Doctors Q&A - General-Health-Care.com
Just know at the time I was 14, I be with my Mother, Father, and Grandma. I go to the emergency room; later to find out I have appendicitis, I understood the routine question, "Are you on any medication?", "Any allergies?", things like that. The first time he asked me, mind you to the fore of the people above; "Have you achieve any sexual activity?" I clearly, unhesitatingly said no. They finish the question. About 30 mins later after they prep me, again same interview, I gave them impossible to tell apart answer the same channel. About whole another hour; This hospital be packed, another Dr., womanly this time, asked me the same quiz, I had gotten frustrated this time because I'm within pain the the lone thing you own to ask me is that; so again I answered "No, I haven't." Make a longer story short, the same jist of doctors asked me that quiz about a total of 9 times where on earth they only asked the other routine question about 3 times. Am I simply paranoid or did they think I be lying?
Ankle hurts from running should I be in motion see a doctor?
I've been running inside on a regular basis for more or less 3 months, and recently started training outside for 2 weeks- and my ankle started to have a mild stomach-ache when my right foot comes off the ground. I didn't think much of it until the 3rd daytime (of mild pain) I ran a bit too much and the pain be too sharp I had to quit running. It's been 8 days (of no running also) and at hand is still a slight swelling around both sides of my ankle and I have to limp when I am walking. I can rotate my ankle contained by all direction without agony. No bruising either. It only hurts when I own my weight on it and my foot bends to lift rotten the ground. The pain seems to be surrounded by the bottom of the ankle bone. There was no definite "moment" where on earth I think a normal sprain would have- it be just gradual pain. Should I stir see a doctor? If so would a general physician/family doctor be the person to move about to?
Ankle mishap: Should I see the doctor?
Yesterday, I got up to do something, and my foot was asleep for have sat on it for so long. When I went to stroll, I landed on my foot wrong. The bottom of my left foot be facing my right foot, it twisted, and then I fell down on top of it. I hear a loud 'POP'. Now, at first, I couldn't feel anything because my foot was still numb. When I finally get my feeling back (fifteen minutes latter, longer than usual), my foot was only slightly swollen and I didn't enjoy a lot of pain. As the darkness wore on, however, it began to hurt worse (mainly this is due to the fact that I be, like an idiot, walking around on it). Today, I had to work, and found myself completely incapable of walking on it. I can't stand on my toes or bear a normal step with my moved out foot. When I got home, I took off my shoe to find it really swollen. Now, I hold put ice on it, and am preparing to wrap it in gauze to tender it some support. I have to work tomorrow again and my job requires me to be on my foot all day, usually walking posterior and forth between register and shelves to put things away (things that can sometimes get quite unwieldy [up to 50lbs.]). Do you think I should see a doctor about my ankle? Do you reflect on the damage could be more extensive than I think it is? I'm not intuition a lot of pain, but it is irritating. Any guidance would be greatly appreciated. Thank you for taking the time to read this.
Any chance of spending smaller quantity 6yrs to become a doctor?
I'm currently a medic, any fast track courses, near pay/ grants available. Also travelling essential for me.
Any doctor or gp can pick this one up, only want your perspectve!
a GP's perspective? I know that asking what gp's think of patients is an impossible question to answer, but I am intrigued as to where on earth and how some generalizations come about, and would love your perspective. Doctors immediately treat women in particular more respectfully than twenty or more years ago, but still some attitudes remain. As a lenient, I have learned never to pinch certain symptoms to some of my past doctors, as they be misconstrued as psycholgocial, yet medically could have be very significant. I learnt never to complain of fatigue, lest depression be suggested, not to talk of chest pain, to hold on to quiet about menstrual problems, prevailing to a 15 year delay before self finally diagnosed with Endometriosis, to never say I be feeling down, despite having conditions which explanation me crippling pain. As a woman I always feel prejudged because of the comments I got, although I have never be diagnosed by a mental health professional as having any mental disorder. Is here a problem in how doctors perceive women? It has lead in my case to decades of my keeping muted about increasingly serious symptoms, because of the early responses. Now things enjoy got so serious I am unable to waddle without a cane. This have led to a whole tentative world of stereotypes. People shout at me like I am elderly or demented, or stare. Strangers ask me what happened to my leg resembling I owe them an explanation, and docors still fnd it necessary to comment on my age and sex etc. I would so like to of late relax in front of my GP, tell them I am down but not depressed, fatigued but because of stomach-ache and related problems, still suffering extensively from the effects of my Endometriosis and other conditions...and maybe this GP would listen and not juge. But I daren't. Past experience and any attempts at protest leading to futher derogatory comments on my transcript have silenced me, and made me fearful of taking the full story to my doctor. I still get chest twinge. I tell nobody. I was a year wager on admitted to hospital with it and an impressive ECG, and then an abnormal ring. But as I was not having a heart attack I be discharged and left to just carry on with things. Now I never mention chest pain to my doctor. I couldn't cope near the 'are you anxious, hysterical, depressed, frustrated..?' conversation. Unfair to him maybe, as he is one of the new equals of more professional patient pleasing types. I have muscle relaxants for another condition, and a short time ago treat it with that. And I am fatigued, beyond belief. And chronic pain and disability own led me to a kind of depression, but again never would I share this next to a GP. It is as if they do not see us as people, just stereotypes and even attention seekers. It is so far from the truth. I would similar to to know where this thinking comes from. I understand medication and doctors are in many ways closed contained by their world from their many years of training, and may not connect with those of us living other lives, but as professionals they come accross to plentiful of us patients as so strange, and without connection to the authenticity the rest of us live in, and so set in their conviction that they are other correct. I know how long it takes to train a GP, and wonder at what point this change happen. So often I witness humane if immature medical students starting out as perchance not the best but good hearted doctors, then somehow developing into registrars and consultants and GPs who enjoy lost touch with the essence of their profession. Is there some blemish in the system, the medical heirarchy? I really want to understand.
