Episodios

  • When Laura Johnson’s father Bill, a healthy and active senior, went for a simple medical procedure, Laura’s gut instincts told her to miss work and go with him to keep him safe.

    But Bill told her he had a friend accompanying him and assured Laura he would be fine because “how bad could they mess this up”.

    Tragically, Laura’s instincts were right. Her father was not safe in that hospital under their care. And the doctor responsible for Bill’s care, is the daughter of a doctor who is imprisoned for medical fraud. The medical apple does not fall far from the criminal tree.

    Laura shares what happened to her father, how he was blamed when the procedure went wrong, and how staggering levels of medical incompetence lead to his early death.

    Connect with Laura Johnson:

    https://m.facebook.com/laura.g.johnson.7

    Be a podcast patron

    Support Medical Error Interviews on Patreon by becoming a Patron for $2 / month for audio versions.

    Premium Patrons get access to video versions of podcasts for $5 / month.

    Be my Guest

    I am always looking for guests to share their medical error experiences so we help bring awareness and make patients safer.

    If you are a survivor, a victim’s surviving family member, a health care worker, advocate, researcher or policy maker and you would like to share your experiences, please send me an email with a brief description: [email protected]

    Need a Counsellor?

    Like me, many of my clients at Remedies Counseling have experienced the often devastating effects of medical error.

    If you need a counsellor for your experience with medical error, or living with a chronic illness(es), I offer online video counseling appointments.

    **For my health and life balance, I limit my number of counseling clients.**

    Email me to learn more or book an appointment: [email protected]

    Scott Simpson:

    Counsellor + Patient Advocate + (former) Triathlete

    I am a counsellor, patient advocate, and - before I became sick and disabled - a passionate triathlete. Work hard. Train hard. Rest hard.

    I have been living with HIV since 1998. I was the first person living with HIV to compete at the triathlon world championships.

    Thanks to research and access to medications, HIV is not a problem in my life.

    I have been living with ME (myalgic encephalomyelitis) since 2012, and thanks in part to medical error, it is a big problem in my life.

    Counseling / Research

    I first became aware of the ubiquitousness of medical error during a decade of community based research working with the HIV Prevention Lab at Ryerson University, where I co-authored two research papers on a counseling intervention for people living with HIV, here and here.

    Patient participants would often report varying degrees of medical neglect, error and harms as part of their counseling sessions.

    Patient Advocacy

    I am co-founder of the ME patient advocacy non-profit Millions Missing Canada, and on the Executive Committee of the Interdisciplinary Canadian Collaborative Myalgic Encephalomyelitis Research Network.

    I am also a patient advisor for Health Quality Ontario’s Patient and Family Advisory Council, and member of Patients for Patient Safety Canada.

    Medical Error Interviews podcast and vidcast emerged to give voice to victims, witnesses and participants in this hidden epidemic so we can create change toward a safer health care system.

    My golden retriever Gladys is a constant source of love and joy. I hope to be well enough again one day to race triathlons again. Or even shovel the snow off the sidewalk.

  • Medical error and harm can take many forms and occurs in almost every medical context, except perhaps during autopsies. So when a medical error occurs during a joyous event like childbirth, it can not only impact the immediate experience, but may also cause lifelong suffering and disability.

    This is what happened to Carol Sunnucks when she went to the hospital to give birth to her son Kai. It was a hard labour and they had to use a suction device to pull Kai out -- but the doctor failed to check Carol for internal damage after that difficult procedure. This would prove to be catastrophic to Carol’s health and future.

    To make matters exponentially worse, the medical error and the damage it was causing was not detected for so long that any hope of Carol recovering her normal bodily functions is seemingly gone.

    Layered on top of that is the betrayal Carol subsequently experienced by both the health care and legal systems. Carol and I talk about her experiences and what she’s doing to make meaning out of someone else’s failure to do their job.

    Connect with Carol Sunnucks

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/carol.sunnucks.92

    Twitter: https://twitter.com/kaibaby28

    Email: [email protected]

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  • Ashanti Daniel is one of those people who knew their career destiny as a child - and then made it come to fruition. As a nurse, Ashanti had the inside view of how the health care system operates - so when she got very sick and was hospitalized multiple times, she thought that being a health care worker would afford her legitimacy in the eyes of her medical peers.

    But Ashanti quickly discovered that being a black woman with ‘normal’ results from routine medical tests, trumped years of working as a health care professional.

    While medical gaslighting is endemic throughout the health care system, it is especially evident if you have a disease that has no biomarkers, and you are a female of colour. Ask any one with a complex chronic illness, and you will most assuredly hear a story of doctors denying the patient experience of their own body, and instead attribute physical symptoms to psychological causes. And this is based on nothing except the doctor’s biases, prejudices and ego. For black female patients with a complex disease, it could be argued that the operationalized ‘standard of care’ is gaslighting.

    As Ashanti experienced, a doctor can write whatever they want about a patient in the medical records. It doesn’t have to be true. The amount of power doctors wield over people is the power of life and death. At their whim, they can deny testing, ignore a diagnosis, and label a person as mentally ill. In some jurisdictions, doctors can have a person committed to a mental hospital against their will.

    The medical system is a pathological mess, driven and controlled by a god complex culture. Until doctors change their culture, there will continue to be -- as Long COVID patients are discovering en masse -- many doctors that inflict great harm by disbelieving patients.

    Connect with Ashanti Daniel, RN

    Instagram: @AshantiRN

    Twitter: @AshantiRN

    Linktr.ee: www.Linktr.ee/AshantiRN

    Be a podcast patron

    Support Medical Error Interviews on Patreon by becoming a Patron for $2 / month for audio versions.

    Premium Patrons get access to video versions of podcasts for $5 / month.

    Be my Guest

    I am always looking for guests to share their medical error experiences so we help bring awareness and make patients safer.

    If you are a survivor, a victim’s surviving family member, a health care worker, advocate, researcher or policy maker and you would like to share your experiences, please send me an email with a brief description: [email protected]

    Need a Counsellor?

    Like me, many of my clients at Remedies Counseling have experienced the often devastating effects of medical error.

    If you need a counsellor for your experience with medical error, or living with a chronic illness(es), I offer online video counseling appointments.

    **For my health and life balance, I limit my number of counseling clients.**

    Email me to learn more or book an appointment: [email protected]

    Scott Simpson:

    Counsellor + Patient Advocate + (former) Triathlete

    I am a counsellor, patient advocate, and - before I became sick and disabled - a passionate triathlete. Work hard. Train hard. Rest hard.

    I have been living with HIV since 1998. I was the first person living with HIV to compete at the triathlon world championships.

    Thanks to research and access to medications, HIV is not a problem in my life.

    I have been living with ME (myalgic encephalomyelitis) since 2012, and thanks in part to medical error, it is a big problem in my life.

    Counseling / Research

    I first became aware of the ubiquitousness of medical error during a decade of community based research working with the HIV Prevention Lab at Ryerson University, where I co-authored two research papers on a counseling intervention for people living with HIV, here and here.

    Patient participants would often report varying degrees of medical neglect, error and harms as part of their counseling sessions.

    Patient Advocacy

    I am co-founder of the ME patient advocacy non-profit Millions Missing Canada, and on the Executive Committee of the Interdisciplinary Canadian Collaborative Myalgic Encephalomyelitis Research Network.

