Anonymous wrote:I delivered a stillborn baby at Sibley and hearing that chime while I waited in the lobby for my husband to get the car and pull it up front would have started a fresh round of crying. However, it would have just been one round of many (just going to Target during that timeframe would make me cry).
Does it chime everywhere in the hospital? If so, then it is completely inappropriate.
Anonymous wrote:I feel like that's something that was created with only the best intentions, but .... I don't know. I have mixed feelings about it. I'm thinking also of those mothers that perhaps deliver, but their babies go into the NICU and pass, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You know what is the equivalent of a cancer patient hitting a gong as she leaves the hospital for the last time? A mother leaving the hospital with a newborn on her lap.
um, not really.
Anonymous wrote:I disagree. I like the chime. I like knowing that a new life has been born. Maybe even to someone who struggled through infertility.
If they rang a bell for finishing cancer treatment, and you had cancer, would you begrudge them that? I think you are allowing infertility to color too much of your world. Let people have their baby chime.
Anonymous wrote:You know what is the equivalent of a cancer patient hitting a gong as she leaves the hospital for the last time? A mother leaving the hospital with a newborn on her lap.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, Sibley's not exactly the most sensitive. I will always remember the hazy moment I came out of anesthetic after getting a D&C for a m/c, and seeing the giant pregnant belly on the nurse who was tending to me. And hearing all about the pregnancy. I mean, I know nurses have jobs and nurses have babies, but THAT nurse, at THAT moment, with THAT conversation?
If Sibley wants to be so public about all the goings-on with its patients, how about a big game-show-style, WAH-WAHHH, whenever they screw up?
What the hell! That's messed up. If I were that nurse I would have asked to switch patients. WOW.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:IF us a chronic medical condition without a promised outcome or cure. Ringing a bell to alert you to some else's joy, luck, or even cure (if it was an IF mother) is so unacceptable for every other chronic condition. So why do this to IF men and women? I would complain to Sibley right away.
+1. And there should not be a cancer gong. Can you IMAGINE sitting in a fertility clinic and hearing a gong go off every time there was a success?
Anonymous wrote:IF us a chronic medical condition without a promised outcome or cure. Ringing a bell to alert you to some else's joy, luck, or even cure (if it was an IF mother) is so unacceptable for every other chronic condition. So why do this to IF men and women? I would complain to Sibley right away.