No I think it was for the original trial John. I remember being shocked at what I was reading, it covered the enalapril being given and the fact that Jack was haemorrhaging into his lungs. Will have another look.
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Replying to @lynn_laidlaw @C7RKY and
That ruling is from the GMC case. The criminal court transcript has never been published. The SI report is somewhere on the internet, last saw it published by
@doctorcaldwell1 reply 1 retweet 3 likes -
Replying to @katemasters67 @C7RKY and
Thanks Kate. On reflection I can’t remember exactly what it was I read but it certainly provided much more medical detail than I had read before. I remember being very shocked at the amount of failings in Jacks care.
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Replying to @lynn_laidlaw @katemasters67 and
For a number of doctors to be defending her actions, has me thinking that the is generally the level of acceptable practice & care. Why else would they be screaming "it could be me next"? We accept it as service users or die.
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Replying to @Janine00050361 @lynn_laidlaw and
If the doctors tweeting
#iamhadiza truly believe they’d have acted the same, we are stuffed.5 replies 4 retweets 11 likes -
Replying to @katemasters67 @Janine00050361 and
It seems clear that the child's collapse was a result of his mother's administering enalapril in direct opposition to the doctor's orders. A system which allows that to happen is tragically flawed. It is unrealistic and unfair to hold doctors accountable for systemic disasters.
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Replying to @galexandermd @katemasters67 and
You'll not find this to be a thread filled completely with participants who are likely to be inclined to be tolerant of any implication of parent blaming in this scenario - be mindful.
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Replying to @C7RKY @galexandermd and
If a parent gives a medication to a child in hospital almost for sure a Doctor has said at some point in time ‘Make sure he always takes it and never misses it and gets it on time’
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Replying to @doctorcaldwell @galexandermd and
Exactly. Even if that advice came from their GP before admission. This debate that went on for days previously. Patients/parents follow doctors' orders. But if nobody makes it clear to us that one doctor's opinion trumps another whilst we're in hospital, how do we know that?
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Replying to @C7RKY @doctorcaldwell and
Common sense would lead one to ask first. A child who is sick and in the hospital will have different medical needs than a healthy outpatient, and the hospitalist's orders at least in the U.S. are universally understood to overrule the GP's outpatient orders.
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We established quite clearly through open discussion previously that what appears obvious common sense to doctors, does not necessarily appear that way to patients. And if you want patients to behave a certain way, then it must be made clear.
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