Note that you will never find me defending the mask. Ever since Day 1, I have professed masks don't do a damn thing UNLESS we were all wearing proper surgical masks, which will never happen.
wbt5845 said:
Note that you will never find me defending the mask. Ever since Day 1, I have professed masks don't do a damn thing UNLESS we were all wearing proper surgical masks, which will never happen.
I won't elaborate anymore that my other post because one of the docs that ended up treating my son is an Ag, so I'm not going to out the doc who effed up just incase that doc posts on TA. Let's just compare it to going in to get a few stitches on a finger and you wind up losing your hand a couple weeks later. Something that shouldn't have happened happened, and it was because corners were cut and what the doc did was not within the standards of care.Proposition Joe said:
There's a difference between thinking doctors are infallible and trusting doctors.
Just because someone is extremely educated on a subject does not mean they are always going to be correct. If you don't believe a diagnosis is sound and you fail to look for a second opinion, well that's on you.
Someone who is extremely educated on a subject is going to be listened to a whole lot more often than just someone who says "oh yeah well sometimes they are wrong!".
So to extend your (very unfortunate - sorry for your experience BTW) analogy - you're applying your (horrific to be sure) experience to the medical community at large - the number of stitches that are applied correctly each day notwithstanding?aTm2004 said:I won't elaborate anymore that my other post because one of the docs that ended up treating my son is an Ag, so I'm not going to out the doc who effed up just incase that doc posts on TA. Let's just compare it to going in to get a few stitches on a finger and you wind up losing your hand a couple weeks later. Something that shouldn't have happened happened, and it was because corners were cut and what the doc did was not within the standards of care.Proposition Joe said:
There's a difference between thinking doctors are infallible and trusting doctors.
Just because someone is extremely educated on a subject does not mean they are always going to be correct. If you don't believe a diagnosis is sound and you fail to look for a second opinion, well that's on you.
Someone who is extremely educated on a subject is going to be listened to a whole lot more often than just someone who says "oh yeah well sometimes they are wrong!".
So, unless you're privy to the facts, kindly STFU and shove the "well that's on you" opinion you know where.
aTm2004 said:I won't elaborate anymore that my other post because one of the docs that ended up treating my son is an Ag, so I'm not going to out the doc who effed up just incase that doc posts on TA. Let's just compare it to going in to get a few stitches on a finger and you wind up losing your hand a couple weeks later. Something that shouldn't have happened happened, and it was because corners were cut and what the doc did was not within the standards of care.Proposition Joe said:
There's a difference between thinking doctors are infallible and trusting doctors.
Just because someone is extremely educated on a subject does not mean they are always going to be correct. If you don't believe a diagnosis is sound and you fail to look for a second opinion, well that's on you.
Someone who is extremely educated on a subject is going to be listened to a whole lot more often than just someone who says "oh yeah well sometimes they are wrong!".
So, unless you're privy to the facts, kindly STFU and shove the "well that's on you" opinion you know where.
80% of American adults have now received at least one shot. Are you arguing that the poor doctors have somehow convinced the good doctors, AND the vast majority of Americans to cover for their poor practices? Would that not make all the "good" doctors bad? What about all the other smart American adults in the 80%? Are they all so easily swayed?aTm2004 said:
Before this, like many people, I held doctors in high regards. Not anymore. They're just another person with a different job than me. Just like every profession, be it a police officer, accountant, plumber, etc, they all fall on a bell curve. To the right, you have the great ones. To the left, you have the awful ones. And the middle is filled with the majority, who are good at their jobs.
The issue is the ones in the middle and to the right cover for the ones on the left. It was amazing to see it happen in real life...just as the attorney said it would.
And with COVID, IMO, the ones on the left side of the curve seem to be the ones in power and the ones making the decisions, and the medical community has rallied around them just the same. The ones that speak up or don't buy into it are cast aside and put their careers and earnings at risk.
Doug Ross said:
I 100% believe that seeking a second opinion when you don't feel comfortable with the recommendations of first doctor, is a good idea. But the blanket statement of we don't trust doctors by aggierouge is laughable. It would be like if I said all pilots are awful and then getting on a plane to Hawaii.
Yes, but my brother's wife's cousin's assistant pastor went in for a vasectomy and ended up getting nicked and they had to deflate one of his testicles, so....coolerguy12 said:
You guys see the worst of the worst and extrapolate it out to every one. It's fear mongering
Quote:
If I take my car into a mechanic and he says it needs an engine rebuild and I really don't think it does, but let him do it without taking it to another mechanic... A week later when the car takes a dump am I going to believe the mechanic screwed up? Yes.
Quote:
It sounds more like due to your incredibly sad experience that you've developed a bias against doctors and assumption that they all most be "covering for" one another. That's completely understandable, but it is a bias just like the ones you point out from those involved in the medical profession.
