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So it's a real pain in the arse.One of the few things I know about JWs, is that they don't do blood transfusions, because of blood ghosts. Please correct me if I'm wrong resident medfags, but don't most surgeries come with a side of blood? Or at least a fairly high risk of needing one? Like, if they nicked something they oughtn't, would the surgery team need to let the bitch bleed out on the table? See just how much saline you can top someone up with before they no longer function?
I’ve had patients that had a 24/7 guard of men in suits (“deacons”) to ensure we didn’t secretly talk them into a blood transfusion. I’ve also seen JW patients die after childbirth when they could have been saved. It sucks for everyone else involved who is left feeling guilty for not somehow having the magic touch to convince them.However I've also had JW patients that would still get their blood products and just ask that it's covered so nobody sees it (lol), and someone else who came in very unwell and needing blood and we didn't find out until after the fact. The patient just asked that we don't tell anyone.
To expand on this: the reason that a surgeon routinely consents a patient for blood pre-op and orders type+screens is just in case things go down the shitter. Nobody's planning on transfusing during a hernia repair, but y'know, every now and then there's a whoopsie with the aorta.However the use of blood products isn't overly liberal, and you try to avoid it in any patient because it comes with its own risks. Most surgeries don't need blood products.
JWs seem to have a really optimistic idea of how quickly someone can get transfused. If a patient comes in wildly hemorrhaging, yeah, but otherwise the doctor's going to talk to the patient, then Lab is going to band and draw them, then hours later the blood product will be ready and eventually two nurses will do the check at bedside before it's spiked. Nobody is going to reverse vampire a patient the second they fall asleep.I’ve had patients that had a 24/7 guard of men in suits (“deacons”) to ensure we didn’t secretly talk them into a blood transfusion.
For some reason I thought the tear ducts made moisture, not sucked it away.
Don't worry I thought the same thing until right now.For some reason I thought the tear ducts made moisture, not sucked it away.
I’m too stupid to ever be a munchie.
I think the term "tear duct" sticks in the mind better than "excretory ducts of the lacrimal gland" and "lacrimal canals." For most situations in life we don't have to get so specific.For some reason I thought the tear ducts made moisture, not sucked it away.
Can I just express how much I love that this thread goes from "I don't fucking know" to someone telling us about dog behavior, eating disorders, organ transplants, or how tear ducts work and we all just informative sticker each other?Some of the things that Jamie described about her childhood eating struggles sound a bit like ARFID. In particular, the flipping out over food textures and fear of choking sound like that. ARFID can (and often does) result in low weight and other health issues that you'd see with anorexia nervosa. I wouldn't be particularly surprised if there's an AFRID-to-anorexia pipeline (as the child turns into a teen and adult), but I have no idea if there's research to back that up. It sounds like she received a lot of attention-- from parents, from counselors-- because of her childhood eating issues, and I wonder if that translated into teen/adult anorexia, especially when you add in things like the k-pop obsession. Those k-pop diet tips from the first post were identical copies of The Thin Commandments from the original pro-ana websites.
Speaking of anachans, I was amused to see that she lists EPI as one of her many ailments, because that's one you can get after starving yourself. There's a current Instagram-based anachan who's claiming EPI, which is mysteriously resistant to all commonly prescribed medications. Needless to say, that means she "can't" gain weight. At one point, she was claiming she had Whipple Disease, and that it was affecting her ability to absorb the pancreatic enzymes. Some of the antibiotics also "weren't working," because reasons (reasons like: I don't want to gain weight, so I don't take my enzymes). Also, if you're thinking that Whipple Disease is rare, you're correct, and I imagine it's especially rare in young Edinburgh-based university students, which is what she is. Her antics are exhaustively documented on the other farms, and she's a really awful person, so that's fun.
Anyway, Jamie should try swearing with big-girl words and see if that lets out some of her pent-up tension. I'm glad to see that the spare parts dog is no longer dragging her chariot.
The amount of self satisfaction I get from people giving mewe all just informative sticker each other
Uh I think you mean gender "dysmorphia"Autie now claiming gender dysphoria from her teenage boy alters.
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Autie? She lost custody.I find it distressing that she has a child. Does anyone know if she still has custody after her lastcry for attention‘suicide attempt?’
Good. Thank youAutie? She lost custody.
That's the whole point of the flex though. Look at how skinny I am, guys, I'm just wasting away but still SO BRAVE and ZEBRASTRONG.Jamie Bruce irrationally annoys me with her constant flexing stance when she literally never had even the tiniest of baby biceps to flex with