    I am also a patient advisor for Health Quality Ontario’s Patient and Family Advisory Council, and member of Patients for Patient Safety Canada.

    Medical Error Interviews podcast and vidcast emerged to give voice to victims, witnesses and participants in this hidden epidemic so we can create change toward a safer health care system.

    My golden retriever Gladys is a constant source of love and joy. I hope to be well enough again one day to race triathlons again. Or even shovel the snow off the sidewalk.

  • In the early hours of the 28th of July 2016, Colette McCulloch was hit and killed by a bus. Eighteen hours earlier Colette had walked out of the specialist care facility for autistic adults where she was being treated.

    Throughout Colette’s short life, her parents Andy and Amanda, sought out medical professionals to try to explain and ease their younger daughter’s extraordinary mind. Since Colette’s death Andy and Amanda have been fighting various medical and legal authorities to uncover the failings in her care and treatment.

    In our interview, author Andy McCulloch tells the story of his daughter's life and untimely death: the years in which her autism went undiagnosed, her lifelong battle with eating disorders and the lack of support for her complex needs. In spite of these challenges, Colette forged a path to university to pursue her passion for literature and to have her writing published.

    Over the past year Andy and Amanda have written a book about their family’s experience with the health care system titled “Why Can’t You Hear Me?” - and it includes some of Colette’s writing, where she articulates her experiences grappling with a world forever at odds with her. With this book, Colette’s dream of having her words published has come to fruition.

    Colette's story is ultimately a call to action and a message of hope for a future in which autistic people will be better understood, appropriately cared for, and able to flourish.

    Connect with Andy McCulloch:

    Twitter: @AndyMcCulloch5

    Buy his book: Why Can’t You Hear Me?

    Be a podcast patron

    Support Medical Error Interviews on Patreon by becoming a Patron for $2 / month for audio versions.

    Premium Patrons get access to video versions of podcasts for $5 / month.

    Be my Guest

    I am always looking for guests to share their medical error experiences so we help bring awareness and make patients safer.

    If you are a survivor, a victim’s surviving family member, a health care worker, advocate, researcher or policy maker and you would like to share your experiences, please send me an email with a brief description: [email protected]

    Need a Counsellor?

    Like me, many of my clients at Remedies Counseling have experienced the often devastating effects of medical error.

    If you need a counsellor for your experience with medical error, or living with a chronic illness(es), I offer online video counseling appointments.

    **For my health and life balance, I limit my number of counseling clients.**

    Email me to learn more or book an appointment: [email protected]

    Scott Simpson:

    Counsellor + Patient Advocate + (former) Triathlete

    I am a counsellor, patient advocate, and - before I became sick and disabled - a passionate triathlete. Work hard. Train hard. Rest hard.

    I have been living with HIV since 1998. I was the first person living with HIV to compete at the triathlon world championships.

    Thanks to research and access to medications, HIV is not a problem in my life.

    I have been living with ME (myalgic encephalomyelitis) since 2012, and thanks in part to medical error, it is a big problem in my life.

    Counseling / Research

    I first became aware of the ubiquitousness of medical error during a decade of community based research working with the HIV Prevention Lab at Ryerson University, where I co-authored two research papers on a counseling intervention for people living with HIV, here and here.

    Patient participants would often report varying degrees of medical neglect, error and harms as part of their counseling sessions.

    Patient Advocacy

    I am co-founder of the ME patient advocacy non-profit Millions Missing Canada, and on the Executive Committee of the Interdisciplinary Canadian Collaborative Myalgic Encephalomyelitis Research Network.

    I am also a patient advisor for Health Quality Ontario’s Patient and Family Advisory Council, and member of Patients for Patient Safety Canada.

    Medical Error Interviews podcast and vidcast emerged to give voice to victims, witnesses and participants in this hidden epidemic so we can create change toward a safer health care system.

    My golden retriever Gladys is a constant source of love and joy. I hope to be well enough again one day to race triathlons again. Or even shovel the snow off the sidewalk.

  • Implanting plastic mesh inside our bodies doesn’t sound like a smart thing -- and it wouldn’t have happened to Michelle Hedgcoth if a previous medical error hadn’t damaged her body.

    Michelle was a healthy and happy career woman when she gave birth - but the doctor, who had given Michelle an episiotomy, failed to sew her back up after the baby was delivered. This failure would have devastating consequences on every aspect of Michelle’s life.

    In an effort to ‘fix’ their mistake, doctors performed a surgery to implant plastic mesh into Michelle’s abdomen. Plastic mesh that can disintegrate releasing toxic and sickening poisons -- plastic mesh that can twist, break apart and pierce internal organs -- plastic mesh that can attach itself to organs so that it can never be detached.

    In this interview, Michelle tells us what happened to her in the health care system, the impact it has had on her body, her health, her family, her career, and what she is doing today to make others aware of the dangers of mesh implants.

    Connect with Michelle Hedgcoth:

    Twitter: @WCmeshfighter

    Facebook: WestCoastMeshFighter https://www.facebook.com/Westcoastmeshfighter

    Instagram: WestCoastMeshFighter https://www.instagram.com/westcoastmeshfighter/?hl=en

    Website: http://WestCoastMeshFighter.com

    Be a podcast patron

    Support Medical Error Interviews on Patreon by becoming a Patron for $2 / month for audio versions.

    Premium Patrons get access to video versions of podcasts for $5 / month.

    Be my Guest

    I am always looking for guests to share their medical error experiences so we help bring awareness and make patients safer.

    If you are a survivor, a victim’s surviving family member, a health care worker, advocate, researcher or policy maker and you would like to share your experiences, please send me an email with a brief description: [email protected]

    Need a Counsellor?

    Like me, many of my clients at Remedies Counseling have experienced the often devastating effects of medical error.

    If you need a counsellor for your experience with medical error, or living with a chronic illness(es), I offer online video counseling appointments.

    **For my health and life balance, I limit my number of counseling clients.**

    Email me to learn more or book an appointment: [email protected]

    Scott Simpson:

    Counsellor + Patient Advocate + (former) Triathlete

    I am a counsellor, patient advocate, and - before I became sick and disabled - a passionate triathlete. Work hard. Train hard. Rest hard.

    I have been living with HIV since 1998. I was the first person living with HIV to compete at the triathlon world championships.

    Thanks to research and access to medications, HIV is not a problem in my life.

    I have been living with ME (myalgic encephalomyelitis) since 2012, and thanks in part to medical error, it is a big problem in my life.

    Counseling / Research

    I first became aware of the ubiquitousness of medical error during a decade of community based research working with the HIV Prevention Lab at Ryerson University, where I co-authored two research papers on a counseling intervention for people living with HIV, here and here.

    Patient participants would often report varying degrees of medical neglect, error and harms as part of their counseling sessions.

    Patient Advocacy

    I am co-founder of the ME patient advocacy non-profit Millions Missing Canada, and on the Executive Committee of the Interdisciplinary Canadian Collaborative Myalgic Encephalomyelitis Research Network.

    I am also a patient advisor for Health Quality Ontario’s Patient and Family Advisory Council, and member of Patients for Patient Safety Canada.