First of all, you don't respect my opinion or you wouldn't make a second post calling me out saying it's laughable.Doug Ross said:I respect your opinion, granted I disagree. But if you have little to no faith in doctors, the next time you break a bone, have a stroke, heart attack, can't breath because of COVID-19, involved in a motor accident, or catch a case of the clap, don't come to the ER, because myself and the other EM docs on this board obviously don't know wtf we are talking about. Working in DFW for 4 years, I've individually treated a minimum of 500 covid patients at this point in my life, (the number is probably closer to 750-800 but I don't feel like doing the math right now). I've probably admitted 200 patients to the hospital? Of those 200 aprox 8 were vaccinated, and 7 of those 8 were on immunosuppressive treatment for renal/hepatic transplant. I see aprox 35 patients in a ER shift and I HAVE NEVER ADMITTED ONE PATIENT TO THE HOSPITAL FOR A VACCINE REACTION. Yes there are side effects to the vaccine, and they are grossly minor reactions if any. However, the major potential side effect to not getting it, is me sedating/paralyzing you so I can shove a piece of plastic down your trachea in the hopes that one day you can breath again on your own. But yea once again, if you don't trust us, I guess don't come to the emergency department when you need us, granted no matter what you think of us, you will always receive care in our medical expertise....emergently saving peoples lives.aggierogue said:Wow. This is why I am putting less and less faith in doctors. You don't have all the answers. You think b/c you are a physician you can just dismiss people's symptoms and claim they are either making these stories up or it's all in their head.Dr. Not Yet Dr. Ag said:
That video is the embodiment of what is wrong with how layman interpret VAERS reporting and why it should be taken with a gigantic grain of salt. There is no physiologic mechanism that could possibly explain her developing non-allergic reaction symptoms in the minutes following vaccine injection. Autoimmune conditions develop days to a few weeks after vaccine administration.
Her symptoms and work up are also inconsistent with any known auto-immune condition like MS, transverse myelitis, and Guillan Barre. Many of her symptoms are seen with individuals with psychosomatic issues (blurred vision, tingling, generalized weakness). She undoubtedly had lumbar punctures and multiple MRIs, all of which came back normal. She was seen 3 times in an ER and symptoms were non-concerning enough that she was discharged 3 times.
The NIH supposedly diagnosing her "with a bunch of vaccine caused injuries" is incredibly vague and overall meaningless. Likely what happened is she went over there, they ran a bunch of tests, all of them came back negative and rather than tell her everything came back negative, they threw her a bone by stating some of these symptoms might have been caused by the vaccine to validate her already formed opinion.
Neuro conditions (like West Nile virus or Guillan Barre) causing someone to be wheelchair/bed bound for months typically leads to months of formal rehab to regain strength, which based on other sources doesn't sound like it that ever happened. Needless to say, that story all sounds incredibly suspect, and again, despite thousands supposedly developing issues like this, myself and every other physician I know have yet to see this in any of their patients. In fact, the only place we are hearing of these issues is in the media who all seem to be highlighting incredibly suspect cases in individuals with no objective signs of organic disease. So even if this individuals symptoms were legitimately caused by the vaccine, they are exceptionally rare on many orders of magnitude.
No one is claiming that vaccine injury or death isn't rare. People are saying there are vaccine injuries and death. Some of you want to state with certainty that the vaccines are safe. There are Aggies on this site who have claimed vaccine injury and their lives changed. There are many people in the Vaccine Injury Hearing posted in this thread. One of my brother's coworkers had a heart attack and died the day after he was vaccinated. He was in his early fifties.
But b/c you haven't recognized an injury in your practice must mean they don't exist right? Nevermind the fact that many of these people are sent home without answers before anyone even gives them a real clinical checkup.
Perhaps listen to the fact that the vaccine trials and their apps have no options to share negative symptoms other than their selective options. Some weren't even allowed to continue their trials after first doses b/c they had adverse effects beyond the norm and were dismissed and not allowed to be part of the studies.
Fauci and Walensky are politicians under the guise of being a doctor, IMO. Unfortunately, our political leaders and leaders of our medical associations follow everything they say, which is vaccinate vaccinate vaccinate.Wakesurfer817 said:80% of American adults have now received at least one shot. Are you arguing that the poor doctors have somehow convinced the good doctors, AND the vast majority of Americans to cover for their poor practices? Would that not make all the "good" doctors bad? What about all the other smart American adults in the 80%? Are they all so easily swayed?aTm2004 said:
Before this, like many people, I held doctors in high regards. Not anymore. They're just another person with a different job than me. Just like every profession, be it a police officer, accountant, plumber, etc, they all fall on a bell curve. To the right, you have the great ones. To the left, you have the awful ones. And the middle is filled with the majority, who are good at their jobs.
