In 2021, Ipsos surveyed people across 28 countries, asking the public how much they trust different professions. An average of 64% rated doctors as trustworthy, which put them in first place, ahead of scientists (61%) and teachers (55%).
However, Reddit user CR24752 was interested in the remaining 36 percent, so they asked everyone else on the platform, "What's the weirdest thing a medical professional has casually said to you?"
Their post immediately took off and in just a few days, it has received over 14,000 comments. We thought you would also be interested in the discussion, but to save you some precious time, we went through all the answers and compiled the most memorable ones.
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I live in Ireland, the surgeon who replaced my hip is also a farmer. The day before I was due to be discharged he came in on his rounds, he said “I may or may not see you tomorrow, it depends on the dog”, so I said “ok what’s up with the dog?” He told me the dog broke his leg and was having it set tomorrow but he wasn’t sure what time so I said “shur bring in the oul dog and I’ll mind him” (this is rural Ireland bear in mind and I was in the convalescent area of the hospital by then) and shortly after breakfast he arrived in, with the dog, lovely border collie with his leg in plaster, he stayed with me watching tv till the doc was finished replacing another hip and was ready to discharge me and we could all go home. It could only happen in Ireland.
I told an OBGYN during an exam my husband and I had just started trying to get pregnant and she said “Are you tracking your cycle or just f*****g all time?” -Hearing that come out of a small elderly black woman was freaking hilarious!!! She was close to retirement and had zero filter, miss her!
I am constantly anemic and when my doc was putting my IUD in I bled a little and he said, "no! Not your precious iron!"
After destroying my knee riding bmx at 17, the emergency surgeon said “wow, really f****d that up.”
10 years later and another serious knee injury from riding, I saw the same surgeon (he did a great job on the first one). First words out of his mouth were “I remember you. F****d up the other one, huh?”
Not me, but Mom. She's in remission for a non-Hodgkins lymphoma that invaded her brain. She was getting a scan to confirm the cancer had left her brainpan and the doctor came in and said "Good news! We've scanned your brain and confirm that there's nothing in there!"
My surgeon, during surgery to replace pins in my broken finger that had been pushed out by my own body - "I'm really getting them in there this time, you little freak of nature."
I go to urgent care because I have an ear ache and may have an ear infection. The nurse asks if I'm on any medication and I tell her about my IUD. She says:
"I could never have an IUD or even take birth control. You know, since that's murder and all. But hey, do whatever makes you happy."
ETA I did report her and she did get in trouble.
This is no joke. I had a medical professional say, " I used to be an addict so i'm pretty good at this." As she was putting in my IV lmfao, I laughed so hard.
When my girlfriend was in the ICU one of the nurses sorta shrugged and said dismissively "she's gonna die anyhow."
She should have. Her kidneys had shut completely down and she was so swollen that her tongue wouldn't fit in her mouth. We were making the decision whether to continue life support or not. She didn't die. A month and a half later she walked out of the hospital and into my car for the ride home.
What an a*****e nurse! Happy the girlfriend made it, not very happy that we let people like that take care of other people 🤨
I had a doctor tell me that my metabolism is so slow that I would do very well in an apocalypse
If you're gonna pay throught the nose anyway...at least get your treatment with a sense of humor
"Were you a teacher? Your bladder is huge." -obgyn during a pelvic ultrasound.
I was indeed a teacher.
My previous OBGYN came through my line at my old job. For some reason I blanked on who he was. Like I knew I knew him, but for the life of me I couldn't remember how. He saw I was struggling and said "Don't remember me? I'll give you a hint: last time I saw you you were in my office with your ankles in the air!"
Loudly, in front of a line of little old ladies fresh from church, wanting to buy flowers from the garden center.
He was an amazing doc and figured out what was wrong with me when no other doc could, but in that moment the embarrassment could have killed me lol
I don’t know where this happened but as someone who worked in the healthcare field and now in mental health care I was always taught that if I see a patient in public I should not act like I know them unless they acknowledge me in which case make the communication short and do not talk about their care.
As an introvert I feel like this should be thaught to everyone. I don't want some random classmate I've never even talked to before starting a full on convo with me😭
Load More Replies...My OBGYN was named Dr. Peeper first of all. One day I was getting an exam done and he had said something and I didn't catch it. So when I asked .. he said "Dont worry, it'll all be on YouTube later." I didn't know what to say.. he could huckled and said kidding of course. I smiled because he's an amazing doctor. He stayed late on the tail of a 72 HR shift to make sure my daughter and I were okay. Edit: typo
I ran into someone very familiar after getting off work - I worked the 11 pm-7 am shift. He said hi, and talked to me as if he knew me well. I was so derpy tired, I could not place him, and said, "No offense, you're so familiar, but I just can't place you." Luckily, he laughed and said, "Okay, paper or plastic?" Turns out it was my favorite grocery store cashier. I replied, "Oh, sorry, I just got off work about 10 minutes ago, and I didn't recognize you in people clothes!"
