Women with agonising toothache in the 1980s used to encounter daftnesses like these:
Saying that you are in such agonising pain that you are contemplating suicide, proves you are 'really' depressed. You do not need your imaginary pain to be dealt with; you just need antidepressants.
"Prescribing
antidepressants to someone who is contemplating suicide because of the
intensity and long duration of pain is a life-saving measure and I am
proud of saving lives in this way." - A belief (about their women
patients) commonly held by GPs in the 80s.
"He wasn't being rude
to you. Speaking like that is just his way." - This was Miss Anne
Atkinson's response when I told her that Mr Reg Dinsdale had repeatedly
addressed me as "You Fat Depressives" (plural), instead of by my name.
These two misguided health professionals worked at the Charles Clifford
Dental Hospital. Mr Dinsdale was an 'eminent' oral surgeon. Miss
Atkinson was a Senior Lecturer in dentistry who claimed to be trying to
help me.
When I told my then GP, Dr Hazel Radley, of Mr
Dinsdale's insulting way of speaking to me, she described it as "Shock
Treatment", intended to 'shock' me out of believing that I was in pain!
Miss Atkinson demonstrated her own mastery of daft dental logic by insisting to me that I was not really in pain, I only thought I was in pain!
And when Mr Dinsdale was performing an apicectomy on my UL2, he told his
student assistant that Depressives did not actually feel pain, they
only complained about being in pain! - And when bone failed to
regenerate after his poorly performed apicectomy, which had left me in
greater pain than before, he told the student who was looking at the
X-ray with him that 'neurotics' were very poor at regenerating bone! - Very clearly, this man was deluded.
An 'ordinary dentist', a general dental practitioner, did a
re-apicectomy on the UL2 the following year, and this time the op was
done properly and the infection was properly removed so that the bone
did at last regrow.
I was sent by Roger Heesterman - Community Dental Officer, I think
his title was - in a further stage of the cynical game of pretending
that something was being done to help me, to see a Mr Hirschmann,
another high-up dentist at a dental hospital in another city,
(Heestermann could, and should, in my opinion, have helped me himself.
He was a qualified dentist after all. But I suppose there was some Dept
of Health rule that people complaining of dental negligence must on no
account receive any actual help, only exhausting hassle so that they'd give up their struggle.)
Hirschman said that no doubt I did have some dental
problems, but that the real problem was depression. He said that
he wouldn't indulge me by taking any X-rays and that none of the
dentists there would help me, but possibly one of the students could be
spared after the summer holidays...
In contrast to all this daft dangerous misogynistic nonsense:
I had an article published in Mensa magazine about my great suffering at the hands of high-up dental drips: Cruelty, Negligence and the Abuse of Power in the NHS: Fighting the System. Someone
sent a copy of the article to an academic health campaigner, and she
wrote to me to commend me for my "excellent piece in Mensa about
customer complaints". She continued, "I have been fighting the medical
attitude to consumer complaints - especially from women - for years - as
a member of a Regional Health Board, then Chair of the Patients
Association, now as a lay member of the General Medical Council.
I
certainly remember a number of cases from my days at the Patients
Association of patients with intractable dental pain who were treated as
neurotic or frankly loony - and all women. They were laughed at,
insulted and generally had a rotten time."
She went on to suggest
that I should write a similar article for the British Dental Journal to
get to the professionals directly. - I did, in fact, do this, but the
article was rejected, as you might, perhaps, have guessed it would be.
The
very top man in the whole world on the subject of pain used to be
Professor Patrick Wall of University College, London, who died in 2001.
In a personal letter to me some years ago, he wrote: "Simple-minded
doctors and dentists (the majority) have a built-in scale of how much
pain they expect for how much damage. If you fall outside their norm,
you are labelled as mad. It is they who need their heads examining. They
also need to read and think."
Wednesday, October 02, 2013
Deluded Dentists?
Posted by Willow at 5:15 pm
Labels: Anne Atkinson, apicectomy, Charles Clifford Dental Hospital, Dr Hazel Radley, Mr Hirschmann, NHS dentists, Patients Association, Professor Patrick Wall, Reg Dinsdale, Roger Heesterman, toothache
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