Trainwreck Alex Dacy / Alex Dzimtowicz / Wheelchair Rapunzel - 50% wholesome disability influencer, 50% that cash me outside girl

We've seen some truly retarded things in this thread, but hells bells this takes the fucking biscuit.

What kind of moron decides that it's acceptable to administer IV fluids and possibly prescription drugs to a heavily pregnant SMA patient with active D&V, knowing fuck all about their medical history?

What kind of heavily pregnant SMA patient with active D&V calls said moron instead of seeking proper medical care?
 
We've seen some truly retarded things in this thread, but hells bells this takes the fucking biscuit.

What kind of moron decides that it's acceptable to administer IV fluids and possibly prescription drugs to a heavily pregnant SMA patient with active D&V, knowing fuck all about their medical history?

What kind of heavily pregnant SMA patient with active D&V calls said moron instead of seeking proper medical care?

Robyn? Oops, wrong thread.
 
We've seen some truly retarded things in this thread, but hells bells this takes the fucking biscuit.

What kind of moron decides that it's acceptable to administer IV fluids and possibly prescription drugs to a heavily pregnant SMA patient with active D&V, knowing fuck all about their medical history?

What kind of heavily pregnant SMA patient with active D&V calls said moron instead of seeking proper medical care?
An unlicensed person? An idiot? Take your pick. There are tons of idiot medical professionals in the world, mds included.
 
Wow. You’d think she’d know better, really. I have a weird allergy, to IV zofran. (Oddly, not to pills). If I’d never had it as an infusion before, I wouldn’t know that, so having strangers come and administer it for the first time could be fatal. I know zofran and benedryl are common infusions but the possibility of an allergic reaction is not nil.

She had to grow up seeing doctors. I understand one gets very tired of being a patient, and going to the ER is awful, but with her issues and a pregnancy on top, it’s just irresponsible.

But I also think it’s an ad.
 
Wow. You’d think she’d know better, really. I have a weird allergy, to IV zofran. (Oddly, not to pills). If I’d never had it as an infusion before, I wouldn’t know that, so having strangers come and administer it for the first time could be fatal. I know zofran and benedryl are common infusions but the possibility of an allergic reaction is not nil.

She had to grow up seeing doctors. I understand one gets very tired of being a patient, and going to the ER is awful, but with her issues and a pregnancy on top, it’s just irresponsible.

But I also think it’s an ad.
PL but relevant: I've had random IV reactions and sudden allergies to antibiotics out of nowhere, even though I have had them plenty of times before. This is exactly why random infusions available to the general public is a terrible idea.

The worst was red man syndrome. Luckily it's only as a result of IV vanco but that was worse than having whole body hives due to a sudden sulfa allergy in my late 20s. Prior to this the only thing I was ever allergic to and born with an allergy were eggs. Which meant I was allergic to mmr too, but it was worth the risk compared to yanno, getting measles/rubella/mumps and at a drs office. And we didn't figure out the egg allergy until later.
 
Are these licensed doctors? Zofran and Reglan are prescription only in the US. I looked one up around me and they do Myers and NAD+ as well but absolutely none do any infusions with actual medication.

Some random person giving out Benadryl and other meds with no medical oversight seems like a great lawsuit. I’m not talking about the actual iv insertion, but rather what happens if someone becomes suddenly allergic to a med or has a bad reaction or something. Or because these places don’t require you to prove your medical history, some other complication occurs. Like your meds interfering with another med, completely unaware.

In a proper medical setting, these are non issues. A reaction can be dealt with, a dr or pharm would check for drug interactions, but like at home..yikes.

Even if the person administering it is a nurse, still sounds like a terrible idea esp with no vetting system on the patients side (unless there is one?). A dr can check what meds you take and look at a chart (though people do lie), they can test to see what levels you’re at for vits if you’re complaining of a symptom ther could be caused by a vit deficiency,

Like what if a patient is pregnant and they know but the place doesn’t ask or check. Or the patient lies. Pees sticks are done all the time in hospitals for a reason.

Sorry. This just makes me so mad because I know NPs who promote this shit. How can you be educated and degreed and promote fucking IV vitamins for anyone who pays for it.
It seems a doctor remotely oversees paramedics from what I can see, I just googled local home IV services that weren’t actual dme/home health/infusion clinics and geared towards hangovers and boutique shit (this is in the USA too, so Benadryl, toradol and reglan and honestly, all of it, are script/prescribed only from what I can tell). Either way it’s sketchy as hell, and says nothing about the dosages (but also will give IM toradol injections) so I’m hoping they’re minuscule but it still seems like a huge lawsuit waiting to happen for IV meds and no verified medical history.
 
It seems a doctor remotely oversees paramedics from what I can see, I just googled local home IV services that weren’t actual dme/home health/infusion clinics and geared towards hangovers and boutique shit (this is in the USA too, so Benadryl, toradol and reglan and honestly, all of it, are script/prescribed only from what I can tell). Either way it’s sketchy as hell, and says nothing about the dosages (but also will give IM toradol injections) so I’m hoping they’re minuscule but it still seems like a huge lawsuit waiting to happen for IV meds and no verified medical history.