    Medical Error Interviews podcast and vidcast emerged to give voice to victims, witnesses and participants in this hidden epidemic so we can create change toward a safer health care system.

    My golden retriever Gladys is a constant source of love and joy. I hope to be well enough again one day to race triathlons again. Or even shovel the snow off the sidewalk.

  • Like the vast majority of people, you have probably taken an antibiotic at some point in your life. And it probably helped you. However, a class of antibiotics known as fluoroquinolones can cause permanent and severe damage -- this is known as fluoroquinolone toxicity, or, in the US, fluoroquinolone induced disability - FQID. This is a global health care problem that few know about -- or are warned about by their doctor. Why is that?

    In this episode, I chat with someone who has insight not only into the dynamics that keep this medical harm mostly hidden from the public, but has also been profoundly impacted by fluoroquinolones.

    Marc from Germany is just one of 10s of 1000s of people around the planet who have been injured by these antibiotics. Marc shares how he finally connected the dots between his declining health and repeated use of fluoroquinolones, and what he does to help alleviate the toxicity symptoms so that he has an improved quality of life.

    The statistics of harm from fluoroquinolone toxicity are vastly under reported because the toxicity symptoms may not noticeably manifest until days, weeks or months after the antibiotic use. This makes it difficult for those affected to identify the cause of their symptoms, and a challenge for physicians to tease out….or even acknowledge.

    Symptoms include tendon rupture, aortic rupture, hypoglycemia, nerve damage, mental health issues and -- surprisingly to me -- a dysfunctional response to exercise known as post exertional malaise, the hallmark symptom of the neurological disease ME, or myalgic encephalomyelitis. As you will hear, Marc postulates that some people diagnosed with ME may have fluoroquinolone toxicity. Is he connecting more dots, that the medical system is missing?

    Connect with Marc:

    Twitter: @FQID2

    Marc’s Doctor is Dr. Stefan Pieper

    https://praxisdrpieper.de

    Dr Pieper released a "Springer essential" at scientific publisher Springer in German with basic facts about diagnosis and possible treatment regarding FQID (Fluoroquinolone Induced Disability) https://springer.com

    Be a podcast patron

    Support Medical Error Interviews on Patreon by becoming a Patron for $2 / month for audio versions.

    Premium Patrons get access to video versions of podcasts for $5 / month.

    Be my Guest

    I am always looking for guests to share their medical error experiences so we help bring awareness and make patients safer.

    If you are a survivor, a victim’s surviving family member, a health care worker, advocate, researcher or policy maker and you would like to share your experiences, please send me an email with a brief description: [email protected]

    Need a Counsellor?

    Like me, many of my clients at Remedies Counseling have experienced the often devastating effects of medical error.

    If you need a counsellor for your experience with medical error, or living with a chronic illness(es), I offer online video counseling appointments.

    **For my health and life balance, I limit my number of counseling clients.**

    Email me to learn more or book an appointment: [email protected]

    Scott Simpson:

    Counsellor + Patient Advocate + (former) Triathlete

    I am a counsellor, patient advocate, and - before I became sick and disabled - a passionate triathlete. Work hard. Train hard. Rest hard.

    I have been living with HIV since 1998. I was the first person living with HIV to compete at the triathlon world championships.

    Thanks to research and access to medications, HIV is not a problem in my life.

    I have been living with ME (myalgic encephalomyelitis) since 2012, and thanks in part to medical error, it is a big problem in my life.

    Counseling / Research

    I first became aware of the ubiquitousness of medical error during a decade of community based research working with the HIV Prevention Lab at Ryerson University, where I co-authored two research papers on a counseling intervention for people living with HIV, here and here.

    Patient participants would often report varying degrees of medical neglect, error and harms as part of their counseling sessions.

    Patient Advocacy

    I am co-founder of the ME patient advocacy non-profit Millions Missing Canada, and on the Executive Committee of the Interdisciplinary Canadian Collaborative Myalgic Encephalomyelitis Research Network.

    I am also a patient advisor for Health Quality Ontario’s Patient and Family Advisory Council, and member of Patients for Patient Safety Canada.

    Medical Error Interviews podcast and vidcast emerged to give voice to victims, witnesses and participants in this hidden epidemic so we can create change toward a safer health care system.

    My golden retriever Gladys is a constant source of love and joy. I hope to be well enough again one day to race triathlons again. Or even shovel the snow off the sidewalk.

  • Multiple award winning author Marcus Sedgwick is best known for his popular fiction books, but his experiences with deeply entrenched medical gaslighting inspired his new book titled “All In Your Head - What happens when your doctor doesn’t believe you.”

    Marcus describes how he got sick with flu like symptoms...but they never went away. Marcus was thrown into a world he did not even know existed, a world where very sick people are disbelieved and often belittled by physicians. A world Marcus is also seeing unfold for the millions of Long COVID patients around the world, where their physical symptoms are often dismissed as psychological. With Long COVID we are witnessing millions of people being medically traumatized by global gaslighting.

    Marcus and I discuss the immense pressure physicians are under, from the government and insurance companies, and why the medical system has been set up so that it is in the physician’s best interest to say ‘it’s in your head’ rather than in your body. #FollowTheMoney

    Connect with Marcus Sedgwick

    www.marcussedgwick.com

    ‘All In Your Head’ preview:

    https://marcussedgwick.com/all-in-your-head/

    Twitter: @marcussedgwick

    Instagram: @marcussedgwick

    Be a podcast patron

    Support Medical Error Interviews on Patreon by becoming a Patron for $2 / month for audio versions.

    Premium Patrons get access to video versions of podcasts for $5 / month.

    Be my Guest

    I am always looking for guests to share their medical error experiences so we help bring awareness and make patients safer.

    If you are a survivor, a victim’s surviving family member, a health care worker, advocate, researcher or policy maker and you would like to share your experiences, please send me an email with a brief description: [email protected]

    Need a Counsellor?

    Like me, many of my clients at Remedies Counseling have experienced the often devastating effects of medical error.

    If you need a counsellor for your experience with medical error, or living with a chronic illness(es), I offer online video counseling appointments.

    **For my health and life balance, I limit my number of counseling clients.**

    Email me to learn more or book an appointment: [email protected]

    Scott Simpson:

    Counsellor + Patient Advocate + (former) Triathlete

    I am a counsellor, patient advocate, and - before I became sick and disabled - a passionate triathlete. Work hard. Train hard. Rest hard.

    I have been living with HIV since 1998. I was the first person living with HIV to compete at the triathlon world championships.

    Thanks to research and access to medications, HIV is not a problem in my life.

    I have been living with ME (myalgic encephalomyelitis) since 2012, and thanks in part to medical error, it is a big problem in my life.

    Counseling / Research

    I first became aware of the ubiquitousness of medical error during a decade of community based research working with the HIV Prevention Lab at Ryerson University, where I co-authored two research papers on a counseling intervention for people living with HIV, here and here.

    Patient participants would often report varying degrees of medical neglect, error and harms as part of their counseling sessions.

    Patient Advocacy

    I am co-founder of the ME patient advocacy non-profit Millions Missing Canada, and on the Executive Committee of the Interdisciplinary Canadian Collaborative Myalgic Encephalomyelitis Research Network.

