[Noodle blog] Adventure from Rolton or his adventures with doctors.

Actually, I would like to tell readers about my adventures. I wrote while still in the hospital, because there was nothing to do it was in the evening and the only way to entertain myself was for me to describe in my notebook on my lap everything that was happening around. I had to write a lot… Yeah..

Try not to get sick, and if you do get sick, go to a paid clinic. There the doctors are like doctors and the attitude towards the patient is appropriate. As they say, free cheese only comes in a mousetrap. Well, you know where to look for positive people.

So let’s get started.
It all started https://casino-wreckbet.co.uk/ when one day I felt bad. Very bad. A heroic trip to the doctor indicated bronchitis for me. And okay, to hell with this bronchitis. So the doctor prescribed me general strengthening vitamins headed by ACC. There were no antibiotics at all. Okay, I went, bought it, chewed it spat out. Didn’t help. Persistently. And the next morning the temperature crept up. And it remained stable for 4 days between 38 and 39 degrees Celsius. It was already getting fun. Since I was no longer able to do anything on my own, my mother took over. She called a doctor from the same clinic I went to to the house. The doctor came an hour later, although my house is a very leisurely 5-minute walk from their establishment. Okay, we’ve passed, let’s move on. The doctor came, listened to me, rolled his eyes and said that why the hell am I not yet in the hospital for bronchitis (although they don’t seem to be hospitalized because of it). And then he added that it’s more likely that I no longer have bronchitis, but pneumonia. And he strongly recommended that you show up for an x-ray or, to put it in a more capacious word at that time – KTTS. It’s clear that it started to smell bad. I was offered 2 options: either go to the local traumatology department and take pictures there, or call an ambulance to the hospital, do it all there, and if the suspicions are confirmed, quickly register me there too. Of course I was pleased with option 2.
And now I’ll explain why. Once, back in September, I seriously sprained my ankle. After limping for a week, it became clear to me that it would be a good idea to see a traumatologist. With grief for two, I got to this department. Not bad already. But that’s where it all ended. I went up to the 3rd floor of the building (that’s where the traumatologist was located) and saw, probably, 150 people. The floor was just packed. And everyone wanted to get to the dock. It’s clear that even before X-rays I was like before Mars. Turning around, I limped home and there, using folk remedies, I healed myself in 2 weeks. And now, most likely, the same situation awaited me, only instead of pain in my leg, I was faced with chaos in my head and my body swaying in an upright position, as if in an n-point storm.
Having sent the doctor out the door, I began to frantically get ready for the trip. In my understanding at that time, the word “urgent” meant a period from 0 to 30 minutes. During this time it was necessary to think through and collect everything necessary. I got it together, but the ambulance arrived 2 hours after the call… And okay, at first I started justifying them like evening traffic jams – cops – traffic lights – crossings – children blah blah blah and other crap. So they steadily drove me to the other end of the city at a speed of 80-100 km/h without flashing lights and at the same time I felt like that same bundle of firewood that our minibus drivers carry every day 24/7. And somehow it began to seem to me that in these 2 hours the crew killed 1.5 to devour shkolotycakes with tea. Although maybe I’m wrong and during this time they saved not a single life… Everything is possible here.

I continue the chronicle of my adventures.
After an X-ray, a couple of interrogations and tests, they confirmed the diagnosis of “mild pneumonia of the right lung” and took me to settle in and introduce me to the local aborigines and general flora and fauna in general. Since there were practically no places, I was again offered 2 options (isn’t that a bit much for today??) temporary check-in: or to some left-wing boys aged 8-9 years or something like in an examination room for patients, but alone. “The lone stump is clear!"I told the nurse. Well, they settled there. Remember the wooden “sofas” covered in faux leather in doctors’ offices?? This is exactly the same one I got. Yes, it’s tough, but not very comfortable, but there is silence, no one pesters with stupid, unnecessary questions and does not squeak in voices that have not yet become coarse. More than a worthy price for peace. But my happiness lasted only 1 night and half a day, and then I was moved into a suddenly completely empty three-bed ward. On a soft bed… Later they placed a Suvorov and Nakhimov veteran at the age of 11-12 years..
Friends Beavis and Butthead. Yes, yes, that’s exactly how I christened my roommates. Because their communication came down to exactly 2 things:
1) Tell an accordion joke, like a bear in a burning car.
2) Rumble for a long time, making characteristic sounds

