Getting out of the hospital is a lot like resigning from a book club. You're not out of it until the computer says you're out of it.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
For the last 20 months, I've just been going from one hospital to another.
The hospital industry to this day works its tail off to do the right thing.
One of the most difficult things to contend with in a hospital is that assumption on the part of the staff that because you have lost your gall bladder you have also lost your mind.
People have been turned away from hospitals simply because they have no insurance. People have been put out of hospitals because they have reached the lifetime caps.
When you walk through the hospital, you waiver between feeling bad for everyone else and feeling bad for yourself. It's a war of the worlds - the healthy and the sick.
When you're in medicine - especially when you're a resident in a public hospital - you feel like you're doing your part. But not when you're a writer.
I try to visit people in hospitals when I can, smiling and joking while I'm there. But when I leave, I just start crying.
There's nothing worse than walking into a hospital and seeing people sick and miserable and having a horrible treatment.
In hospital, people should be able to have time to themselves.
Too often, hospital staff are incented by management to get work done without worrying about care, and clinicians are too often not even trained to think about care.
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