    I am also a patient advisor for Health Quality Ontario’s Patient and Family Advisory Council, and member of Patients for Patient Safety Canada.

    Medical Error Interviews podcast and vidcast emerged to give voice to victims, witnesses and participants in this hidden epidemic so we can create change toward a safer health care system.

    My golden retriever Gladys is a constant source of love and joy. I hope to be well enough again one day to race triathlons again. Or even shovel the snow off the sidewalk.

  • When Alice Urbino was a young teenager she got the flu and never got better. Her mother - desperate for her daughter to recover - paid for what she thought was a legitimate treatment -- even though young Alice could plainly see the ‘lightning process’ was based on pseudoscience.

    Nevertheless, Alice was pressured to partake in a cult like atmosphere with absurd rituals that amounted to brain washing. Alice was made to believe that she chose to be sick, and that even expressing feelings of nausea or fatigue were signs that she wasn’t trying hard enough and that she had the wrong attitude and that’s why she was still sick.

    Not surprisingly, young Alice was brain washed and internalized the blame and shame and soon became depressed and started hating herself. For years, belief in this ‘treatment’ affected Alice’s mental health and belief in herself and the physical symptoms she experienced.

    In our interview, Alice tells us how she overcame the internalized gaslighting caused by the lightning process, and to warn us about what she learned about the lightning process’s infamous founder Phil Parker, who professes to have the “ability to step into other people’s bodies...to assist them in their healing”. Parker - who is often called out as a charlatan on social media - has a long history of financially preying on the sick, vulnerable and desperate.

    Link to Phil Parker’s old prototype page: https://t.co/VNjPRdxjjd?amp=1

    Connect with Alice Urbino:

    twitter and instagram are both @aliceurbino

    Be a podcast patron

    Support Medical Error Interviews on Patreon by becoming a Patron for $2 / month for audio versions.

    Premium Patrons get access to video versions of podcasts for $5 / month.

    Be my Guest

    I am always looking for guests to share their medical error experiences so we help bring awareness and make patients safer.

    If you are a survivor, a victim’s surviving family member, a health care worker, advocate, researcher or policy maker and you would like to share your experiences, please send me an email with a brief description: [email protected]

    Need a Counsellor?

    Like me, many of my clients at Remedies Counseling have experienced the often devastating effects of medical error.

    If you need a counsellor for your experience with medical error, or living with a chronic illness(es), I offer online video counseling appointments.

    **For my health and life balance, I limit my number of counseling clients.**

    Email me to learn more or book an appointment: [email protected]

    Scott Simpson:

    Counsellor + Patient Advocate + (former) Triathlete

    I am a counsellor, patient advocate, and - before I became sick and disabled - a passionate triathlete. Work hard. Train hard. Rest hard.

    I have been living with HIV since 1998. I was the first person living with HIV to compete at the triathlon world championships.

    Thanks to research and access to medications, HIV is not a problem in my life.

    I have been living with ME (myalgic encephalomyelitis) since 2012, and thanks in part to medical error, it is a big problem in my life.

    Counseling / Research

    I first became aware of the ubiquitousness of medical error during a decade of community based research working with the HIV Prevention Lab at Ryerson University, where I co-authored two research papers on a counseling intervention for people living with HIV, here and here.

    Patient participants would often report varying degrees of medical neglect, error and harms as part of their counseling sessions.

    Patient Advocacy

    I am co-founder of the ME patient advocacy non-profit Millions Missing Canada, and on the Executive Committee of the Interdisciplinary Canadian Collaborative Myalgic Encephalomyelitis Research Network.

    I am also a patient advisor for Health Quality Ontario’s Patient and Family Advisory Council, and member of Patients for Patient Safety Canada.

    Medical Error Interviews podcast and vidcast emerged to give voice to victims, witnesses and participants in this hidden epidemic so we can create change toward a safer health care system.

    My golden retriever Gladys is a constant source of love and joy. I hope to be well enough again one day to race triathlons again. Or even shovel the snow off the sidewalk.

  • Ryan Clark had it all. Successful career. Great relationships. Healthy body.

    When Ryan noticed a bit of hair loss, like many men, he took a common medication known as Propecia to promote hair growth.

    Unbeknownst to Ryan, Propecia can cause post-finasteride syndrome - causing sexual, neurological, physical and cognitive adverse reactions - it is a condition with no known cure and few, if any, effective treatments.

    In the ensuing years, Ryan’s body started to break down and unfamiliar and confusing symptoms manifested: anxiety, trouble sleeping, erectile dysfunction and memory problems.

    But his doctors were not making the connection between Ryan’s symptoms and the hair growth medication -- even after Ryan developed testicular cancer -- very few physicians are even aware of post finasteride syndrome.

    In our interview Ryan shares the heartbreaking losses he’s suffered to his health, his relationships and his career as a direct result of the medication -- and Ryan shares about how he’s finding meaning in helping and supporting other men who’ve had their lives ruined by a medication the health care system fails to recognize, let alone treat.

    Connect with Ryan Clark

    https://twitter.com/RyanCla64726007

    https://www.facebook.com/ryan.clark.589583

    https://www.propeciahelp.com/

    Be a podcast patron

    Support Medical Error Interviews on Patreon by becoming a Patron for $2 / month for audio versions.

    Premium Patrons get access to video versions of podcasts for $5 / month.

    Be my Guest

    I am always looking for guests to share their medical error experiences so we help bring awareness and make patients safer.

    If you are a survivor, a victim’s surviving family member, a health care worker, advocate, researcher or policy maker and you would like to share your experiences, please send me an email with a brief description: [email protected]

    Need a Counsellor?

    Like me, many of my clients at Remedies Counseling have experienced the often devastating effects of medical error.

    If you need a counsellor for your experience with medical error, or living with a chronic illness(es), I offer online video counseling appointments.

    **For my health and life balance, I limit my number of counseling clients.**

    Email me to learn more or book an appointment: [email protected]

    Scott Simpson:

    Counsellor + Patient Advocate + (former) Triathlete

    I am a counsellor, patient advocate, and - before I became sick and disabled - a passionate triathlete. Work hard. Train hard. Rest hard.

    I have been living with HIV since 1998. I was the first person living with HIV to compete at the triathlon world championships.

    Thanks to research and access to medications, HIV is not a problem in my life.

    I have been living with ME (myalgic encephalomyelitis) since 2012, and thanks in part to medical error, it is a big problem in my life.

    Counseling / Research

    I first became aware of the ubiquitousness of medical error during a decade of community based research working with the HIV Prevention Lab at Ryerson University, where I co-authored two research papers on a counseling intervention for people living with HIV, here and here.

    Patient participants would often report varying degrees of medical neglect, error and harms as part of their counseling sessions.

    Patient Advocacy

    I am co-founder of the ME patient advocacy non-profit Millions Missing Canada, and on the Executive Committee of the Interdisciplinary Canadian Collaborative Myalgic Encephalomyelitis Research Network.

    I am also a patient advisor for Health Quality Ontario’s Patient and Family Advisory Council, and member of Patients for Patient Safety Canada.

    Medical Error Interviews podcast and vidcast emerged to give voice to victims, witnesses and participants in this hidden epidemic so we can create change toward a safer health care system.

