racer983

joined 1 year ago
[–] racer983@mander.xyz 1 points 1 year ago

Lucille: How's my son? Doctor: He's going to be all right. Lindsay Funke: Finally some good news from this guy. Doctor: That's a great attitude. I got to tell you, if I was getting this news, I don't know that I'd take it this well. Lucille: But you said he was all right. Doctor: Yes, he's lost his left hand. So he's going to be "all right." Lucille: [Jumping on the doctor] You son of a bitch! I hate this doctor!

My favorite running gag, love the literal doctor

 

Archive link: https://archive.ph/rYlvQ

I think this would be an interesting article for discussion. Some of these articles in popular media I feel adopt an overly hostile tone toward doctors and assume the worst of a situation. Part of this is the necessity of health care privacy laws that prevent us from getting all sides of a story which could shed more light on a situation.

I think it also ignores the huge flipside problem of this, confidently telling someone they have a diagnosis even though you shouldn't and they don't. For instance I often see someone who's been referred to me and told confidently they have a deadly disease or a genetic disease, told everyone in their life they have this, joined online support groups, and made big life choices based on that info, but they actually don't have the disease. And the information the diagnosis was based on was nowhere near confident enough to say so. It was right to seek further evaluation and there may have been some abnormality, but even if the diagnosis should be mentioned as a possibility, the patient shouldn't have been told they definitely have this thing yet because the certainty was just not there. Anyway, I think there's lots of interesting aspects of this article to think about.

 

A fascinating condition. You can walk away, come back ten minutes later and have the exact conversation in the exact same way even down to the person's vocal intonations. It is uncanny. Truly gives you existential "oh my god I'm a meat computer" thoughts if you ever see it for yourself.

Luckily if someone gets this they are back to normal in less the a day, and it's uncommon to have multiple episodes.

[–] racer983@mander.xyz 1 points 1 year ago

Wait I'm lost, I did some calculus with my girl and now I can't tell if she's a wave or a particle

[–] racer983@mander.xyz 3 points 1 year ago

On the instances where hot is working, I think it does work pretty nicely for this. Hopefully it'll be up and working everywhere very soon with the next update. When I'm on an account with an instance where it's not working, I tend to switch between top-day and new. Going into individual communities as well you can easily see what was popular.

[–] racer983@mander.xyz 4 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I think as an end user of a platform like reddit, it's easy to just want to browse a site and look at some interesting content when you have a few minutes downtime and not think much of it. The vast majority of people on the site aren't even really contributing to content in any way. I barely ever did until hearing about the fedverse.

What got me to care and take the effort to start up here wasn't even really the recent reddit move specifically, like sure this was a crappy thing to do on their part and they've done a lot of bad stuff before too. But it was seeing all these social media platforms and web services in general go one after the other becoming worse and worse for the users and ever more invasive. I think it's just clear now that a centralized social media isn't sustainable and going to work, and will always have that end result.

What's so appealing about the fedverse is I think it's a model for how these problems can be avoided and services can still go forward. I think the best we can do is be active on the fedverse, make it an appealing place to be by contributing, with programming skills if we have them or fresh content if we don't, and continue to point out how these big web companies continue to fail us.

[–] racer983@mander.xyz 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Yes, it's a medical emergency that can be very dangerous or even deadly. It can lead to seizures or a devestating condition called osmotic demyelination syndrome, which can cause a "locked in syndrome" or total body paralysis. There are certain medications that can make it more likely to happen. Severe psychiatric conditions make it more likely. It tends to happen pretty frequently to people with alcoholism too. It's pretty rare for it to happen to people without risk factors for it because your kidneys are pretty good at keeping everything balanced even if you're drinking a decent amount of water. Though one infamous example of that is the wee for a wii radio contest where people deliberately drank tons of water and were not allowed to pee to try and win a Nintendo wii. I believe someone died from the contest, and the organizers hadn't realized how dangerous this was. In short, drink water when you're thirsty, and pee when you need to pee.

[–] racer983@mander.xyz 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

This is a really interesting finding. There's precedence too. Pelvic inflammatory disease, classically caused by sexually transmitted bacterial infections like chlamydia or gonorrhea, is associated with a higher risk of developing endometriosis. There also does appear to be a genetic component, but that might have to do with determining how your body responds to infections in a way that's more likely to cause endometriosis. Hopefully finding this new bacterial association can lead to more treatment options.

[–] racer983@mander.xyz 2 points 1 year ago

Well I did use sync, now using jerboa of course. Would be neat if sync or other apps could be remade for the fedverse. An app that could bridge different fedverse apps more easily like lemmy and mastadon for instance but keep everything easily readable and sortable would be cool.

 

From the history of pretty crazy self experimentation in medicine, a doctor has a cutaneous branch of his own radial nerve surgically cut. He then meticulously documents the progress of nerve regrowth, initial total numbness followed by neuropathic pain, and a partial return of sensation over time