Slimy doctors

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SLH
SLH Member Posts: 566
edited June 2014 in Bonded by Breast Cancer

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  • SLH
    SLH Member Posts: 566
    edited April 2008

    Have you had an experience with a slimy doctor? To protect the guilty, you don't have to use real names.

    This, of course, doesn't have the level of satisfaction that winning a big, fat lawsuit would give you, but at least you can talk about it and we'll understand.

  • bluewillow
    bluewillow Member Posts: 779
    edited April 2008

    Hi SLH,

    Well, I don't know about "slimy", but my radiation oncologist is a pure 100 percent jerk with no manners or personality whatsoever.  I do know that he has an excellent reputation for being a very competent and skillful oncologist, and his office staff and rads technicians are absolutely wonderful, so that is really what matters.  But gosh, I just wish he was NICE!!!!!!  And everyone that I have talked to feels the same as I do-- his staff, other patients, etc.  Do doctors not have to go through "nice" training in med school?

    My general practitioner, on the other hand, is a very nice guy, but he scared the daylights out of me one time when he did an EKG on me in his office.  He told me I had suffered a previous heart attack.  Well, I immediately went to a cardiologist, had echo/treadmill stress tests, holter monitors, etc., and the cardio said absolutely no, I had not had a heart attack, ever.  I haven't been back to my GP because needless to say, I'll never trust him again.

    I'm sure there are much worse cases out there, unfortunately.  Hopefully there are more good docs than bad ones.

    Mary Jo

  • SLH
    SLH Member Posts: 566
    edited April 2008

    When I was 19 and a freshman in college, I decided to go to a gynecologist for the first time to get a "female" exam, and start on the pill.  I had always gone to the family dr, so this was a first-time meeting.

    During the pelvic exam, Dr X had his nurse in the room.  Then they both left while I was putting my clothes back on, but Dr X came back to give me the prescription and talk about the pill.

    He immediately came over to me, wrapped his arms around me, and gave me a big, long, wet French kiss!!!  I was shocked, and so naive that I didn't say anything.  I didn't tell anybody about it, and kind of felt guilty that I had done something to lead him to do it.

    But a year later, I was working as a hostess for a nice restaurant, where he was a regular customer.  After I had seated Dr X and his wife, one of the waitresses told me he had done the same thing to her and one of her friends!

    I never reported him, or told anybody else, and now he's dead.  But I encourage my daughter to go to female gynecologists.

    sally 

  • SLH
    SLH Member Posts: 566
    edited April 2008

    Since I started this conversation, I'll go first.

    When I was 19 and a freshman in college, I decided to go to a gynecologist for the first time to get a "female" exam, and start on the pill.  I had always gone to the family dr, so this was a first-time meeting.

    During the pelvic exam, Dr X had his nurse in the room.  Then they both left while I was putting my clothes back on, but Dr X came back to give me the prescription and talk about the pill.

    He immediately came over to me, wrapped his arms around me, and gave me a big, long, wet French kiss!!!  I was shocked, and so naive that I didn't say anything.  I didn't tell anybody about it, and kind of felt guilty that I had done something to lead him to do it.

    But a year later, I was working as a hostess for a nice restaurant, where he was a regular customer.  After I had seated Dr X and his wife, one of the waitresses told me he had done the same thing to her and one of her friends!

    I never reported him, or told anybody else, and now he's dead.  But I encourage my daughter to go to female gynecologists.

    sally 

  • bluewillow
    bluewillow Member Posts: 779
    edited April 2008

    Oh My, Sally!  You did have a slimy doctor!  That was a lawsuit waiting to happen!  I had something similar happen to me when I was married and in my 20s, except that the dr. was asking very personal questions about my sex life and me being naive too, I answered him at first, but then figured out that wasn't what a dr. was supposed to do, so I told him to stop.  He died a couple of years later of a brain tumor.  I finally told my mom and she said one of her friends said he'd done the same to her!  CREEPS!

    MJ

  • gsg
    gsg Member Posts: 3,386
    edited April 2008

    When the general surgeon put in my port, she operated on the wrong side...and I immediately developed a blood clot...probably because I had just had an SNB on that side a few days prior.  You would have thought my bright blue bewbie leftover from the SNB might have been a clue that the port belonged on the other side.  When I opened my eyes in recovery, I looked down and said, "They operated on the wrong side."  The room went quiet and nobody would talk to me.

     I asked the surgeon what happened and she told me she hadn't read the notes first and the nurses forgot to mark the side it was supposed to go on.  After the clot developed all the way up into my jugular (I looked like a puffer fish)...she wouldn't return my calls.  My breast surgeon's office finally got her (at first she said to them, why are you calling me?)...but she came down to the emergency room, where she "talked down" to my mother.  She also told me a blood clot is no big deal.

      

    They had to change my treatment plan as a result and I had to stay on coumadin from April through December of that year.  Twice I had to give myself shots in the stomach for a few days.   They also had to remove my port at the time of lumpectomy...instead of leaving it in a while in case of a recurrence.

    I understand mistakes are made...but I was really taken aback by her attitude.  At one point, I said to her, "I'm not going to sue," and she laughed.  I should have, but didn't have the energy for it.