    My golden retriever Gladys is a constant source of love and joy. I hope to be well enough again one day to race triathlons again. Or even shovel the snow off the sidewalk.

  • If a surgeon told you that they were going to implant plastic mesh around an organ -- perhaps your bladder or bowel -- and screw the ends into your pelvis and spine -- would you have that surgery?

    What if the surgeon also told you the plastic mesh may disintegrate and release toxins into your body causing multi system dysfunction -- and that the plastic may twist and puncture your organs or press against nerves causing suicidal level pain when you move -- would you have that surgery?

    What if the surgeon also told you that if you experience these symptoms --- that no doctor will have been educated to look for the signs of plastic mesh injury --- that no doctor will believe you if you think the symptoms are caused by the plastic mesh --- that you will be gaslighted so often that the gaslighting becomes internalized -- would you have that surgery?

    What if the surgeon told you that the plastic mesh has an expiry date and that protects the manufacturer from medical negligence lawsuits --- and that the expiry date is not from the date of the implant, but from the date of manufacturing -- so the plastic mesh can sit on the shelf for many years before it gets implanted -- would you have that surgery?

    If a surgeon told you that plastic mesh may ruin your physical health, cause intractable pain, disable you from working or exercising or socializing so that you lose your career, your home and your future and quality of life may plummet -- would you have that surgery?

    Sally Maddocks was not informed of any of these possible outcomes when the doctor recommended surgery. And Sally is not alone in having her life irrevocably harmed by corporate profits over patient safety. But Sally is fighting back with a petition to raise awareness so others avoid potential harm, and to hold her government accountable for their actions.

    Connect with Sally Maddocks:

    https://twitter.com/maddocks_sally

    https://facebook.com/groups/2327576

    https://facebook.com/groups/1567096

    https://facebook.com/groups/117040

    https://facebook.com/groups/2039629

    https://facebook.com/groups/325473

    Be a podcast patron

    Support Medical Error Interviews on Patreon by becoming a Patron for $2 / month for audio versions.

    Premium Patrons get access to video versions of podcasts for $5 / month.

    Be my Guest

    I am always looking for guests to share their medical error experiences so we help bring awareness and make patients safer.

    If you are a survivor, a victim’s surviving family member, a health care worker, advocate, researcher or policy maker and you would like to share your experiences, please send me an email with a brief description: [email protected]

    Need a Counsellor?

    Like me, many of my clients at Remedies Counseling have experienced the often devastating effects of medical error.

    If you need a counsellor for your experience with medical error, or living with a chronic illness(es), I offer online video counseling appointments.

    **For my health and life balance, I limit my number of counseling clients.**

    Email me to learn more or book an appointment: [email protected]

    Scott Simpson:

    Counsellor + Patient Advocate + (former) Triathlete

    I am a counsellor, patient advocate, and - before I became sick and disabled - a passionate triathlete. Work hard. Train hard. Rest hard.

    I have been living with HIV since 1998. I was the first person living with HIV to compete at the triathlon world championships.

    Thanks to research and access to medications, HIV is not a problem in my life.

    I have been living with ME (myalgic encephalomyelitis) since 2012, and thanks in part to medical error, it is a big problem in my life.

    Counseling / Research

    I first became aware of the ubiquitousness of medical error during a decade of community based research working with the HIV Prevention Lab at Ryerson University, where I co-authored two research papers on a counseling intervention for people living with HIV, here and here.

    Patient participants would often report varying degrees of medical neglect, error and harms as part of their counseling sessions.

    Patient Advocacy

    I am co-founder of the ME patient advocacy non-profit Millions Missing Canada, and on the Executive Committee of the Interdisciplinary Canadian Collaborative Myalgic Encephalomyelitis Research Network.

    I am also a patient advisor for Health Quality Ontario’s Patient and Family Advisory Council, and member of Patients for Patient Safety Canada.

    Medical Error Interviews podcast and vidcast emerged to give voice to victims, witnesses and participants in this hidden epidemic so we can create change toward a safer health care system.

    My golden retriever Gladys is a constant source of love and joy. I hope to be well enough again one day to race triathlons again. Or even shovel the snow off the sidewalk.

  • When Dr Simon Breidert tried to discontinue use of the hair growth medication Finasteride, he experienced a myriad of very disturbing and disabling symptoms in multiple body systems.

    But the medical system doesn’t recognize Post Finasteride Syndrome and has labeled any one who says they experience those symptoms as hysterical. Dr Breidert was now confronted by his own profession’s deeply embedded medical bias. Simon was experiencing horrible physical symptoms, but the health care system had already decided his diagnosis is psychosomatic. Talk about major cognitive dissonance. Simon had to reconcile years of medical education that psychologizes everything it does not yet understand, with his own body’s experience.

    Simon and I talk about how his body broke down, his hellish health care journey and the strategies he employs to manage Post Finasteride Syndrome. Simon also shares what he now thinks of the medical system, psychiatry and psychosomatic medicine, and how he’s leveraging the trauma of serious illness and medical marginalization and gaslighting, into growth by founding the charity PFS Research.

    Connect with Dr Simon Breidert

    https://twitter.com/simonbreidert

    https://www.pfsresearch.org/

    Be a podcast patron

    Support Medical Error Interviews on Patreon by becoming a Patron for $2 / month for audio versions.

    Premium Patrons get access to video versions of podcasts for $5 / month.

    Be my Guest

    I am always looking for guests to share their medical error experiences so we help bring awareness and make patients safer.

    If you are a survivor, a victim’s surviving family member, a health care worker, advocate, researcher or policy maker and you would like to share your experiences, please send me an email with a brief description: [email protected]

    Need a Counsellor?

    Like me, many of my clients at Remedies Counseling have experienced the often devastating effects of medical error.

    If you need a counsellor for your experience with medical error, or living with a chronic illness(es), I offer online video counseling appointments.

    **For my health and life balance, I limit my number of counseling clients.**

    Email me to learn more or book an appointment: [email protected]

    Scott Simpson:

    Counsellor + Patient Advocate + (former) Triathlete

    I am a counsellor, patient advocate, and - before I became sick and disabled - a passionate triathlete. Work hard. Train hard. Rest hard.

    I have been living with HIV since 1998. I was the first person living with HIV to compete at the triathlon world championships.

    Thanks to research and access to medications, HIV is not a problem in my life.

    I have been living with ME (myalgic encephalomyelitis) since 2012, and thanks in part to medical error, it is a big problem in my life.

    Counseling / Research

    I first became aware of the ubiquitousness of medical error during a decade of community based research working with the HIV Prevention Lab at Ryerson University, where I co-authored two research papers on a counseling intervention for people living with HIV, here and here.

    Patient participants would often report varying degrees of medical neglect, error and harms as part of their counseling sessions.

    Patient Advocacy

    I am co-founder of the ME patient advocacy non-profit Millions Missing Canada, and on the Executive Committee of the Interdisciplinary Canadian Collaborative Myalgic Encephalomyelitis Research Network.

    I am also a patient advisor for Health Quality Ontario’s Patient and Family Advisory Council, and member of Patients for Patient Safety Canada.

    Medical Error Interviews podcast and vidcast emerged to give voice to victims, witnesses and participants in this hidden epidemic so we can create change toward a safer health care system.

