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The Forbidden Dreamer (forbiddendreamer@poa.st)'s status on Wednesday, 10-May-2023 08:27:40 JST The Forbidden Dreamer They don't have metal detectors or something on those rooms? -
Woggy's Zeonic Frolicks (washedoutgundampilot@poa.st)'s status on Wednesday, 10-May-2023 08:27:39 JST Woggy's Zeonic Frolicks @ForbiddenDreamer No, because get this - they haven’t updated procedures from the early days of MRI’s.
When we had sane white folk as patients, you could reasonably expect they’d comply with your orders, because they wouldn’t want to be a bad patient. Today, a smart tech will explain that it’s a very painful process to have anything on you, but people are retarded niggers, so they blow it off.
This dept would probably start saying “NOTHING on/in your person” from now on. Lesson learned about harping on “metallic items” the whole time
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Woggy's Zeonic Frolicks (washedoutgundampilot@poa.st)'s status on Wednesday, 10-May-2023 13:18:33 JST Woggy's Zeonic Frolicks @Elliptica @ForbiddenDreamer Yeah but that goes back to my point - this is all relatively new. It didn’t used to be as common as it is today, if I had to guess.
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Anime Wong (elliptica@poa.st)'s status on Wednesday, 10-May-2023 13:18:34 JST Anime Wong @WashedOutGundamPilot @ForbiddenDreamer Not defending the butt-plug man, but I would think they should have them anyway. People forget that they have plates and screws in them, but the real danger is that sometimes doctors accidentally leave things in patients after a major surgery (about 1 in 1000 surgeries). I've heard of a few cases where people go in, not realizing there are bits of surgical steel inside them. Results can be horrifying. -
Woggy's Zeonic Frolicks (washedoutgundampilot@poa.st)'s status on Wednesday, 10-May-2023 13:42:09 JST Woggy's Zeonic Frolicks @sargoysmuck @Elliptica @ForbiddenDreamer It’s all new though: Putting screws and plates inside the body wasn’t nearly as common because we didn’t have adequate materials that would allow the bone to scaffold back over it, didn’t have stuff that would last without immune friction.
We didn’t have retarded weed smoking surgeons back then, and most of them were blitzed on some kind of nicotine and stim to get them through surgery
topping it off the patients were more compliant and eager to comply because they were paying more out of pocket and saw a direct correlation between their behavior and good outcomes.
it’s all these little things stacking up that end with a buttplug tearing a gaping hole in some THOT’s duodenum
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sargoysmuck (sargoysmuck@poa.st)'s status on Wednesday, 10-May-2023 13:42:10 JST sargoysmuck @WashedOutGundamPilot @Elliptica @ForbiddenDreamer Yeah I think it’s easier to forgot something in there nowadays since they try and avoid cracking you open like a lobster unless necessary. -
Anime Wong (elliptica@poa.st)'s status on Wednesday, 10-May-2023 13:58:40 JST Anime Wong @WashedOutGundamPilot @sargoysmuck @ForbiddenDreamer A lot of this stuff is older than I am, so it's hard for me to think of it as new. I sort of get it, to a doctor in his 60's, this is all "fresh", but I would think that there's been enough trial by contact to sort this stuff out by now. -
Woggy's Zeonic Frolicks (washedoutgundampilot@poa.st)'s status on Wednesday, 10-May-2023 13:58:40 JST Woggy's Zeonic Frolicks @Elliptica @sargoysmuck @ForbiddenDreamer New docs actually have higher survival rates in some specialties, because old guys don’t like changing and learning new procedures. For the few fully manual things left, there’s a fair chance that you’re better off with the young buck than the dude who’s been practicing since the 70’s
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