  • SLH
    SLH Member Posts: 566
    edited April 2008

    Wow, gsg.  That was a serious, life-threatening boo-boo on her part.  It seems like drs would apologize, but then they would appear to accept responsibility.

    sally 

  • gsg
    gsg Member Posts: 3,386
    edited April 2008

    not only didn't she apologize, she acted like we were bothering her.

    i was surprised she admitted she hadn't read her notes prior to surgery.  i asked her when she realized she had operated on the wrong side, and she said as she was sewing me up.  when the nurse from the hospital called me the day after surgery to see how i was doing, i told her about them operating on the wrong side...she was appalled she hadn't been informed of it...she was evidently head nurse for that area.  told me she was going to investigate and call me back..but i never heard another word from the hospital.  i guess they decided to take a wait and see attitude as to whether i was going to sue.

    in fairness, i have to add all other experiences at that hospital were wonderful and i wouldn't want to be hospitalized anywhere else.

  • Harley44
    Harley44 Member Posts: 5,446
    edited April 2008

    WOW, gsg!!  That is just HORRIBLE!

    I only had one experience like yours, SLH...  I was having some bladder issues, and I was referred to a uro-gynecologist.  I was only 40 y.o., or so.  When I got to his office, he was standing outside, in the hallway.  He was SO HAPPY to see me!  I guess since most women are alot older when they start to have bladder issues. 

    So, he told me to take off my clothes and sit in this really uncomfortable chair.  He comes in and STICKS HIS WHOLE HAND UP INSIDE ME!   GROSS!!  I don't think he even wore a glove!  He just kept on reaching inside me, and I was getting VERY UNCOMFORTABLE!  I kind of 'pushed' him out...well, I tried to...  When he FINALLY finished, he told me to get dressed and meet him in his office.  What a creep!  When I got back in his office, he said "wow, you sure have good muscle control!"  What a jerk!  I also will only see female drs. for this sort of thing... and any regular gyn exams...

    BTW, there was a nurse there, but she was standing ALL THE WAY in the back of the room, and I am sure he could have raped me, and she wouldn't have seen anything.

    HARLEY

  • pamfenton
    pamfenton Member Posts: 344
    edited April 2008

    When my PS was getting ready to do my nipples, my husband, his skinny nurse (who I am pretty sure he was sleeping with) and I were in the room. I had no shirt on of course.  We wanted to give some input on where they would be so they would not be pointing skyward seing as I was 52.   Thought that might make the freaky implnts look more real.  He told me to get a new PS.  I was so desperate to get the whole thing done I agreed to where he wanted to put them (part 2 coming)

  • pamfenton
    pamfenton Member Posts: 344
    edited April 2008

    He starts marking on me and says, "It's not like any onei s going to looking at these close up and with the lights on".  I said, "With due respect Dr. Asshole, that is the goal here."   He was furious.  ( did not really call him Dr. A-hole)  He said, I don't care if you do it upside down or with chickens.  Hell, I'll put them on your back if you want." (part 3 coming)

  • pamfenton
    pamfenton Member Posts: 344
    edited April 2008

    Then he says he is too upset to do the surgery, goes out of the room, my husband leaves because he is going to take a swing at him and knows he will mess up me getting thru this.  Finally he comes back in.  I still have no shirt on.  He sits in his chair sniffling, wiping his very dry eyes.  I had to beg him to do it.  It was my one and only out of body experience. My out of body head was thinking, "You total and complete ass.  Just say what he wants so he will do it."  My inner body head was saying ridiculous things like, "You're a Christian man aren't you? Please do not abandon me!   etc"

    So the nipples point north, I reported him to OR board of med examiners, and not sure what they did to him.  This is only one of a series of weird stuff. And now I am paying a fortune to have it done right.

  • kiki56235
    kiki56235 Member Posts: 94
    edited April 2008

    OMG I can't believe the number of a$$h*le doctors out there!

    When I was 18 I went to an allergy doc. for allergy testing.  I had to take my top off because they did the scratches on my back.  After the doc. looked at my back he then decided to do a "breast exam" more like he felt me up.  When I asked why he had to check my breasts he said that allergies can show up as lumps in your breast.  Of course I now know that is bull.  What a perv!!

  • SLH
    SLH Member Posts: 566
    edited April 2008

    The school of hard knocks...Slimy doctors not only screw you over, but leave you questioning yourself, like 'why didn't I stand up for myself?!'  Or, 'what I should have said...'

    I think part of it is that we are raised to think doctors are a glorified bunch.  And when they do something outrageous, we're caught off-guard.  We want them to be flawless. 

    Well, Pam, you should be getting great work at NOLA.  So many women have such great results.

    BTW, Kiki, you still look 18!

    sally 

  • kiki56235
    kiki56235 Member Posts: 94
    edited April 2008

    Sally, that's my 40th bday pic (4 mos. before dx).  Thanks for the compliment, from far away you can't see the wrinkles!! LOL

    Isn't it the truth about seeing docs as some higher power.  For me too I was raised that you don't question authority.  I think the younger people today aren't quite that blind to the "power" that others have over them.

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