I didn’t look. I’m not going to look. I will settle for reading the descriptions and reactions to follow, I’m sure. But I am not going to look. No way.
I didn’t look. I’m not going to look. I will settle for reading the descriptions and reactions to follow, I’m sure. But I am not going to look. No way.
I’m hoping to get into this line of work, so I was pretty well braced for what was there. YMMV, but it wasn’t all that bad (I’ve seen worse). Pus IVa was fascinating; one tends to think of pus as a liquid (the patient didn’t like it though, that’s for sure). I didn’t read the comments past the first page, but I’m damned curious as to just what caused those abscesses. What’s especially intriguing and disturbing at the same time is just how MUCH of that action there was. I couldn’t help but wince on the patient’s behalf. Yikes.
Depends on your definition of the word ‘great’. I remember reading a series of novels that fictionalized trench warfare during WWI (I think the novels revolved around the real-life soldier-poet Wilfrid Owen). In the story, a soldier falls onto a rotting corpse and gets a mouthful of putrid flesh. Now, whatever he tries to eat tastes like rotting flesh, so he just kind of wastes away. Certainly an effective diet plan, but maybe not a great one.
It made me feel better about working in the hospital. Also, now I want to help third world hospitals and buy the book the video poster recommended. Way less alarming then a zit thread.
That’s the one. But I might have lied about the Wilfrid Owen part; the story might have involved Siegfried Sassoon instead. One of those poet chappies.
I think the person (physician?) who is posting these is smart. He or she is probably raising awareness of the distress of these patients and the need for improved care. If was just another charity asking for money it would be easy to tune out. I wonder how some of these patients survived to this point. I wonder how they are healing.