The issue is the ones in the middle and to the right cover for the ones on the left. It was amazing to see it happen in real life...just as the attorney said it would.
And with COVID, IMO, the ones on the left side of the curve seem to be the ones in power and the ones making the decisions, and the medical community has rallied around them just the same. The ones that speak up or don't buy into it are cast aside and put their careers and earnings at risk.
Seems like a stretch to me.
Again, never said I don't trust them. Their trust is earned. They should not be treated any different than anyone else, but in society, we give them a lot of unearned respect and trust because of their status.Proposition Joe said:
Caution and skepticism, yes. Wholesale "not trusting them", no.
Try going after one and your view will change.Quote:
But if I'm forced to choose between believing there's an enormous cover-up and "backside covering" of doctors "protecting their own" or that doctors that I I have known personally for decades are giving me their honest, educated thoughts on a subject... I'm gonna choose the latter.
aTm2004 said:Fauci and Walensky are politicians under the guise of being a doctor, IMO. Unfortunately, our political leaders and leaders of our medical associations follow everything they say, which is vaccinate vaccinate vaccinate.Wakesurfer817 said:80% of American adults have now received at least one shot. Are you arguing that the poor doctors have somehow convinced the good doctors, AND the vast majority of Americans to cover for their poor practices? Would that not make all the "good" doctors bad? What about all the other smart American adults in the 80%? Are they all so easily swayed?aTm2004 said:
Before this, like many people, I held doctors in high regards. Not anymore. They're just another person with a different job than me. Just like every profession, be it a police officer, accountant, plumber, etc, they all fall on a bell curve. To the right, you have the great ones. To the left, you have the awful ones. And the middle is filled with the majority, who are good at their jobs.
The issue is the ones in the middle and to the right cover for the ones on the left. It was amazing to see it happen in real life...just as the attorney said it would.
And with COVID, IMO, the ones on the left side of the curve seem to be the ones in power and the ones making the decisions, and the medical community has rallied around them just the same. The ones that speak up or don't buy into it are cast aside and put their careers and earnings at risk.
Seems like a stretch to me.
They push this under threats, which is why many are silent and toe the line.
LA Times: A warning to doctors - spreading COVID misinformation could cost you your license
MSN: Maine suspends doctor's license for allegedly spreading COVID-19 misinformation
MSN: In Mississippi, doctors who spread misinformation about COVID could lose their license
I'm not against the vaccine. I believe they help people who truly need them. I do not support a one size fits all approach that is being taken. Also, did you not wonder why early on any time a treatment option was brought up, it was immediately dismissed? Nobody knew what worked at the time, but by God they knew what didn't. Now that there's a vaccine, it's the only solution it seems.
Quote:
But if I'm forced to choose between believing there's an enormous cover-up and "backside covering" of doctors "protecting their own" or that doctors that I have known personally for decades are giving me their honest, educated thoughts on a subject... I'm gonna choose the latter.
Now that doesn't mean their honest, educated thoughts on a subject will turn out to be correct. But like most things in life we defer to those that are actually educated on the subject, not anecdotal evidence and message forums full of people talking about things that they have zero formal education on.
aTm2004 said:
Ahh, the facts that Fauci, the CDC, and the government say are the facts. Yeah, those facts.
We just had a doctor in Houston lose privileges at a major hospital ins Houston for not being against the vaccines, but believing one should be able to choose whether or not they need the vaccine. Can't have that kind of misinformation going on at Houston Methodist!
That's not why she lost her privileges? You sure?Proposition Joe said:aTm2004 said:
Ahh, the facts that Fauci, the CDC, and the government say are the facts. Yeah, those facts.
We just had a doctor in Houston lose privileges at a major hospital ins Houston for not being against the vaccines, but believing one should be able to choose whether or not they need the vaccine. Can't have that kind of misinformation going on at Houston Methodist!
That is not why she lost privileges and to frame it like that shows the motivation in your posts (as does your posting history).
That's not to say she deserved to lose her privileges -- one can absolutely debate that if they wish. But when you purposely leave out prudent facts it kind of makes it very easy to see your previously mentioned bias.
We can all do better, but you are just contributing to the problem with posts like that.
Quote:
Houston Methodist has suspended the privileges of a local doctor the hospital said was spreading dangerous misinformation about COVID-19 treatments.
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"The issues with Vaccines and ivermectin really go against patient autonomy and their right to choose their treatment," Dr. Bowden said.
Dr. Bowden told KPRC she feels some people are even being discriminated against because they have not been vaccinated.
"That led me to send out an email that I was going to prioritize seeing the unvaccinated," Bowden said.