And no matter how hard I rested all my limbs on the blanket on my bed, which covered my head, I had to make contact. From all the conversations I drew several conclusions:
1) The level of training in schools is somewhere between a concrete floor and a plinth.
2) My interlocutors lacked a general outlook as such. It’s not far to look for an example: 1 of them had not even heard that in our vast country there is such a lake as Baikal.
3) The only thought that occupies and torments them for a long time, even at night, is how to quickly come to their native Mukhosransk, get on the computer and play games until they lose their pulse.
Further.
After staying for 6 days in completely peaceful conditions, they suddenly decided to move me abruptly, without warning, from my already warm, warm room. The caretaker decided to move me to a larger (now not 3, but 5 beds), and therefore more stuffy ward. At that time, 1 (Nakhimov resident) had already been discharged and the rest were decided to be resettled. Instead of disturbing one person and bringing him to live with us (and there were candidates, there were already a couple lying in the corridor), she decided to disturb two. The logic is iron. After we moved, the room turned out to be empty… for about 20 minutes, then it was completely occupied by other people. Iron logic[2].
By the way, it should be noted that all the double-glazed windows in the hospital had no handles. This was explained by the fact that children could supposedly fall out of the window. But the likelihood of falling from the 1st floor and getting some serious injury seemed ridiculous to me.Most likely, the handles were missing just so that they would not be torn off or so that with the help of magic crafting a handle + window they would escape to hell from the hospital (and there was a reason).
New ward, new roommates. Since I just can’t write a detailed description about each, I’ll do it easier: there were me, 3 small ones and a 12-year-old boar as tall as me. All the small ones were from schools, which I already spoke about a little higher, so the level of development did not raise any questions. If anyone could be singled out, it was one fellow from the cadet corps. I arrived at the hospital with a common cold, and by the time I was discharged I was already suffering from bronchitis. The man didn’t take so much care of his health that he forgot to take pills, didn’t warm his throat, just tried to eat everything dry. And in addition, he sleepwalked, as the “boar” put it: in black. Then in the middle of the night he suddenly gets up in the room and shouts: “Sheep!” and instantly falls into bed, then wakes up and, lying in bed, points his finger at someone and mutters incomprehensible garbage, occasionally reminiscent of phrases

At such moments, everyone in the ward was freaking out in fear, as this happened around 2-3 o’clock in the morning after a couple of horror stories read from the Internet. Funny kid. And thanks to his bronchitis, coupled with a runny nose, he snored like a tractor and slept soundly, very soundly. Waking him up and explaining to him that everyone else would like to get some sleep took some effort, one of which was whistling in his ear. The man was really sleeping very soundly. After this little guy woke up and quickly fell asleep, we had about 15 minutes to fall asleep ourselves, then again snoring could be heard throughout the entire ward..
The days passed, the doctors threw pills mercilessly, my butt was languishing from precise and not so precise injections of antibiotics, but I did not lose heart. And one fine day, namely yesterday, Monday, the doctor listened to me, said “great” and said that the next day they would do a repeat x-ray and if it didn’t show anything, they would happily discharge me.
And now I’m sitting at home and finishing this text, among my beloved parents and dogs, with a seagull at hand and a notepad on which this story was written. Yes, it may seem strange to some, but I spent a long time in the hospital on this story and it wouldn’t be good if I didn’t finish what I started.
In conclusion, I just want to advise my readers to go to paid clinics when sick, or better yet not to get sick at all. Something like this. Yes.
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