cancer patients comfortable and pain free at the end of life. Used appropriately it can still perform that function.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sigh.
Do you really not know the answer to this?
This is the level of critical thinking Gen Z is working with. Everything is so black and white. Their emotions rule. It is as bpd is a generation.
Anonymous wrote:Good question.
If knives are so dangerous, why do they use THEM in hospitals??
Anonymous wrote:Sigh.
Do you really not know the answer to this?