Like I said...pic.twitter.com/7scQYRFlCW
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Replying to @Allyncondon @C7RKY
What would you change, if you could, about the investigation and outcomes of investigation? For me, it's about acknowledgement, accurate medical records, fair, equitable future care w/o discrimination. For you, is it about acknowledgement of failings, changes in medical practice?
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Replying to @kateheydonorg @C7RKY
For me it is about 7 Doctors from one unit in one Hospital lying and covering each other’s failings. They just feed off each other’s lies. For me it is about them finding out what is at the end of the path they thought why would put our family on. University Hospital Bristol
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Replying to @Allyncondon @C7RKY
This study is interesting, published at the end of Jan. Your baby son died from sepsis? (I think?). He looks like a beautiful baby in your shared pictures. Has the recent awareness campaign around sepsis helped? (Thankfully I've no experience re: sepsis) :https://discover.dc.nihr.ac.uk/portal/article/4000917/intravenous-antibiotics-administered-over-3-hours-are-linked-to-lower-death-rates-in-sepsis …
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Replying to @kateheydonorg @C7RKY
Thank you for asking but there is nothing that has helped Kate. How can anything help when Doctors leave a baby to die and then administer a drug days out of protocol causing him to collapse and then spend 3 years covering up their mess. The truth would be a start.
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Honesty helps, I agree. That's what we're all asking for, I think - for acknowledment where there has been none? In my case it's about closure, correct records, future care. For you, might honesty bring you some peace, closure around circumstances of the loss of your baby son?
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Replying to @kateheydonorg @Allyncondon
For me, honesty is far more than just a help here Kate. It's a basic foundation on which the entire doctor/patient relationship is built. Without honesty, there can be no trust. I think that's why people often find the cover up more abhorrent than the error it's designed to hide.
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This is the issue for me. I came to no actual harm, unlike others here, but the lies leave me with no trust, and anticipating reprisals.
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I'm in a similar boat. I'm not the one who's suffered any harm - it's been those around me who've paid the price. But the lies destroyed my trust just as much as theirs. Reprisals I'm mindful of, but so far it seems clinicians are more keen to avoid making errors when I'm around.
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"Reprisals I'm mindful of" You should be.
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Perhaps so. I knew what I was taking on though and made the conscious decision to do so anyway. I just wasn't prepared to allow what I'd found going on to continue, regardless of the personal consequences of stopping it. It crossed a line for me.
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Honesty is a huge deal. It’s unanticipated how hard it is to get honest records, information sharing from or between medical professionals. I have no doubt that poor data systems, coupled with numerous patients to remember, confused note taking, high staff turnover, plays a part.
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Replying to @kateheydonorg @C7RKY and
Some of the systems are appalling. Eg. not all GP practices use compatible software systems; can’t transfer data electronically above certain file sizes, are not allowed to use memory sticks, allegedly. Even prescriptions; use 3 keyword search max., results ordered by frequently.
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End of conversation
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