4 Kommentare

  1. Lopsided_Aeroplane-2 on

    Six years? Unless it was tablet form it’s not possible to make that mistake? There are nurses and ward sisters and phone appointments with oncologists and reappointing with surgeons for check ups every year. And information online and in pamphlets that the hospital gives out. And other patients. Did no one including her communicate with each other? Your white bloods are wiped out every time you have chemo and after six months ur red bloods are severely affected. You get tested every week for neutrophils. And every time a different person sees your notes. And you ask questions. All the time. I am struggling with this story TBH.

    BUT They’ve kept her alive for six years or more and with a brain tumour….

    I mean. Pretty miraculous. For quite a few cancers, let alone brain.

    Is anyone else experiencing more and more questions about this? And yes, I have had cancer; last year. So I’m not being a total jerk.

  2. BenniesForNothing on

    I struggle to believe there is negligence or ignorance at play here after the poor lass had six years over-treatment, another in the article… fourteen years! Surely this has to be wilful gross misconduct, I hope they get the answers for whats happened here.

  3. a_bone_to_pick on

    So it seems the stories around this suggest the consultant who prescribed it was giving it for far longer than guidelines recommend. Given this guy was a professor of oncology, one would reasonably assume his decision was based on highly expert opinion, even if it ran contrary to guidelines. Ultimately it’ll come down to whether someone could prove his decision making was improper, or if patients were not given appropriate councelling regarding side-effects.

  4. Wise-Reflection-7400 on

    Feels like it will be very hard for her to prove in court that they were unnecessary years. She’ll have to prove the counterfactual (that she would have been fine with just 6 months). Good luck with that!

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