widdrjb

widdrjb t1_j9nverm wrote

We went to the live stage show when it ran in the West End. That was 1990.

The front rows were reserved for the fans in costume, and the whole audience were word perfect. Except for the people sitting next to us, a dozen or so tourists who had been booked in by their package operator. I stole a look during "Time Warp"; they looked like rabbits in front of an 18 wheeler.

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widdrjb t1_j90rez3 wrote

My wife is a nurse in end of life care. I've just shown her this. Her opinion is that this woman is either insane, or that American nursing is in a very bad way.

I'd go with the latter. She's turned up to court neatly dressed, apparently alert, has understood the charges and entered a plea.

I would assume that the home owners had a policy forbidding staff to call a doctor because of the cost. Instead, the nursing staff probably carried out diagnosis, prescribing and minor procedures themselves. This was a necrotic limb, but the elderly regularly lose toes due to poor circulation. Frequently nurses will tidy up, log it and tell the doctor later. At this point, life expectancy is measured in days, and full surgery is lethal.

Basically, this wasn't a completely anomalous event, but the extreme end of a spectrum. She should do time for it, but so should the people who set the initial conditions.

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