I would never want a paramedic outside of a hospital or ambulance setting do that to me, jfc.
 
I don't know how things are in Burgerland, but the set up I'm used to you "book in" with a hospital at the start of your pregnancy, and if you have any issues (eg. decreased foetal movements, hyperemesis) you can call the Midwives for advice. They can arrange for you to come direct to an Obstetric ward for a review. For a high risk pregnancy this would be especially true, they would be erring on the side of caution and would stress to call or even just present directly to the ward for review with an Obstetrician.

An IV service can't do Dopplers or an US, can't check your bloods. I'm so mad at her lol
 
Wow. You’d think she’d know better, really. I have a weird allergy, to IV zofran. (Oddly, not to pills). If I’d never had it as an infusion before, I wouldn’t know that, so having strangers come and administer it for the first time could be fatal. I know zofran and benedryl are common infusions but the possibility of an allergic reaction is not nil.

She had to grow up seeing doctors. I understand one gets very tired of being a patient, and going to the ER is awful, but with her issues and a pregnancy on top, it’s just irresponsible.

But I also think it’s an ad.
As an "influencer" she will understand that all ads must be disclosed on social media.
Unfortunately I think this lunacy actually happened.
 
I would never want a paramedic outside of a hospital or ambulance setting do that to me, jfc.
I completely agree. It seems weird enough to do things like fluids and “vitamins” without actual doctor supervision, I certainly wouldn’t want anything else like meds that way either. Seems like such a liability for them too, though I’m unsure of what forms or things they ask, it’s certainly not something I’d want.
 
I don't know how things are in Burgerland, but the set up I'm used to you "book in" with a hospital at the start of your pregnancy, and if you have any issues (eg. decreased foetal movements, hyperemesis) you can call the Midwives for advice. They can arrange for you to come direct to an Obstetric ward for a review. For a high risk pregnancy this would be especially true, they would be erring on the side of caution and would stress to call or even just present directly to the ward for review with an Obstetrician.

An IV service can't do Dopplers or an US, can't check your bloods. I'm so mad at her lol
how it works in the us is you call your ob. You can only go to the hospital your ob practices at in a non emergency situation for insurance reasons. We don’t do midwives except for home births or birthing centers, which she cannot do.

Your ob can admit, your ob can direct you to the hospital but you can get a different ob on call when you arrive if your ob is not there.

You could try to go to another hospital but the drs wouldn’t be familiar with you, insurance may deny it, and if an absolute emergency, the ambulance by law has to take you to the nearest hospital only.
 
Stolen from Reddit cause I don't have IG. They reveal in this live that Noah had a relapse 3 months ago on Kratom and he's stopping now and doing IOP (Intensive outpatient program).



(Sorry for bad audio, I tried my best. Here's the Reddit post with better audio quality)
 
Stolen from Reddit cause I don't have IG. They reveal in this live that Noah had a relapse 3 months ago on Kratom and he's stopping now and doing IOP (Intensive outpatient program).

View attachment 4215784

(Sorry for bad audio, I tried my best. Here's the Reddit post with better audio quality)
Well that explains the disappearing sobriety tags and posts.

This redditor makes a good point. Ive never bought the "adderall" story. Someone upthread went into detail about why thats sus AF.
Screenshot_20230108_090555_Reddit.jpg

Re: the IV infusions I think it both happened AND is an ad. I reckon they blagged a free or discounted treatment for a promo from this shady place.
 
That kid is definitely gonna end up in the physical and legal custody of her parents

I honestly really hope so. And this isn't because one person is disabled. Disabled people have the right to care for their kid, but given that a) Alex physically cannot care for a kid and b) her partner has substance abuse issues/addiction, it wouldn't be a healthy environment for a baby.

Like others have said, this is just one bad decision over another, ad nauseum on every front. Not masking, promoting a scam, putting herself in situations where she could get sick, and so on.
 
Not a million percent relevant to this thread but Chelsie Hill and her husband have welcomed a healthy baby girl this morning and she looks like a whopper too.
Be interesting to see if there's a reaction from Alex and Noah because unusually I don't see her in Chelsie's likes.
For once on this vile and hateful site its a pleasant change to be able to say heartfelt Congratulations to a lovely family.

Screenshot_20230109_120408_Instagram.jpg
 
Yeah, it does. I don’t know whether bullying was the spin but I’m sure it played a part. But I’m also pretty sure that his childhood must have been pretty unstable. The live in carers who were there to care for his mother but also for him, and care work being what is it, no one stays for long. He started smoking weed at the age of 11, which seems insanely young.
One wonders what his father must have been like. Chances are, he was better off not knowing him.

We've seen some truly retarded things in this thread, but hells bells this takes the fucking biscuit.

What kind of moron decides that it's acceptable to administer IV fluids and possibly prescription drugs to a heavily pregnant SMA patient with active D&V, knowing fuck all about their medical history?

What kind of heavily pregnant SMA patient with active D&V calls said moron instead of seeking proper medical care?
Someone who's been turned away by every other legitimate practitioner, I guess.
 
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