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Re: NHS, Be afraid, be very afraid
I hope you are feeling better soon Jaysay :)
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Re: NHS, Be afraid, be very afraid
Glad you're feeling better.:)
They probably only sent you home because after so long, by law, they have to give you a bed bath, and those poor nurses probably couldn't face it.:D |
Re: NHS, Be afraid, be very afraid
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I would be surprised if many of the staff use the gel at the entrance way as they enter and leave the building as well. |
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:D |
Re: NHS, Be afraid, be very afraid
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It only takes a little lapse in concentration to kill yourself or someone else. 6 Months ago at our Londonish plant a contractor had a lapse of concentration, last thing I heard he was still in hospital trying to grow his skin back. |
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Re: NHS, Be afraid, be very afraid
Well I thought I'd just drag this thread back up again. I have just started on my 5th course of antibiotics to try and get rid of this HCAI, I'm actually pulling my hair out, and I ain't got a lot to start with, I just can't get shut. the latest tests came back from the path lab and its seems this infection is called pseudomonas aeruginosa, the names enough to give me the heebie jeebies. The only problem is, if this latest course of tabs don't work, its plan "B", intravenous anti-bios, but in hospital:(:(:( John is a very, very unhappy bunny.
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Re: NHS, Be afraid, be very afraid
John, this infection is extremely common......it can be present on the skin(even your own)......and is present in soil......it is an opportunistic organism, that means, when the good bacteria(the ones that live with you and cause you no harm at all) are killed off by antibiotic therapy(multiple antibiotic therapy in your case) these little blighters move in and occupy the places that have been vacated by your now dead 'good bacteria'.
I hope the planned treatment works and that they do not have to resort to plan B. |
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Re: NHS, Be afraid, be very afraid
yes and it can even be in water....though one would hope, not the stuff that comes through the tap.
Like I say Jaysay, I hope the first line cephalosporins will see it off for you. |
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