    My golden retriever Gladys is a constant source of love and joy. I hope to be well enough again one day to race triathlons again. Or even shovel the snow off the sidewalk.

  • It is an open secret that hospitals’ standard of practice is to deny, diminish or cover up their medical errors. When they occur, there is often immense pressure from hospital administrators on employees to conform to a narrative that protects the hospital. The employee may feel that their job and career are in jeopardy, and they may feel peer pressure to ‘not rock the boat’ and protect their health care colleagues.

    Nurse Shirley Barker found herself in exactly that pressure cooker when a police sheriff who was shot multiple times in a high profile shoot out ended up under Shirley’s care. Although seriously injured, the next day he was recovering and his family was in the waiting room while the doctor examined him. The physician asked Shirley to administer a medication, but she refused because of safety concerns. The physician himself then injected the medication -- and immediately the sheriff’s vital signs dropped and Shirley witnessed his death...by physician.

    In our interview Shirley shares the highly pressured experience of being a hospital’s employee and a key witness in a court case about a medical death in that hospital. Shirley also shares how her father’s death involved medical error and how these cumulative experiences have impacted her life’s path.

    Connect with Shirley Barker:

    Facebook.com/Wellness-Island

    Be a podcast patron

    Support Medical Error Interviews on Patreon by becoming a Patron for $2 / month for audio versions.

    Premium Patrons get access to video versions of podcasts for $5 / month.

    Be my Guest

    I am always looking for guests to share their medical error experiences so we help bring awareness and make patients safer.

    If you are a survivor, a victim’s surviving family member, a health care worker, advocate, researcher or policy maker and you would like to share your experiences, please send me an email with a brief description: [email protected]

    Need a Counsellor?

    Like me, many of my clients at Remedies Counseling have experienced the often devastating effects of medical error.

    If you need a counsellor for your experience with medical error, or living with a chronic illness(es), I offer online video counseling appointments.

    **For my health and life balance, I limit my number of counseling clients.**

    Email me to learn more or book an appointment: [email protected]

    Scott Simpson:

    Counsellor + Patient Advocate + (former) Triathlete

    I am a counsellor, patient advocate, and - before I became sick and disabled - a passionate triathlete. Work hard. Train hard. Rest hard.

    I have been living with HIV since 1998. I was the first person living with HIV to compete at the triathlon world championships.

    Thanks to research and access to medications, HIV is not a problem in my life.

    I have been living with ME (myalgic encephalomyelitis) since 2012, and thanks in part to medical error, it is a big problem in my life.

    Counseling / Research

    I first became aware of the ubiquitousness of medical error during a decade of community based research working with the HIV Prevention Lab at Ryerson University, where I co-authored two research papers on a counseling intervention for people living with HIV, here and here.

    Patient participants would often report varying degrees of medical neglect, error and harms as part of their counseling sessions.

    Patient Advocacy

    I am co-founder of the ME patient advocacy non-profit Millions Missing Canada, and on the Executive Committee of the Interdisciplinary Canadian Collaborative Myalgic Encephalomyelitis Research Network.

    I am also a patient advisor for Health Quality Ontario’s Patient and Family Advisory Council, and member of Patients for Patient Safety Canada.

    Medical Error Interviews podcast and vidcast emerged to give voice to victims, witnesses and participants in this hidden epidemic so we can create change toward a safer health care system.

    My golden retriever Gladys is a constant source of love and joy. I hope to be well enough again one day to race triathlons again. Or even shovel the snow off the sidewalk.

  • Medicine is so messed up. It has been fatally bitten by its own dogma.

    When singer-songwriter Dana Parish suddenly got very sick, she quickly had a correct diagnosis of Lyme disease and was given the standard antibiotic treatment. But Dana never fully recovered and eventually ended up in heart failure.

    Dana saw many top doctors in New York and they all missed the ongoing underlying infection that would lead to Dana’s heart failure. None of these physicians could wrap their heads around the idea that Dana had been under treated for Lyme disease and it was causing her impending death.

    Like other medically marginalized and discriminated diseases, chronic Lyme infection has been maligned and neglected by the very system that purports to provide medical care. This reflects the heart of the problem with our health care: entrenched discriminatory dogma in a closed system.

    Eventually Dana found Dr Steven Phillips, who was already an internationally renowned physician specializing in complex, chronic diseases when he became a patient himself. After nearly dying from his own mystery illness, he experienced firsthand the medical community’s ignorance about the pathogens that underlie a deep spectrum of serious conditions—from fibromyalgia, multiple sclerosis and myalgic encephalomyelitis (MEcfs) to depression, anxiety, OCD and neurodegenerative disorders.

    In their book Chronic: The Hidden Cause of the Autoimmune Pandemic, Dana and Dr Phillips explore the science behind common infections that are difficult to diagnose and treat and debunk widely held false beliefs by doctors that keep patients chronically sick.

    With the Covid pandemic still going parabolic, and the number of Long Covid patients with chronic autoimmune symptoms also skyrocketing, their book could not be more timely.

    Connect with Dana Parish:

    Thechronicbook.com

    Facebook.com/thechronicbook

    Twitter @Lymebook

    IG: Instagram.com/thechronicbook

    Be a podcast patron

    Support Medical Error Interviews on Patreon by becoming a Patron for $2 / month for audio versions.

    Premium Patrons get access to video versions of podcasts for $5 / month.

    Be my Guest

    I am always looking for guests to share their medical error experiences so we help bring awareness and make patients safer.

    If you are a survivor, a victim’s surviving family member, a health care worker, advocate, researcher or policy maker and you would like to share your experiences, please send me an email with a brief description: [email protected]

    Need a Counsellor?

    Like me, many of my clients at Remedies Counseling have experienced the often devastating effects of medical error.

    If you need a counsellor for your experience with medical error, or living with a chronic illness(es), I offer online video counseling appointments.

    **For my health and life balance, I limit my number of counseling clients.**

    Email me to learn more or book an appointment: [email protected]

    Scott Simpson:

    Counsellor + Patient Advocate + (former) Triathlete

    I am a counsellor, patient advocate, and - before I became sick and disabled - a passionate triathlete. Work hard. Train hard. Rest hard.

    I have been living with HIV since 1998. I was the first person living with HIV to compete at the triathlon world championships.

    Thanks to research and access to medications, HIV is not a problem in my life.

    I have been living with ME (myalgic encephalomyelitis) since 2012, and thanks in part to medical error, it is a big problem in my life.

    Counseling / Research

    I first became aware of the ubiquitousness of medical error during a decade of community based research working with the HIV Prevention Lab at Ryerson University, where I co-authored two research papers on a counseling intervention for people living with HIV, here and here.

    Patient participants would often report varying degrees of medical neglect, error and harms as part of their counseling sessions.

    Patient Advocacy

    I am co-founder of the ME patient advocacy non-profit Millions Missing Canada, and on the Executive Committee of the Interdisciplinary Canadian Collaborative Myalgic Encephalomyelitis Research Network.

    I am also a patient advisor for Health Quality Ontario’s Patient and Family Advisory Council, and member of Patients for Patient Safety Canada.

    Medical Error Interviews podcast and vidcast emerged to give voice to victims, witnesses and participants in this hidden epidemic so we can create change toward a safer health care system.