An old friend did the reverse at a party, after drinking a good bit. Her OBGYN was there and said hi. She looked at him for a minute and said, “Hi Dr. xxx! I almost didn’t recognize you without looking at you between my knees.” Her husband then announced that it was time to take her home. True story.
Never ever acknowledge in public that someone was your patient. That is the patient’s business to do so.
Well, they said lol, so that means it's okay that I laughed, right?
What's bad is when you and the other person can't figure out where you know each other from and give up after trying to remember for a good half hour. This was a few years ago and I never did remember where I knew him from lol
I would have died from laughter😂😂😂 like that is so just😂😂.... I'd need to go on break early after that
My gynecologist while trying to remove my IUD when the strings weren't visible and fishing through my cervix (with local anesthesia thank god...)
Come here, kitty kitty!
In all honestly, I think he spaced out and was very concentrated to avoid unnecessary pain (uterus wasn't happy with the invasion) and he most definitely has cats and the words just came out... He bursted out laughing with embarrassment and said sorry more than I could care to count. Honestly, I thought it was hilarious.
I've been seeing him for a long time for many IUDs and he's a gem.
"This is the part where all your dignity goes out the window. I'm going to tape your penis to your abdomen."
My obgyn was about to start sewing me up after a c section when she noticed a cyst on my ovary. She told me it had caused enough torsion to twist it down and start growing to my uterus, the said to my husband "look at how twisted this is. Don't worry, this will only take a second, and I won't charge for it." while proudly displaying my entire reproductive system with both hands. He's a trooper. Didn't look grossed out or anything, just a very deadpan, "Thanks for not charging us for that."
Our son was born by C-Section and my hubby watched the whole procedure. He was absolutely fascinated by it! I was laying there with a numb lower half and listening to everything that was going on. Man he asked a lot of questions. haha.
Back pain, I’m not young. Doctor just said basically “Well, that’s just life for you. You’re tall.”
“So I’m just going to end up being a hunched over 90 year old?”
“Lol, you’re not going to see 90.”
“Um…pardon?”
“How many tall old people have you ever seen?”
“Oh…yeah…ok.”
I was 18 at the time and went to the family doctor that brought me into the world. The reason was I was having great pain urinating and was leaking a pus like substance. After getting a shot I went to his office, I sat down and he lit a Winston, rocked back in his chair whilst taking a big drag and said, "I am going to talk to you like a Dutch uncle, if you do not know if it is clean, keep your goddamned zipper zipped up."
following a checkup..."we're going to have to remove your testicles....just kidding, you should've seen your face"
I asked my cardiologist I had growing up what the goop was they put on before echoes... he said, "Yak snot." I believed him for way too long
My ENT casually said I should get my anxiety checked out. He was very certain I had it and I’d never been diagnosed for it. Turns out he was right and he really saved my mental health.
I was getting an EKG, sitting there with my full titties out, and the doctor tells me i remind him of a girl he used to see in college
“You just hang on right there we will get you a wheelchair and admitted to the hospital. We have to do a colonoscopy, but don’t worry I will knock you out before sticking a camera up your a*s”
When I was like 20, my endocrinologist took a good look at me and asked "are you okay with your face being so asymmetrical?"
I had never really noticed it before, but boy have I noticed it since!
“If you don’t mind, I’d like to show everyone pictures of your tonsils.”
According to her, I had the most disgusting tonsils she had ever seen in her years in the business, and gosh darn she wanted to show them off.
Male gyno looked at me, smirked and said 'look at you laying there all coy' before he stuck his fingers up the business end for far too long. I was terrified and froze.
I lodged a complaint and got a pathetic reply back. There are no female gynos in my area.
Dr: “you look great! How did you lose weight?”
Son: “eating disorder; anorexia”
Dr. “Well keep doing whatever you are doing, it’s working great!”
When I was 12 I had a dentist say "Hold on I think I might be counting wrong, you shouldn't have those yet... okay never mind those are definitely your wisdom teeth. Your mouth is just huge I guess." They said it was the youngest they've ever seen anyone get their wisdom teeth. They called in every dentist in the building to come look at my mouth.
"If you ever tried to have a baby, the kid would snap your pelvis in two and rip you in half." Said by my gynaecological surgeon. He said it in the most casual manner. I was mortified!
ETA: Thank goodness I was there to get a hysterectomy, haha!
I snapped both of my Achilles while finishing off a set of heavy leg presses with calf extensions. I didn’t close it all of the way and the sled crashed down on me, pinning my legs next to my head. (Yes- I was dumb not to use the safety pins! They weren’t there (they constantly disappeared to other machines) so I was lazy for not using them and paid the price.
The doctor looked at my scans and said “these are mirror images of each other. You must have good form.”
You can't use antidepressants forever.
