Tan Tock Seng hospital doctor force injection to a patient. Police report filed.

Did you read the report? The victim has been assess in imh and she is verified of being sound mind. That means the Dr is in the wrong way of handling things which amount to even being criminal.
thank you, I can read and comprehend well. being verified of sound mind doesn't mean anything at all. many crazies and psychos are walking around because doctors couldn't find anything wrong with them. some of these peeps live amongst us or work amongst us. nothing unusual really.
 
thank you, I can read and comprehend well. being verified of sound mind doesn't mean anything at all. many crazies and psychos are walking around because doctors couldn't find anything wrong with them. some of these peeps live amongst us or work amongst us. nothing unusual really.
It means she has a case to win. To treat a patient against her will is a Case for suing.
 
There are injections used in psychiatric emergencies to quickly calm patients. By reducing the agitation, these medications may help patients regain greater clarity of thought.
Yep, an injection goes straight into our blood stream and the effect is almost immediate.
 
It means she has a case to win. To treat a patient against her will is a Case for suing.
The patient was probably acting in a highly agitated manner posing a danger to other patients and staff earlier, which justifies the action taken by the doctor to calm her down through the injection.
 
You have brought up an interesting topic.
A siao lang will see another siao lang as normal, and they would avoid, at any cost, to be asked if a person is a siao lang.

I have already tested proven it here with gansiokbin @ginfreely
hanor, birds of a flock, they feather together wan :whistling:
 
Evaluating mental conditions is very complicated. As a former doc at IMH, 10 psychiatrists can come out with different diagnosis, from normal to schizo.
 
I had one actual real encounter with someone who really suffered from mental illness. She went into a relapse because of work stress. Basically anything that involves a deadline will trigger her off. Then she will go silent in office the whole day.

Just because we don’t understand their issues, doesn’t mean it’s easy to overcome. So I think the doc here was trying to do the right thing.
 
I had one actual real encounter with someone who really suffered from mental illness. She went into a relapse because of work stress. Basically anything that involves a deadline will trigger her off. Then she will go silent in office the whole day. Just because we don’t understand their issues, doesn’t mean it’s easy to overcome. So I think the doc here was trying to do the right thing.
A doc in a public hospital won't go out of his way to inject a patient who is struggling like that and has to be held down by so many other staff. The clinician doesn't get paid extra to dispense a jab. In fact, it is extra work and a thankless task as is made plain by the police report filed against him.
 
A doc in a public hospital won't go out of his way to inject a patient who is struggling like that and has to be held down by so many other staff. The clinician doesn't get paid extra to dispense a jab. In fact, it is extra work and a thankless task as is made plain by the police report filed against him.
My point exactly. Its easier for the doc not to do anything at all.
 
A doc in a public hospital won't go out of his way to inject a patient who is struggling like that and has to be held down by so many other staff. The clinician doesn't get paid extra to dispense a jab. In fact, it is extra work and a thankless task as is made plain by the police report filed against him.
precisely my point. no doc in his right frame of mind wanna go thru this hassle unless he too is mentally unsound
 
Did you read the report? The victim has been assessed in imh and she is verified of being sound mind. That means the Dr is in the wrong way of handling things which amount to even being criminal.
Must be CECA doctor. TTSH have plenty of Pinoy nurses small people siding him
 
I presume the patient could possibly be defending herself against any form of injection which she obviously has every right to do so as the body belongs to her and not that doctor. If someone in the hospital wants to force an unknown and questionable injection onto you, of course I will defend myself at all cost even to the extend of using deadly force.

seeing that fucking snake face already makes my blood boils let alone let that dirty hands touch me lol....
 
I presume the patient could possibly be defending herself against any form of injection which she obviously has every right to do so as the body belongs to her and not that doctor. If someone in the hospital wants to force an unknown and questionable injection onto you, of course I will defend myself at all cost even to the extend of using deadly force.
I doubt that any doctor would force an injection on a patient who was not posing a threat to staff, herself and other patients or visitors at the hospital. The doc was trying to calm the woman for the safety of everyone in the vicinity (including the patient herself).
 
