Film, Media & TV0 min ago
Update on my husbands DVT
24 Answers
Hubby was transferred to the London hospital on Wednesday and had surgery on Friday.
Clot was in his lower abdomen and was by all accounts massive and causing blockage in vein from groin to knee.
Not entirely sure what they did but they went in through the back of his knee and put a stent into his abdomen and some medicine into the vein.
When I saw him yesterday his leg was aleady a little less swollen and Doctor reckons it should be a lot better by tomorrow. So hopefully he can come home soon.
Thank you for all your kind wishes during the last week - even cyber wishes are comforting. Will let you all know when he is home.
Clot was in his lower abdomen and was by all accounts massive and causing blockage in vein from groin to knee.
Not entirely sure what they did but they went in through the back of his knee and put a stent into his abdomen and some medicine into the vein.
When I saw him yesterday his leg was aleady a little less swollen and Doctor reckons it should be a lot better by tomorrow. So hopefully he can come home soon.
Thank you for all your kind wishes during the last week - even cyber wishes are comforting. Will let you all know when he is home.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Chickadee that is good news! I am glad he is safe.
Are they calling it the Royal London now? When I was a student there (Occupational Therapy clinical placement) nearly 40 years ago, it was just called The London. The OT bulk store was right at the top of the building actually behind the clock face on the facade. Lucky the student who drew the job of topping up the satellite stores, getting to spend the day wandering through the hidden places of the Hospital.
Are they calling it the Royal London now? When I was a student there (Occupational Therapy clinical placement) nearly 40 years ago, it was just called The London. The OT bulk store was right at the top of the building actually behind the clock face on the facade. Lucky the student who drew the job of topping up the satellite stores, getting to spend the day wandering through the hidden places of the Hospital.
No Sqad, I was only there for 6 weeks. We had 3 month placements and I did 6 weeks there and six week down the road at the Bethnal Green Hospital. That was an eye opener....many many homeless people with varying addictions. There was a daily report on which wards were closed to non ward staff (Ot's, physios, the almoner etcetera) for fumigation. The medical records department was overrun with rats and mice while I was there so some bright spark had the idea of luring in the feral cats which lived in the grounds....replacing the rats and mice with fleas and ticks!
It was an amazing experience. The nurses still wore starched caps with lace cuffs and cap tails on high days and holidays. Ward sisters were known by the name of their ward and were always addressed as "sister so and so" and students had to seek out the senior nurse on duty and ask permission to enter the ward and see patients at every ward visit.
...sorry, thread hijack
It was an amazing experience. The nurses still wore starched caps with lace cuffs and cap tails on high days and holidays. Ward sisters were known by the name of their ward and were always addressed as "sister so and so" and students had to seek out the senior nurse on duty and ask permission to enter the ward and see patients at every ward visit.
...sorry, thread hijack
woofgang.......LOL
Half way through my medical training, I was short of money and had to find some night work. I applied for and was appointed "Ward Orderly" on nights at Bethnal Green Hospital and it was fabulous. The nurses knew that I was a med student from the London, so after giving out the night drinks to the patients, they tucked me up in a chair in front of a roaring fire which was in the ward LOL. I was awakened at Night Sister`s round, went back to sleep again...gave out the breakfasts in the morning and then during the day back to the studies at the London.
Funny....wit all the squalor that you have mentioned, MRSA was never a problem...or even identified. Discipline was the order of the day and respect.
Oh! for a bit of that in the NHS now.
Half way through my medical training, I was short of money and had to find some night work. I applied for and was appointed "Ward Orderly" on nights at Bethnal Green Hospital and it was fabulous. The nurses knew that I was a med student from the London, so after giving out the night drinks to the patients, they tucked me up in a chair in front of a roaring fire which was in the ward LOL. I was awakened at Night Sister`s round, went back to sleep again...gave out the breakfasts in the morning and then during the day back to the studies at the London.
Funny....wit all the squalor that you have mentioned, MRSA was never a problem...or even identified. Discipline was the order of the day and respect.
Oh! for a bit of that in the NHS now.
There were fleas, lice and ticks, but I don't remember dirt as such...certainly toilets and bathrooms were spotless and patients, even the poor damaged souls at Bethnal Green, wouldn't have dreamed of doing what i saw recently in a hospital, where a patient ate a cake and a banana and dropped the cake paper and skin on the floor....24 hours later they were still there :-(
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