Well i've been very depressed forever, so what do I do kill myself?
Was living in a foreign country and had a cold / flu type illness. Went to the doc and he comes in eating a bowl of cereal. Already weird. Checks some things and says “do you know what AIDS is”? I’m in complete shock and say yes, I do. He follows up with “It’s a virus and there is no cure”. Goes on to explain why there is no cure, all while I’m seeing my life over as I know it. Finally ends with, “but you don’t have that virus, you have a different one, much more common and treatable but I wanted you to understand why an antibiotic wouldn’t work”.
Still in shock I’m like so I don’t have AIDS then right? He goes, no and walks out.
What a roller coaster.
EDIT: This was in Switzerland about 15 years ago and I’m American.
Yes, he was slurping his cereal the whole time.
EDIT 2: He did explain the difference between HIV & AIDS. Guess he just wanted to come in hot and get my attention.
Thanks all.
Every 5 weeks like clockwork, for 18 months straight, I had tonsillitis. It would lay me out for 3 to 5 days straight, and it was pure misery. The doctor who would be doing the surgery suggested we hold off because, "we wouldn't want to take out something God gave us."
Was on a 72hr hold following an attempt on my life on the anniversary of a traumatic event, and had a nurse ask if she could pray for me. I'm not religious but I thought it was nice and it was like 2am and I was tired so I said sure. She proceeded to pray out loud for like 30 minutes asking Jesus to forgive me for the huge sin I had committed. Not the direction I thought she'd go lol, but just said a very awkward thank you after and went back to sleep.
I had a MRSA infection in my left leg. A Wiccan friend in Canada told me that she lit a candle for me and offered up prayers (I am Christian). I thanked her for her support and prayers.
My son is about your age and single, do you want his number?
- Gynecologist
Things I have heard during pelvic exams:
*”s**t.”
*”wow.”
*”okay, you’re a girl.”
Bear in mind I am a normal, healthy, cisgender woman with the regular parts in the regular places. I have just had some whacky doctors.
edited formatting
edit 2 so glad one of my highest rated comments is about my vag
“You won’t find a penis in there”. From my OBGYN.
We thought we were having a boy according to the ultrasound, but apparently she was calling for a strike right down the middle. After she was born, my husband was looking around at the afterbirth when my doctor said that.
“If you want to help people, don’t go into medicine. As a doctor, I’m nothing more than a people mechanic, and much like a car mechanic, I patch people back together well enough to get them out of the door until I see them again. If I could go back, I’d run as far away from medicine as I could.”
Edit:
Whew…this gained more traction than I expected.
For context, this sentiment was offered to me by a 70 year old, 40+ year tenured physician who was on more boards than I care to list and was a very well-respected surgeon. As many in the comments have stated, his distaste for the job had very much to do with the long list of hoops that he had to jump through in order to order and perform even the most basic treatments, and yes, the endless charting was exhaustive to witness, much less perform.
He also went so far as to send a hospital wide email asking any physician who had the time to sit in a meeting with all of the pre-med people who had dedicated the most time to shadowing for a brief back and forth.
Asked a few questions along the lines of “Whose unhappy with their job…how many have been divorced…how many think you’re over-worked…how many would go back to med school…especially with the debt load today….” and a few more questions that painted a very (at least with this test group of 40+ people) realistic picture of how unhappy they all were.
At least 80% raised their hands in favor of the most negative option presented and briefly attested to how bad and hard the job had been, and of those that were heavily in favor of the job, I’d say at least 80% were quite obviously there for the money and nothing more.
I still have an immense respect for those who choose to work in healthcare, but I’m also glad that I steered away from it; especially when I consider that I would’ve entered residency in the midst of a pandemic….whew!!!
totally agree with the "car mechanic" analogy..... perhaps if more men mentally saw it that way they go to the doctor's more often (🤔 though I also think more would look up a YouTube video on how to fix or repair themselves 🤔🤔).....I do the same principle with my mental health with the tools and techniques I've been professionally taught I treat it like car maintenance,like checking oil,tyre pressure,brake fluids etc ...the important thing is not to be too self arrogant or to proud to ask for help 😉👍
Was a teen and seeing my pediatrician. There was a baby or infant in a another room wailingits head off. After a few minutes, my doc said, "don't mind him, we just lopped his leg off."
i was at the doctor back in St. petersburg getting a checkup and there was a four year old screaming across the hall, and the doctor came in and said “don’t mind him hes apparently getting tortured” and i still laugh about that sometimes
Went in for my checkup 6 weeks after my second kid and the intern who was shadowing my OBGYN made the comment “oh, hey, you’re looking great!”
Not to my face but to the bottom half of me.
As an intern currently having rotations in the OBGY department (and also having previously shadowed another OBGY doctor for over a month), I can tell you that very few students (including male students) are actually excited about this subject. I guess that the OP encountered a rare intern.