    My golden retriever Gladys is a constant source of love and joy. I hope to be well enough again one day to race triathlons again. Or even shovel the snow off the sidewalk.

  • When nurse Denise Crawley connected with me about sharing her experiences with her own medical errors in the workplace, I thought it was a great opportunity to hear from a health care worker from their side and perspective of medical errors.

    As Denise states, there is a big problem with how the health care system responds to medical error, especially how systemic contributors to medical error are rarely addressed, and how the response tends to focus on individual blame. This in turn fosters a medical culture of cover up, denial and fear.

    With medical error being the 3rd leading cause of death for many decades, it is self evident that the current process of dealing with medical mistakes is fatally flawed.

    Denise refers to it as the Swiss Cheese model of how medical errors manifest in that within the various layers of healthcare, there are holes in each layer, and when these holes line up, medical harm and death can happen.

    While we often think of medical trauma exclusive to the patient, as Denise shares, health care workers can be traumatized by participating or witnessing or covering up medical errors. Denise has had to deal with the trauma, and as you’ll hear, is experiencing post traumatic growth.

    Connect with Denise Crawley

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/denise.elaine0218

    Twitter: https://twitter.com/denisecrawley

    Be a podcast patron

    Support Medical Error Interviews on Patreon by becoming a Patron for $2 / month for audio versions.

    Premium Patrons get access to video versions of podcasts for $5 / month.

    Be my Guest

    I am always looking for guests to share their medical error experiences so we help bring awareness and make patients safer.

    If you are a survivor, a victim’s surviving family member, a health care worker, advocate, researcher or policy maker and you would like to share your experiences, please send me an email with a brief description: [email protected]

    Need a Counsellor?

    Like me, many of my clients at Remedies Counseling have experienced the often devastating effects of medical error.

    If you need a counsellor for your experience with medical error, or living with a chronic illness(es), I offer online video counseling appointments.

    **For my health and life balance, I limit my number of counseling clients.**

    Email me to learn more or book an appointment: [email protected]

    Scott Simpson:

    Counsellor + Patient Advocate + (former) Triathlete

    I am a counsellor, patient advocate, and - before I became sick and disabled - a passionate triathlete. Work hard. Train hard. Rest hard.

    I have been living with HIV since 1998. I was the first person living with HIV to compete at the triathlon world championships.

    Thanks to research and access to medications, HIV is not a problem in my life.

    I have been living with ME (myalgic encephalomyelitis) since 2012, and thanks in part to medical error, it is a big problem in my life.

    Counseling / Research

    I first became aware of the ubiquitousness of medical error during a decade of community based research working with the HIV Prevention Lab at Ryerson University, where I co-authored two research papers on a counseling intervention for people living with HIV, here and here.

    Patient participants would often report varying degrees of medical neglect, error and harms as part of their counseling sessions.

    Patient Advocacy

    I am co-founder of the ME patient advocacy non-profit Millions Missing Canada, and on the Executive Committee of the Interdisciplinary Canadian Collaborative Myalgic Encephalomyelitis Research Network.

    I am also a patient advisor for Health Quality Ontario’s Patient and Family Advisory Council, and member of Patients for Patient Safety Canada.

    Medical Error Interviews podcast and vidcast emerged to give voice to victims, witnesses and participants in this hidden epidemic so we can create change toward a safer health care system.

    My golden retriever Gladys is a constant source of love and joy. I hope to be well enough again one day to race triathlons again. Or even shovel the snow off the sidewalk.

  • When author Maya Dusenbery started to experience pain after a viral infection, she was introduced to a medical system that mostly marginalizes women and dismisses diseases that predominantly affect women.

    This of course will come as no surprise to any female that has a disease the medical system does not readily recognize. If that disease doesn’t have a biomarker yet, doctors will often attribute women’s physical symptoms as psychological in origin. This is known as medical gaslighting and its origins can be traced back to the cocaine fueled thinking of Sigmund Freud and beyond.

    In spite of medicine and research claiming to be self correcting institutions, Maya lays out the problems embedded in research, diagnosis and treatment and identifies 2 cracks - or what Maya calls ‘gaps’ - in the health care system: A knowledge gap and a trust gap, and the feedback loop that sustains them.

    In this interview, we unpack Maya’s experience with the health care system and why it prompted her to take a deep dive into exposing the systemic gaps in women’s access to appropriate research data and treatment protocols.

    Connect with Maya Dusenbery

    https://www.mayadusenbery.com/

    https://twitter.com/mayadusenbery

    Buy Maya’s book on Amazon

    Be a podcast patron

    Support Medical Error Interviews on Patreon by becoming a Patron for $2 / month for audio versions.

    Premium Patrons get access to video versions of podcasts for $5 / month.

    Be my Guest

    I am always looking for guests to share their medical error experiences so we help bring awareness and make patients safer.

    If you are a survivor, a victim’s surviving family member, a health care worker, advocate, researcher or policy maker and you would like to share your experiences, please send me an email with a brief description: [email protected]

    Need a Counsellor?

    Like me, many of my clients at Remedies Counseling have experienced the often devastating effects of medical error.

    If you need a counsellor for your experience with medical error, or living with a chronic illness(es), I offer online video counseling appointments.

    **For my health and life balance, I limit my number of counseling clients.**

    Email me to learn more or book an appointment: [email protected]

    Scott Simpson:

    Counsellor + Patient Advocate + (former) Triathlete

    I am a counsellor, patient advocate, and - before I became sick and disabled - a passionate triathlete. Work hard. Train hard. Rest hard.

    I have been living with HIV since 1998. I was the first person living with HIV to compete at the triathlon world championships.

    Thanks to research and access to medications, HIV is not a problem in my life.

    I have been living with ME (myalgic encephalomyelitis) since 2012, and thanks in part to medical error, it is a big problem in my life.

    Counseling / Research

    I first became aware of the ubiquitousness of medical error during a decade of community based research working with the HIV Prevention Lab at Ryerson University, where I co-authored two research papers on a counseling intervention for people living with HIV, here and here.

    Patient participants would often report varying degrees of medical neglect, error and harms as part of their counseling sessions.

    Patient Advocacy

    I am co-founder of the ME patient advocacy non-profit Millions Missing Canada, and on the Executive Committee of the Interdisciplinary Canadian Collaborative Myalgic Encephalomyelitis Research Network.

    I am also a patient advisor for Health Quality Ontario’s Patient and Family Advisory Council, and member of Patients for Patient Safety Canada.

    Medical Error Interviews podcast and vidcast emerged to give voice to victims, witnesses and participants in this hidden epidemic so we can create change toward a safer health care system.

    My golden retriever Gladys is a constant source of love and joy. I hope to be well enough again one day to race triathlons again. Or even shovel the snow off the sidewalk.

  • “We’re living in a horror movie” says Anton, speaking for his brother Holger who is so severely sick that he cannot eat or drink and has to be tube fed. Yet the Swedish medical system thinks Holger has a psychiatric disorder and has threatened to have him forcibly committed to an institution against his wishes.

    If the medical system succeeds, it will probably kill Holger.

    Anton, and the rest of Holger’s family, are fighting a medical system that does not recognize or understand the disease myalgic encephalomyelitis, or ME. Holger’s family have started a public campaign including social media to #HelpHolgerNow to save him from a torturous death at the hands of the medical system.