I presume the patient could possibly be defending herself against any form of injection which she obviously has every right to do so as the body belongs to her and not that doctor. If someone in the hospital wants to force an unknown and questionable injection onto you, of course I will defend myself at all cost even to the extend of using deadly force.

seeing that fucking snake face already makes my blood boils let alone let that dirty hands touch me lol....
That doctor specialises in HIV Psychiatry. Who knows what is in the jab.
 
That doctor specialises in HIV Psychiatry. Who knows what is in the jab.
Dr Harold Shipman

A British GP whose murder trial began this week killed 15 women patients for the enjoyment of exercising the power of life or death, the prosecution alleged at Preston crown court.

Dr Harold Shipman, aged 53, who practised in Hyde, Greater Manchester, denies murdering the women, mainly in their 60s or 70s, and forging the will of one of them, 81 year old Kathleen Grundy.

Opening the trial, which could last until the end of February, Richard Henriques QC, for the prosecution, told the jury: “The defendant killed those 15 patients because, in the submission of the prosecution, he enjoyed doing so. He was exercising the ultimate power of controlling life and death and repeated the act so often he must have found the drama of taking life to his taste.”

The QC said that there were a number of similarities in each death “which cumulatively present a compelling case against the defendant.” He said that the deaths were caused by morphine or diamorphine administered to the patients, none of whom was terminally ill.

In several cases Dr Shipman had falsified records to create a false medical history consistent with the false cause of death that he had attributed to the patient, Mr Henriques added.

He told the jury that in a significant number of cases the GP had assured relatives that no postmortem examination was necessary and had told them that the patient had requested a home visit, when records showed no such request had been made.

Mr Henriques said that Dr Shipman had forged a will in which Mrs Grundy purported to leave him her £400000 estate. The doctor had stated the cause of her death as old age, but she had been active and energetic, and when her body was exhumed substantial amounts of morphine were found.

The will and a follow up letter had been produced on a typewriter found by police at Dr Shipman’s surgery, said the QC.
81gtIpBxfuL._UF1000,1000_QL80_.jpg
 
That doctor specialises in HIV Psychiatry. Who knows what is in the jab.
He also specialise in ethics like is he a Dr or ???. Too bad the lady got no one accompany her. When a Dr specialise in ethics it sounds like he will enforce his whatever ethics
 
Dr Harold Shipman

A British GP whose murder trial began this week killed 15 women patients for the enjoyment of exercising the power of life or death, the prosecution alleged at Preston crown court.

Dr Harold Shipman, aged 53, who practised in Hyde, Greater Manchester, denies murdering the women, mainly in their 60s or 70s, and forging the will of one of them, 81 year old Kathleen Grundy.

Opening the trial, which could last until the end of February, Richard Henriques QC, for the prosecution, told the jury: “The defendant killed those 15 patients because, in the submission of the prosecution, he enjoyed doing so. He was exercising the ultimate power of controlling life and death and repeated the act so often he must have found the drama of taking life to his taste.”

The QC said that there were a number of similarities in each death “which cumulatively present a compelling case against the defendant.” He said that the deaths were caused by morphine or diamorphine administered to the patients, none of whom was terminally ill.

In several cases Dr Shipman had falsified records to create a false medical history consistent with the false cause of death that he had attributed to the patient, Mr Henriques added.

He told the jury that in a significant number of cases the GP had assured relatives that no postmortem examination was necessary and had told them that the patient had requested a home visit, when records showed no such request had been made.

Mr Henriques said that Dr Shipman had forged a will in which Mrs Grundy purported to leave him her £400000 estate. The doctor had stated the cause of her death as old age, but she had been active and energetic, and when her body was exhumed substantial amounts of morphine were found.

The will and a follow up letter had been produced on a typewriter found by police at Dr Shipman’s surgery, said the QC.
81gtIpBxfuL._UF1000,1000_QL80_.jpg
Disgusting crap.
 
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