“Is that your brother?” - asked by a nurse about my husband, who was in the room while my tits were out and I was getting an ekg.
As a medical doctor, I am so very very sorry. Every profession has its idiots. The good news is, I couldn't care less about your race or gender unless it affects your health (ladies, I'll never check your prostate, and gents, I'll never ask you to test for pregnancy), but we're often taught the biases along with the facts. It sucks. That said? ............... RADIOLOGIST TO ME OUT LOUD LIKE ALL CAPS IN PERSON: "WOW YOU HAVE LUMPY BOOBS!" THanks, pal, they didn' thear you in Papua New Guinea, say it louder why don't you? So he did. Then he called out, "ANYONE WANNA SEE CLASSIC FIBROCYSTIC BREASTS?!" .... So much for professional "courtesy".
Now I am very sorry that happened to you! Sadly I have to tell you that radiologists are radiologists for a reason. 🙈 when they handed out bedsidemanner and people skills a lot of them were not there 😅 yes, I've worked most of my career with radiologists and had to do lots of damage controll. (Nowadays it's radiooncologists and they are different as well 🫣)
Load More Replies...Most of these weren't that bad...imagine the s**t they say to black women on a daily...not ALL doctors but most treat us like s**t. So many black women have died because doctors think we're lying in order to receive drugs due to their own racist stereotypes
Bias can also cause people to wait for complications before they go for help. In Canada, Indigenous people get treated like c**p (medical neglect, outright insults, etc.). There needs to be training in biases. An immigrant doctor in an Indigenous-majority town was aware of this issue. She gained trust just by speaking to them like a decent human being and listening.
Load More Replies...When I was 12 or 13, my doctor told me that "I'll never really be pretty and thin, but I should be able to get to a healthy weight". We were there for a referral for a dietician, because I was very overweight. Who TF says that to a 12/13-year-old girl!? Yes, I did develop anorexia at 16. And yes, I gained all the weight back, plus more. And yes, I lost it all again, and gained it back again, plus more. Within the last two years I lost 45 kilos on my own, in a healthy way (no starving or obsessing!), but now I have developed a severe case of binge eating disorder for some vague reason. Fun times. I'm not saying he's the root of it all, but remembering his words certainly never helped...
Doctors can be really weird people indeed, even veterinarians. A friend of mine had a cat whose babies all had the equivalent of down syndrome upon birth - the vet was so excited he got all the other vets in the entire county to come and look at the kittens to write some sort of dissertation about them.
I was weighed by my surgeon before my stoma reversal surgery. He told me if I lost a few kgs, I'd be just his type of woman. This was 4 years ago.
I went to the pharmacy wearing a t-shirt that said, "Is it nap time yet?" The pharmacist handed me my sleeping pills, and said, "The answer is: yes."
I had two preemie babies and so when I went into early labor with my third baby, I knew it was the real thing and not Braxton-Hicks contractions or whatever. We went to the hospital and the OB nurse saw how far along I was, wouldn't even check if I was dilated, told me, "If you were actually in labor, you'd have had this baby by now" and sent us home. I was in awful pain and so mad. An hour later at home, my water broke. I was very satisfied seeing her face as I came back in, and especially happy the nurses were mid-shift-change so she didn't help deliver the baby I was definitely in the middle of having.
A very brief backstory. I was 37 weeks pregnant and started to bleed a little, went to the hospital and started to bleed A LOT. Sorry grafic-> I went to the bathroom but couldn't wipe, just pulled up my pants because I suddenly bleed so much. I TOLD THIS TO THE DOCTOR. They put me in a room for a c-section after lunch, but I crashed minutes after that and me and our baby almost died. When we talked with THE SAME doctor afterwards he lightly apologised for not understanding how much I was bleeding. But then he went on an on how cool and seldom they pressed the emergency button for a whole surgical team to extract a baby under 5 minutes. And this was during lunch! He sounded frustrated that we didn't find it cool that he got to press that button. Then he proposed that we should name the baby after him. He was the assisting surgeon, not even the main one!! F**k you Joakim, no one in my family will ever thank you. 🖕🖕🖕
PLEASE tell us that you reported this animal. He is no less than dangerous.
Load More Replies...I had to go to psychiatrical evaluation for my gun permit (in my country you must have psychiatrical evaluations every 5 years to keep your gun) and the only question the male dock asked me was if my periods are regular. I sheepishly answered that they werent and he said ah doesent matter anyways. Then why ask?? Its not like I will use my v to handle the gun.
What in the name of all insanity would inspire that barnyard brute to ask such an invasive question? Were HIS hormones running rampant that day?
Load More Replies...I had one doctor text me, that the scan results may be brain cancer... But we should have a better look after his vacation... Great great 14 days for a person with overthinking issues ..... Lucky for me it wasn't anything important , and they still don't know why I am sick....
