• @CoffeeJunkie
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    1678 months ago

    Funny, but also not. Just Googled because I couldn’t remember:

    “According to the Institute of Medicine, physician’s illegible notes lead to approximately 7,000 deaths annually.”

    Seems unreal. Even if it was half that…that’s a lot of people. If I was getting prescribed drugs, I want it LEGIBLE. Typed up would be great. I just don’t trust that shit, and neither should any of you.

    • @thedirtyknapkin
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      478 months ago

      some said i was destined to be a doctor with my handwriting and family. i decided to break the cycle and become a videographer that barely scrapes by. my family is… they like the videos i make of our get togethers…

      at least i haven’t accidentally killed anyone.

      • @[email protected]
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        8 months ago

        at least I haven’t accidentally killed anyone.

        Yet, there’s still time, I believe in you.

    • @Sarmyth
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      298 months ago

      This is likely why I haven’t seen my doctor write anything for over a decade. Literally everything is done on the computer now. There’s a rolling computer in each room. The only handwriting I saw was by the nurses on a big whiteboard when my wife was giving birth. Just to pass notes and write times.

      • @WhiskyTangoFoxtrot
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        118 months ago

        As someone who’s done IT work for a medical facility, that’s not as much of a step up as you might think.

    • @[email protected]
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      8 months ago

      Watching my doctor fill out my digital chart to avoid these spelling mistakes….

      me: I take guanfacine

      Doctor: oh ok cool you take mucinex?

      me: no, not guanfanesin, guanfacine.

      Doctor: oh, ok. Got it

      Doctor: ….

      Me: ….

      Doctor: and what milligram mucinex do you take?

      • @Sunroc
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        58 months ago

        This literally just happened to me at the doctor’s office. I brought up that I’m interested in trying guanfacine to help with my ADHD and blood pressure and my new doctor tried to correct me… I should probably look for a new doctor.

    • @Jiggle_Physics
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      8 months ago

      Back in the day I used to work at one of the largest hospitals in the US. In my last year there they had started having doctors record their notes, issues order, and prescriptions, on an audio file, using and issued microphone. Then that stuff was sent to a group of people transcribing everything in text. these scribes would also fill out forms for the orders and prescriptions. they did this in response to a series of lawsuits they lost badly.

    • @[email protected]
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      98 months ago

      Here in the UK and (if I’m remembering correctly) back home in Canada, I have always been handed a print out of my prescription with a signature.

        • @Omgpwnies
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          18 months ago

          Same in Ontario. I’ll get a paper copy if I ask for one, but otherwise new scripts are faxes direct to the pharmacy. Even paper copies are a printout though. I haven’t gotten a handwritten prescription in well over a decade now

    • @hakunawazo
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      28 months ago

      No surprise. Lead is very toxic. /s