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In a series of tweets the hospital said:
"Dr. Mary Bowden, who recently joined the medical staff at Houston Methodist Hospital, is using her social media accounts to express her personal and political opinions about the COVID-19 vaccine and treatments.
These opinions, which are harmful to the community, do not reflect reliable medical evidence or the values of Houston Methodist, where we have treated more than 25,000 COVID-19 inpatients, and where all our employees and physicians are vaccinated to protect our patients.
Quote:
Dr. Bowden has gone public saying that vaccine mandates are wrong and shared about her battle to give her patients ivermectin, a controversial drug hailed as a treatment for COVID by some. Houston Methodist says Dr. Bowden is "…spreading dangerous misinformation which is not based in science."
OH NOES!! Not a personal opinion. By golly, we can't have that. It's almost as if a 2nd opinion isn't needed anymore, isn't it?Quote:
"Dr. Mary Bowden, who recently joined the medical staff at Houston Methodist Hospital, is using her social media accounts to express her personal and political opinions about the COVID-19 vaccine and treatments," Houston Methodist said in a statement. "These opinions, which are harmful to the community, do not reflect reliable medical evidence or the values of Houston Methodist, where we have treated more than 25,000 COVID-19 inpatients, and where all our employees and physicians are vaccinated to protect our patients."
coolerguy12 said:
I get what you're saying. I think Covid deniers are crazy and doing harm to themselves and others. It's very real and has killed a lot of people. How many it has killed is up for debate but I digress. It's problematic that for almost 2 years no one wants to talk about getting in shape and eating right as a way to fight this thing. No one wants to talk about natural immunity being equal to or better than a shot. Why is the government pushing shots so hard and not taking natural immunity into account at all? It's stuff like this that causes all sorts of doubt. If they aren't honest about the obvious stuff what else are they lying about?
NoProposition Joe said:
Your quick parsing and quoting of a half-dozen different sources continues to show your stripes.
Did she claim at any time that her hospital employer was not treating unvaccinated patients?
A simple yes or no.
No added text, just a yes or a no.
If you can't do that, then it's clear you aren't coming from an honest position.
It not like she said she refused to treat vaccinated people... oh wait.Proposition Joe said:aTm2004 said:
Ahh, the facts that Fauci, the CDC, and the government say are the facts. Yeah, those facts.
We just had a doctor in Houston lose privileges at a major hospital ins Houston for not being against the vaccines, but believing one should be able to choose whether or not they need the vaccine. Can't have that kind of misinformation going on at Houston Methodist!
That is not why she lost privileges and to frame it like that shows the motivation in your posts (as does your posting history).
That's not to say she deserved to lose her privileges -- one can absolutely debate that if they wish. But when you purposely leave out prudent facts it kind of makes it very easy to see your previously mentioned bias.
We can all do better, but you are just contributing to the problem with posts like that.
aTm2004 said:
Was she suspended for not toeing the vaccination line? A simple yes or no. If no, what do you feel is the reason why?
Where did she say she refused to treat vaccinated people? I may have missed it, but I did listen to her interview on Michael Berry's show and she never mentioned she refuses to treat vaccinated people.Another Doug said:It not like she said she refused to treat vaccinated people... oh wait.Proposition Joe said:aTm2004 said:
Ahh, the facts that Fauci, the CDC, and the government say are the facts. Yeah, those facts.
We just had a doctor in Houston lose privileges at a major hospital ins Houston for not being against the vaccines, but believing one should be able to choose whether or not they need the vaccine. Can't have that kind of misinformation going on at Houston Methodist!
That is not why she lost privileges and to frame it like that shows the motivation in your posts (as does your posting history).
That's not to say she deserved to lose her privileges -- one can absolutely debate that if they wish. But when you purposely leave out prudent facts it kind of makes it very easy to see your previously mentioned bias.
We can all do better, but you are just contributing to the problem with posts like that.
Do you have a link to the tweet?Proposition Joe said:aTm2004 said:
Was she suspended for not toeing the vaccination line? A simple yes or no. If no, what do you feel is the reason why?
No.
She was suspended for saying as an employee of a hospital that she would not be accepting any patients that were vaccinated.
Her exact tweet: "I've had it. Going forward, I will not accept any patients who have been vaccinated,"
So of course she was suspended.
You mean like this practice she started and runs?Quote:
Now, do I have any problem with her not toeing the vaccination line? Absolutely not. If she wants to start her own practice and do so, more power to her -- I'm sure she'll have a line around the corner... Which I'm fairly certain she realized.
But when you try and parse and re-frame things as she was suspended for "believing people should have a choice on whether they get vaccinated" then you show your stripes.
I’ve had it. Going forward, I will not accept any patients who have been vaccinated. I will continue to see established patients how have had the vaccine, but all new patients have to be unvaccinated.
— Mary Talley Bowden MD (@MdBreathe) November 5, 2021