My dentist called me a drama queen for crying during an appointment while she was unknowingly pinching my lips with those tools. My eye doctor also called me a drama queen for crying because of the eyedrops
So many of these comments are appalling. It’s called the medical “profession”, the nursing “profession”. THEN BE A PROFESSIONAL. As far as humor is concerned, NEVER EVER WHEN DOING A GYNE EXAM. What is wrong with these docs?! Otherwise, I have found that humor can actually be very helpful, but, wait and see how the patient may feel about it. If you make a humorous comment that another patient may laugh at, surprise! Not this patient. That’s a problem. Wait until they throw out some humor. Then you’re usually ok. Maybe things are different today, but profanity is also out.
"Wow, this one's bleeding like a slaughtered pig!" I was 12 and under local anesthesia for a minor procedure on my toe. They didn't even let me have someone there with me.
I have always had low sodium. My doctor told me, "please try to eat more potato chips." Pretty sure I'm the only person whose doctor has ever prescribed that!
I love my doctor. A few years ago when I was in for my check-up, she was reviewing the test results and said "Your kidney function is surprisingly good for your age." I jokingly replied "That's because of the Budweiser. It keeps them working properly." She didn't miss a beat, just asked "Is that Bud Light, or the regular Bud, so I'll know which to prescribe to my other patients?" (So there are no misunderstandings, she was joking. I'm pretty sure she isn't prescribing beer to her patients with kidney problems.)
Broke my collar bone, went for follow-up. My bone doc left the room temporarily, another walked in, eyed my ex-rays, then muttered "That's how to do it." He then turned to me and announced, "If you're going to break your collarbone, that's *exactly* how to do it." Glad I got the Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval, LOL.
I have hormone problems causing hair loss and severe hirsutism, my obgyn ruled out pcos but didnt know what caused it then, but she told me 1. not to shave my face because the hair will grow back thicker ( bs ), 2. to try bleaching or hair removal cream ( burn my face off ? ), 3. only way to handle symptoms is the birth control pill but that is too dangerous for someone as fat as me and I should come back when I lost 20Kg/40Ibs.
At the 6 week check up the doctor looked at my son and told me I did a good job giving birth as he had a perfectly round head "like a little cesarean baby"
I had a midwife go off on a full-fledged rant about women gaining weight during pregnancy and thinking its an excuse to "just eat whatever they want," and "Don't gain anymore." She didn't seem to notice my increasing panic and just kept going on and on until I actually started crying and told her I'd struggled with an ED since I was a teenager. It was in my cart. I was about halfway through the pregnancy and had gained about 20lbs (starting out underweight). Happy ending though... I didn't let myself relapse and had a perfectly healthy baby. I've been ED free since.
When I was about 14 I had to go in for a physical and my doctor told me, "drop your pants. Don't be embarrassed. I know you're not a black guy." At 14 I thought it was funny. At 40 not so much
I had a special appointment with a psychiatrist - which are rare in my town, she was a visiting doctor from the city - who looked at my history and after listening to me, said “you’ll never be a normal person. Medication will never fix you, or even help. There’s nothing that will, you have no hope.” I sorta shut down after that, became very depressed, became convinced that I wasn’t worth anything and my life wasn’t worth anything because my brain was so f**ked. I know that medication doesn’t take away mental health problems, only helps manage. But she made me believe that there was nothing I could ever do to live a normal life. That I was a freak of nature and everyone would be better off if I (unlived) myself. Thankfully, I’m not in that dark place anymore, but I was for a long, long time. Edit to add: my psych wanted me to go to this appointment because at the time I was having major sleep disturbances, I rarely slept any more than a few hours at a time and when I did, I had ultra graphic dreams filled with violence and such and it was believed that it was a manifestation of my anxiety
Me, sucking hard on nitrous oxide for the first time ever: .... Dentist: Oops, forgot to put the oxygen on. Why didn't you say something? Me: I didn't know I needed oxygen (meaning as a *separate* air supply, Dentist: yeah, that's that lack of oxygen talking...
I fractured my acromion and went to an urgent care center. The guy there showed me the fracture and fortunately took pictures of it on my phone. I got an appointment with an orthopedic Dr two days later and after they did their own X-rays, came in and said “Well, fortunately you don’t have a fracture”. Uh, yeah I do. Showed him the picture. 🙄. The guy at the urgent care was probably a nurse and was more thorough and very concerned that the clavicle may separate from the shoulder blade.
My gynecologist/obstetrician saw my allergy bracelet (I was allergic to birth control pills before I had my kids), and said to me, while I was in labor with my firstborn, "So, THAT'S why you're here!" Mind you, I was married, and our son was a planned pregnancy, but because I was 21, neither was possible in her eyes.😒😠
When I was pregnant and went into labor, my contractions increased very quickly. We almost didn't make it in time to deliver. They literally wheeled me into a room, waiting for the contraction to stop, moved me to the bed and then the head crowned and my son was born. As a result, I didn't have an epidural. The OBGYN on-call (not my regular one) came in and started pushing my uterus back in place. It hurt a lot and I said so. He said, "Oh, come on, it doesn't hurt that badly." I was about 1/2 a second away from lifting my foot from that stirrup and kicking him across the room. Dude, I just gave birth to an almost 9 pound baby without any pain meds whatsoever. Don't you dare tell me whether I hurt or not!
