In my 2nd part, I wrote about the rot that begins from the top. Well, that is the reality. Lack of supervision and guidance from GOOD consultants are lacking and this has deteriorated the entire civil service. In fact it is reaching a very dangerous level and the patients are suffering on a daily basis. These coupled with attitude problems among the junior doctors is only making the situation worst.
Over the past few weeks, I have been very busy in my hospital. I had blogged about it few days ago with few complicated and rare cases being admitted to my ward. One of the commentator asked why these complicated cases are going to private hospitals rather than government hospitals. First of all, a patient who goes to whichever hospital do not know how complicated their disease is until the doctor diagnoses the condition. I am not talking about collapsed patients who need CPR etc. All ambulance calls are taken to the nearest government hospitals and thus most of these cases are seen in government hospitals. The rest just goes to whichever hospital nearby when they are ill. Unfortunately, our frontline doctors are becoming very complacent, coupled with poor training that they get during housemanship, diseases are being missed!
A 25-year-old patient goes to a GH emergency department after being unwell for 1 week. He was having fever, nausea, vomiting and abdominal pain. He saw a GP for 2-3 times and then the GP referred him to the hospital as he was unable to eat at all and appeared dehydrated. He was observed in the A&E observation ward for 2 hours with a drip and was discharged when the Full Blood Count was normal. The next day he came to see me. From the history and by just looking at him, I knew what was the diagnosis: Hepatitis! He was jaundiced and the liver was palpable 6cm below costal margin, tender as well. His liver was so nicely palpable that even a medical student should be able to feel. It seems that the doctor in the A&E department did not even examine this patient and just told him that it is not Dengue!!
A patient who is a known diabetic, well controlled, presented with 3 weeks history of fever, nausea, vomiting and upper abdominal pain. She was seen 2 weeks prior at a district hospital and admitted for 2 days. She was discharged with no diagnosis while the patient was still having the pain. When she came to see me, she appeared septic with tender, guarded RT hypochondriac region. A diagnosis of cholecystitis was made and confirmed by USG abdomen. In fact, she also had a stone at cystic duct with mild pancreatitis. She was transferred to the GH for further management of empyema of the gallbladder (her gallbladder was clearly palpable). Again, according to the patient, the doctor did not even examine/feel her abdomen during her 2 days stay in the district hospital!
The case of Malaria that I mentioned in my earlier posting was also seen by 2-3 GPs and twice at a government clinic before coming to see me. That’s the reason why the patient refuses to go back to GH despite not having any insurance.
A 31-year-old primigravida at 34 weeks of gestation presented with acute onset of palpitation and chest discomfort. ECG showed sinus tachycardia of about 120/min with S1Q3T3 changes. SpO2 was 94-96% under RA. She was admitted and observed. Since she was unable to afford any further investigations, a d-dimer was sent and came back 3 days later as raised. Her sister is known to have some coagulation disorder and was on heparin during all her pregnancies. She is unsure of the diagnosis of her sister. We transferred her to the nearby GH as a possible case of minor Pulmonary Embolism for further investigations. When she arrived at the GH “bilik saringan” (this was about 5 -6 days after the incident of palpitation), some of the doctors (housemen and even junior MOs) were laughing at her. It seems that she does not look like a patient with Pulmonary Embolism! Since our O&G consultant has already spoken to the registrar on-call, she was admitted to the ward. She was kept for 3 days in the ward and nothing much was done except a repeat D-Dimer and ABG. Since the repeat d-dimer was negative and ABG was normal, she was told that it is unlikely Pulmonary embolism and no further investigations were done! She was also referred to the cardiology MO who just ask 1 question to the patient “is it you who they suspect PE?” When the patient said “Yes”, the MO just took the folder and went to the table and her diagnosis: “ No Pulmonary Embolism”.
This case clearly illustrates the type of doctors we have nowadays. It is the attitude that stinks! All this happened without anyone knowing that the patient is actually a senior staff nurse at a private hospital in KL. She was horrified with the attitude of the doctors especially the cardiology MO who did not even asks her the history of what actually happened. D-dimer can be raised in pregnancy but the very fact that the repeat test 6 days later was normal indicates that the first episode may as well be a minor pulmonary embolism. This coupled with the history of her sister makes the diagnosis of Pulmonary embolism a possibility and a high index of suspicion is important. Unfortunately, even the blood test for thrombophilia screen was not sent. The patient took AOR discharge and came back to our hospital despite not having any money.
A 45-year-old lady presented to a GH emergency department with acute onset of inability to talk. She was crying while she entered their emergency department. She was observed in the observation room and some blood test was done. After about an hour, she was discharged with a diagnosis of ? depression. She was brought to see me the same day and she was crying whenever I ask her any question but she is able to understand what I am trying to say. She can reply by writing or with some slurred speech. This is a clear case of Expressive Dysphasia, likely secondary to a stroke. She is crying because she could not talk/respond to anyone! An MRI showed infarct at Broca’s area. She was also noted to have Hypertension and Diabetes. I just saw her almost 2 months after the incident and she is now able to talk and explained what actually happened at the GH’s emergency department. The attitude of the doctors in the emergency department that she mentioned really makes me feel sad.
To be continued…………….
Good practice: Utar nursing lecturer Liew Siew Fun giving a briefing to Liow along with others during his visit in Kajang yesterday.







