Re: VBAC immediately available policy

From: Henry Gregor (henrygregor@yahoo.com)
Wed Feb 8 15:29:40 2006


Well, if symmetry of the scar would be helpful to her, that could be achieved rather easily in the office.....tho' that would presume the patient had an open mind re working with her caregivers in a cooperative manner, and that the assymmetry, not the prospect of a monetary windfall, was her primary concern.

Hank

GA12L@aol.com wrote: In a message dated 08/02/2006 21:55:10 GMT Standard Time, eramirezt@coqui.net writes: Lawyers here take their cases very thoughtfully – a crooked scar is a very serious complication – for a start, the client will be unable to wear a straight bikini and obviously her husband will be entirely confused, making their sex life miserable – compensation will be in the thousands. Thankfully, her complaint has been fully investigated, the Trust's lawyers have beem consulted and the response that there is no case to answer has gone out to the woman. She complained on her own behalf as she couldn't find a solicitor to take it on. I saw the scar in question, it was a smile shaped incision but the right side was higher than the left. God, nothing corrupts like the idea of a large amount of money coming your way for nothing. What else do they sue for over there?

I can't believe that over there she would have got money. Tell me you had your tongue firmly in your cheek, please!

Gail





use when must restrict search to only the ob-gyn-l forum...
Enter search keywords:
Returns per screen: Require all keywords:

Return to  OB-GYN-L Mail a New Message to the Forum: ob-gyn-l@obgyn.net
Forum Administrator: geffrey.klein@obgyn.net
Report Technical Problems: webmaster@obgyn.net
Last Updated: Thu Oct 2 04:52:03 2008

The American Medical Association is no longer designating CME hours for AMA Category II CME credit. However, physicians themselves may self designate learning activities as Category II CME credit hours if they feel it is of sufficient educational merit and meets the formal definitions of continuing medical education. OBGYN.net believes these interaction in this forum meets these criteria. For further information see the AMA web site.