I get that scare tactics can work for some patients. But when your patient has anxiety list ABOVE spina bifida and lung disease, don't tell them "You have 'rare syndrome name', I've only had one other patient with this. He's dead now. Any questions?". I spent a year thinking I was done for, until my checkup with a different specialist (he was great, helped me understand what I should have been told in the first place)
Sitting by my comatose husband's bedside ... he was in the hospital because of errors that happened after he was admitted for what was expected to be a simple surgery and home the next day. A month later, a doctor says, "This is what happens when you marry an older man."
My dentist and her assistant once sang Stayin' Alive while giving me a filling.
My doctor said I had the prostate of a 40 year old, at a very uncomfortable moment.
Multiple times, my stupid immune system has made my family doctor say 'Huh.' Which you really don't want to hear from anyone, especially a doctor when you're asking about something like why I've had multiple false positive COVID rapid tests. Also I got a fever every time I got a tooth, which does still happen (yay wisdom teeth (which I'm also getting early))
I had an endoscopy that resulted in a punctured intestine. It was something my gastroenterologist had warned me could happen, and while I thought he'd been pretty arrogant, I knew the risks before I went into the procedure. I was lucky and it resolved without further surgery, just a couple weeks in the hospital. About a year later I was scheduled for a screening colonoscopy and my gastroenterologist called for the pre-op and he said "I'm looking at your chart...I see you had a punctured intestine. How did that happen?" I laughed, thinking he was joking. He was NOT. I changed gastroenterologists that day. I will note that I've seen a lot of doctors as I'm chronically ill, and he is one of only two that were out of line.
Maybe it's because I've come across a lot of stories about criminally irresponsible medical "professionals" lately (e.g., Robert Hadden, Kenny Smiles, "The Retrievals" story, etc), but most of these make me feel concerned. I know the Venn diagram of doctors and funny people has plenty of overlap, but many of the comments and "jokes" mentioned here are unnervingly reminiscent of the victims' stories.
"Wow, it looks like a Klingon", said the gyn during the Ultrasound while I was pregnant with my daughter 🙈🤣
As a medical doctor, I am so very very sorry. Every profession has its idiots. The good news is, I couldn't care less about your race or gender unless it affects your health (ladies, I'll never check your prostate, and gents, I'll never ask you to test for pregnancy), but we're often taught the biases along with the facts. It sucks. That said? ............... RADIOLOGIST TO ME OUT LOUD LIKE ALL CAPS IN PERSON: "WOW YOU HAVE LUMPY BOOBS!" THanks, pal, they didn' thear you in Papua New Guinea, say it louder why don't you? So he did. Then he called out, "ANYONE WANNA SEE CLASSIC FIBROCYSTIC BREASTS?!" .... So much for professional "courtesy".
Now I am very sorry that happened to you! Sadly I have to tell you that radiologists are radiologists for a reason. 🙈 when they handed out bedsidemanner and people skills a lot of them were not there 😅 yes, I've worked most of my career with radiologists and had to do lots of damage controll. (Nowadays it's radiooncologists and they are different as well 🫣)
Load More Replies...Most of these weren't that bad...imagine the s**t they say to black women on a daily...not ALL doctors but most treat us like s**t. So many black women have died because doctors think we're lying in order to receive drugs due to their own racist stereotypes
Bias can also cause people to wait for complications before they go for help. In Canada, Indigenous people get treated like c**p (medical neglect, outright insults, etc.). There needs to be training in biases. An immigrant doctor in an Indigenous-majority town was aware of this issue. She gained trust just by speaking to them like a decent human being and listening.
Load More Replies...When I was 12 or 13, my doctor told me that "I'll never really be pretty and thin, but I should be able to get to a healthy weight". We were there for a referral for a dietician, because I was very overweight. Who TF says that to a 12/13-year-old girl!? Yes, I did develop anorexia at 16. And yes, I gained all the weight back, plus more. And yes, I lost it all again, and gained it back again, plus more. Within the last two years I lost 45 kilos on my own, in a healthy way (no starving or obsessing!), but now I have developed a severe case of binge eating disorder for some vague reason. Fun times. I'm not saying he's the root of it all, but remembering his words certainly never helped...
Doctors can be really weird people indeed, even veterinarians. A friend of mine had a cat whose babies all had the equivalent of down syndrome upon birth - the vet was so excited he got all the other vets in the entire county to come and look at the kittens to write some sort of dissertation about them.