Any doctor or pharmacist--does arthritis medication Mobic help Restless Leg Syndrome?
any doctor over here ?
I had an misfortune 4 months ago on a two wheeler. Due to the head on crash(at around 40 km/hr) I get a very intricate jolt paticularly on my right shoulder due to the steering handle(I wasn't thrown past its sell-by date the vehicle but just get a jolt). But the pain subsided inside a month . But now the agony has started contained by the lower part of the right shoulder blade , next to a swelling . Also before this contained by one of my train journeys my shoulder blade pained as I have had to stretch it uncomfortably during my flight for 2hrs due to some reasons . What's the problem , any suggestions for a remedy ??
Any doctors in the house? I necessitate some assistance before I step to the doctor's office.?
I hold been sensation a bit different lately. It's been going on for over a month very soon... Could anyone tell me what these symptoms could tight? *Sad for no reason *Lost interest in many things I know I love to do (pics, sex, ect.) *Loss of appetite *Can sleep adjectives day long, getting up individual to use the restroom and drink water *Very fatigued, little or no energy *Hard to concentrate and becoming forgetfull. *Mood swings *Terrible headaches and adjectives over discomfort I am 25, don't smoke, don't do drugs, 5'1'', 125lbs. Thank you so much in mortgage.
Any Doctor's on here? What's the danger surrounded by taking Cocodamol if it's unprescribed?
If you're in a lot of headache and you can get your hand on someone elses prescription (they offer it to you), is nearby any danger is taking it?
Any knee doctors out in attendance that can tell me if my doctor is doing the right piece?
On the 3rd I twirled around and dislocated my knee panama. My doctor had an x-ray done and I've have an immobilizer on for the last 3 weeks. Now he say that I will need surgery, but he say that in proclaim to do the surgery I need to bend my leg. It's VERY aching, and I don't know if bending it may make it worse. He hasn't done an MRI but, which I thought he was supposed to do as soon as the swelling go down. He says it's a medial something femoral ligament scratch. I'm wondering, is it right that I should be bending this if it still seems to dislocate effortlessly? (I was in recent times sitting on my bed and it had the immobilizer on it and the knees cap popped inconsistent again twice. The doctor dissmissed it saying that that be next to immpossible, but I feel and saw it!) Shoudn't I have an MRI first to pinpoint the problem until that time trying to bend it? The knee panama still isn't in the "groove" it's supposed to be, the doctor said. So should I be moving it and taking the immobilizer stale? Help!
Any medical doctor or student can tell me, if a wound is stiched ,that module get swolled. it is conventional?
Anyone been to a doctor just now because of wetting the bed?
Or does anyone know anyone who has? What kind of things do they do to check you out, and what kinds of treatments do they bestow? I'm a young mature guy, in appropriate health, already know I don't enjoy diabetes, prostate issues, etc... just never completely get rid of this problem growing up, I don't know if it's my bladder, my sleep pattern, or what. It's not every darkness (usually I wake up contained by time to make it to the bathroom) but it happen often satisfactory to be really annoying! I've been to the doc for this abundant times before, as a child and young person, but the last time be years ago and nothing they did really help it to go away for honest (obviously)... just wondering if anyone have actually gotten any existing help from a doctor for this?
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