I was weighed by my surgeon before my stoma reversal surgery. He told me if I lost a few kgs, I'd be just his type of woman. This was 4 years ago.
I went to the pharmacy wearing a t-shirt that said, "Is it nap time yet?" The pharmacist handed me my sleeping pills, and said, "The answer is: yes."
I had two preemie babies and so when I went into early labor with my third baby, I knew it was the real thing and not Braxton-Hicks contractions or whatever. We went to the hospital and the OB nurse saw how far along I was, wouldn't even check if I was dilated, told me, "If you were actually in labor, you'd have had this baby by now" and sent us home. I was in awful pain and so mad. An hour later at home, my water broke. I was very satisfied seeing her face as I came back in, and especially happy the nurses were mid-shift-change so she didn't help deliver the baby I was definitely in the middle of having.
A very brief backstory. I was 37 weeks pregnant and started to bleed a little, went to the hospital and started to bleed A LOT. Sorry grafic-> I went to the bathroom but couldn't wipe, just pulled up my pants because I suddenly bleed so much. I TOLD THIS TO THE DOCTOR. They put me in a room for a c-section after lunch, but I crashed minutes after that and me and our baby almost died. When we talked with THE SAME doctor afterwards he lightly apologised for not understanding how much I was bleeding. But then he went on an on how cool and seldom they pressed the emergency button for a whole surgical team to extract a baby under 5 minutes. And this was during lunch! He sounded frustrated that we didn't find it cool that he got to press that button. Then he proposed that we should name the baby after him. He was the assisting surgeon, not even the main one!! F**k you Joakim, no one in my family will ever thank you. 🖕🖕🖕
PLEASE tell us that you reported this animal. He is no less than dangerous.
Load More Replies...I had to go to psychiatrical evaluation for my gun permit (in my country you must have psychiatrical evaluations every 5 years to keep your gun) and the only question the male dock asked me was if my periods are regular. I sheepishly answered that they werent and he said ah doesent matter anyways. Then why ask?? Its not like I will use my v to handle the gun.
What in the name of all insanity would inspire that barnyard brute to ask such an invasive question? Were HIS hormones running rampant that day?
Load More Replies...I had one doctor text me, that the scan results may be brain cancer... But we should have a better look after his vacation... Great great 14 days for a person with overthinking issues ..... Lucky for me it wasn't anything important , and they still don't know why I am sick....
My dentist called me a drama queen for crying during an appointment while she was unknowingly pinching my lips with those tools. My eye doctor also called me a drama queen for crying because of the eyedrops
So many of these comments are appalling. It’s called the medical “profession”, the nursing “profession”. THEN BE A PROFESSIONAL. As far as humor is concerned, NEVER EVER WHEN DOING A GYNE EXAM. What is wrong with these docs?! Otherwise, I have found that humor can actually be very helpful, but, wait and see how the patient may feel about it. If you make a humorous comment that another patient may laugh at, surprise! Not this patient. That’s a problem. Wait until they throw out some humor. Then you’re usually ok. Maybe things are different today, but profanity is also out.
"Wow, this one's bleeding like a slaughtered pig!" I was 12 and under local anesthesia for a minor procedure on my toe. They didn't even let me have someone there with me.
I have always had low sodium. My doctor told me, "please try to eat more potato chips." Pretty sure I'm the only person whose doctor has ever prescribed that!
I love my doctor. A few years ago when I was in for my check-up, she was reviewing the test results and said "Your kidney function is surprisingly good for your age." I jokingly replied "That's because of the Budweiser. It keeps them working properly." She didn't miss a beat, just asked "Is that Bud Light, or the regular Bud, so I'll know which to prescribe to my other patients?" (So there are no misunderstandings, she was joking. I'm pretty sure she isn't prescribing beer to her patients with kidney problems.)
Broke my collar bone, went for follow-up. My bone doc left the room temporarily, another walked in, eyed my ex-rays, then muttered "That's how to do it." He then turned to me and announced, "If you're going to break your collarbone, that's *exactly* how to do it." Glad I got the Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval, LOL.
I have hormone problems causing hair loss and severe hirsutism, my obgyn ruled out pcos but didnt know what caused it then, but she told me 1. not to shave my face because the hair will grow back thicker ( bs ), 2. to try bleaching or hair removal cream ( burn my face off ? ), 3. only way to handle symptoms is the birth control pill but that is too dangerous for someone as fat as me and I should come back when I lost 20Kg/40Ibs.
At the 6 week check up the doctor looked at my son and told me I did a good job giving birth as he had a perfectly round head "like a little cesarean baby"
I had a midwife go off on a full-fledged rant about women gaining weight during pregnancy and thinking its an excuse to "just eat whatever they want," and "Don't gain anymore." She didn't seem to notice my increasing panic and just kept going on and on until I actually started crying and told her I'd struggled with an ED since I was a teenager. It was in my cart. I was about halfway through the pregnancy and had gained about 20lbs (starting out underweight). Happy ending though... I didn't let myself relapse and had a perfectly healthy baby. I've been ED free since.
When I was about 14 I had to go in for a physical and my doctor told me, "drop your pants. Don't be embarrassed. I know you're not a black guy." At 14 I thought it was funny. At 40 not so much
I had a special appointment with a psychiatrist - which are rare in my town, she was a visiting doctor from the city - who looked at my history and after listening to me, said “you’ll never be a normal person. Medication will never fix you, or even help. There’s nothing that will, you have no hope.” I sorta shut down after that, became very depressed, became convinced that I wasn’t worth anything and my life wasn’t worth anything because my brain was so f**ked. I know that medication doesn’t take away mental health problems, only helps manage. But she made me believe that there was nothing I could ever do to live a normal life. That I was a freak of nature and everyone would be better off if I (unlived) myself. Thankfully, I’m not in that dark place anymore, but I was for a long, long time. Edit to add: my psych wanted me to go to this appointment because at the time I was having major sleep disturbances, I rarely slept any more than a few hours at a time and when I did, I had ultra graphic dreams filled with violence and such and it was believed that it was a manifestation of my anxiety
Me, sucking hard on nitrous oxide for the first time ever: .... Dentist: Oops, forgot to put the oxygen on. Why didn't you say something? Me: I didn't know I needed oxygen (meaning as a *separate* air supply, Dentist: yeah, that's that lack of oxygen talking...
I fractured my acromion and went to an urgent care center. The guy there showed me the fracture and fortunately took pictures of it on my phone. I got an appointment with an orthopedic Dr two days later and after they did their own X-rays, came in and said “Well, fortunately you don’t have a fracture”. Uh, yeah I do. Showed him the picture. 🙄. The guy at the urgent care was probably a nurse and was more thorough and very concerned that the clavicle may separate from the shoulder blade.
My gynecologist/obstetrician saw my allergy bracelet (I was allergic to birth control pills before I had my kids), and said to me, while I was in labor with my firstborn, "So, THAT'S why you're here!" Mind you, I was married, and our son was a planned pregnancy, but because I was 21, neither was possible in her eyes.😒😠
When I was pregnant and went into labor, my contractions increased very quickly. We almost didn't make it in time to deliver. They literally wheeled me into a room, waiting for the contraction to stop, moved me to the bed and then the head crowned and my son was born. As a result, I didn't have an epidural. The OBGYN on-call (not my regular one) came in and started pushing my uterus back in place. It hurt a lot and I said so. He said, "Oh, come on, it doesn't hurt that badly." I was about 1/2 a second away from lifting my foot from that stirrup and kicking him across the room. Dude, I just gave birth to an almost 9 pound baby without any pain meds whatsoever. Don't you dare tell me whether I hurt or not!
I get that scare tactics can work for some patients. But when your patient has anxiety list ABOVE spina bifida and lung disease, don't tell them "You have 'rare syndrome name', I've only had one other patient with this. He's dead now. Any questions?". I spent a year thinking I was done for, until my checkup with a different specialist (he was great, helped me understand what I should have been told in the first place)
Sitting by my comatose husband's bedside ... he was in the hospital because of errors that happened after he was admitted for what was expected to be a simple surgery and home the next day. A month later, a doctor says, "This is what happens when you marry an older man."
My dentist and her assistant once sang Stayin' Alive while giving me a filling.
My doctor said I had the prostate of a 40 year old, at a very uncomfortable moment.
Multiple times, my stupid immune system has made my family doctor say 'Huh.' Which you really don't want to hear from anyone, especially a doctor when you're asking about something like why I've had multiple false positive COVID rapid tests. Also I got a fever every time I got a tooth, which does still happen (yay wisdom teeth (which I'm also getting early))
I had an endoscopy that resulted in a punctured intestine. It was something my gastroenterologist had warned me could happen, and while I thought he'd been pretty arrogant, I knew the risks before I went into the procedure. I was lucky and it resolved without further surgery, just a couple weeks in the hospital. About a year later I was scheduled for a screening colonoscopy and my gastroenterologist called for the pre-op and he said "I'm looking at your chart...I see you had a punctured intestine. How did that happen?" I laughed, thinking he was joking. He was NOT. I changed gastroenterologists that day. I will note that I've seen a lot of doctors as I'm chronically ill, and he is one of only two that were out of line.
Maybe it's because I've come across a lot of stories about criminally irresponsible medical "professionals" lately (e.g., Robert Hadden, Kenny Smiles, "The Retrievals" story, etc), but most of these make me feel concerned. I know the Venn diagram of doctors and funny people has plenty of overlap, but many of the comments and "jokes" mentioned here are unnervingly reminiscent of the victims' stories.
"Wow, it looks like a Klingon", said the gyn during the Ultrasound while I was pregnant with my daughter 🙈🤣