    I interviewed Anton about Holger on December 21st --- subsequently Anton emailed me this message about their medical system:

    “the police report was regarding them tricking Holger to the psychiatric ward in the beginning of December.

    IVO is the healthcare inspektion authority. We are working on a new report to them covering a bigger picture with all the things that happened this fall, the psychiatric ward in the beginning of December...and also their threat of forced institutionalization.

    Holger has been denied to seek a doctor of his own choice because he lives in the care home. But our lawyer says that that is not legal. So we are now trying to find a doctor we can trust and do not deny ME. We know who we want and hope she says yes.

    We have not accepted the healthcare director's reply and asked him to invite us to a meeting and also give us an informed answer because he obviously isn't aware of the details. He is now questioned already by IVO because of the region's handling of Covid-19 patients. They have failed.”

    To follow and support Holger and see if the Swedish medical system tortures and kills him, go to Help Holger Now on Facebook:

    #HelpHolgerNow

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/helpholgernow

    (MEpedia entry about Sophia Mirza who had ME and died after being forcibly moved to a psychiatric institution: https://me-pedia.org/wiki/Sophia_Mirza )

    Be a podcast patron

    Support Medical Error Interviews on Patreon by becoming a Patron for $2 / month for audio versions.

    Premium Patrons get access to video versions of podcasts for $5 / month.

    Be my Guest

    I am always looking for guests to share their medical error experiences so we help bring awareness and make patients safer.

    If you are a survivor, a victim’s surviving family member, a health care worker, advocate, researcher or policy maker and you would like to share your experiences, please send me an email with a brief description: [email protected]

    Need a Counsellor?

    Like me, many of my clients at Remedies Counseling have experienced the often devastating effects of medical error.

    If you need a counsellor for your experience with medical error, or living with a chronic illness(es), I offer online video counseling appointments.

    **For my health and life balance, I limit my number of counseling clients.**

    Email me to learn more or book an appointment: [email protected]

    Scott Simpson:

    Counsellor + Patient Advocate + (former) Triathlete

    I am a counsellor, patient advocate, and - before I became sick and disabled - a passionate triathlete. Work hard. Train hard. Rest hard.

    I have been living with HIV since 1998. I was the first person living with HIV to compete at the triathlon world championships.

    Thanks to research and access to medications, HIV is not a problem in my life.

    I have been living with ME (myalgic encephalomyelitis) since 2012, and thanks in part to medical error, it is a big problem in my life.

    Counseling / Research

    I first became aware of the ubiquitousness of medical error during a decade of community based research working with the HIV Prevention Lab at Ryerson University, where I co-authored two research papers on a counseling intervention for people living with HIV, here and here.

    Patient participants would often report varying degrees of medical neglect, error and harms as part of their counseling sessions.

    Patient Advocacy

    I am co-founder of the ME patient advocacy non-profit Millions Missing Canada, and on the Executive Committee of the Interdisciplinary Canadian Collaborative Myalgic Encephalomyelitis Research Network.

    I am also a patient advisor for Health Quality Ontario’s Patient and Family Advisory Council, and member of Patients for Patient Safety Canada.

    Medical Error Interviews podcast and vidcast emerged to give voice to victims, witnesses and participants in this hidden epidemic so we can create change toward a safer health care system.

    My golden retriever Gladys is a constant source of love and joy. I hope to be well enough again one day to race triathlons again. Or even shovel the snow off the sidewalk.

  • Medical knowledge is embryonic. They are still discovering new body parts. Sometimes medicine doesn’t break new ground, but has to be dragged into the light.

    A case in point is cannabis. The therapeutic value of cannabis has been known for millennia, yet modern medicine vilified the medication, pathologized cannabis users, while the legal system criminalized cannabis patients.

    Now we see the global movement making great headway toward decriminalizing and medicalizing cannabis. And as it is with most changes to the medical system, it did not come from within, but from pressure from outsiders, namely patients.

    In this episode of Medical Error Interviews, I chat with Sarah Colero who’s debilitating migraines were made worse by opioids, but better by cannabis.

    We unpack Sarah’s experience with multiple brain surgeries and a medical system often intentionally ignorant about the medicinal benefits of cannabis, and her advocacy efforts to bring equity in access for patients that need medicinal cannabis to treat disease and symptoms.

    Connect with Sarah Colero:

    Twitter: @Sarah_Colero

    Be a podcast patron

    Support Medical Error Interviews on Patreon by becoming a Patron for $2 / month for audio versions.

    Premium Patrons get access to video versions of podcasts for $5 / month.

    Be my Guest

    I am always looking for guests to share their medical error experiences so we help bring awareness and make patients safer.

    If you are a survivor, a victim’s surviving family member, a health care worker, advocate, researcher or policy maker and you would like to share your experiences, please send me an email with a brief description: [email protected]

    Need a Counsellor?

    Like me, many of my clients at Remedies Counseling have experienced the often devastating effects of medical error.

    If you need a counsellor for your experience with medical error, or living with a chronic illness(es), I offer online video counseling appointments.

    **For my health and life balance, I limit my number of counseling clients.**

    Email me to learn more or book an appointment: [email protected]

    Scott Simpson:

    Counsellor + Patient Advocate + (former) Triathlete

    I am a counsellor, patient advocate, and - before I became sick and disabled - a passionate triathlete. Work hard. Train hard. Rest hard.

    I have been living with HIV since 1998. I was the first person living with HIV to compete at the triathlon world championships.

    Thanks to research and access to medications, HIV is not a problem in my life.

    I have been living with ME (myalgic encephalomyelitis) since 2012, and thanks in part to medical error, it is a big problem in my life.

    Counseling / Research

    I first became aware of the ubiquitousness of medical error during a decade of community based research working with the HIV Prevention Lab at Ryerson University, where I co-authored two research papers on a counseling intervention for people living with HIV, here and here.

    Patient participants would often report varying degrees of medical neglect, error and harms as part of their counseling sessions.

    Patient Advocacy

    I am co-founder of the ME patient advocacy non-profit Millions Missing Canada, and on the Executive Committee of the Interdisciplinary Canadian Collaborative Myalgic Encephalomyelitis Research Network.

    I am also a patient advisor for Health Quality Ontario’s Patient and Family Advisory Council, and member of Patients for Patient Safety Canada.

    Medical Error Interviews podcast and vidcast emerged to give voice to victims, witnesses and participants in this hidden epidemic so we can create change toward a safer health care system.

    My golden retriever Gladys is a constant source of love and joy. I hope to be well enough again one day to race triathlons again. Or even shovel the snow off the sidewalk.

  • Author and writer Maija Haavisto caught my attention with her article titled ‘Medical Trauma: Gaslighting and Continuous Stress Eating Away at Your Self Worth’. In her writing, Maija accurately captures the consequences of harmful medical experiences I witness in my counseling clients. As I’ve said elsewhere, medical error and trauma are the unacknowledged pandemics within our health care systems.

    Maija grew up in Finland, a healthy child until she got the flu as a teenager and never recovered. Kicked out of an abusive home at 16 as she struggled with sickness, Maija relied on her writing prowess and carved out a successful career as a journalist and medical writer who has authored 17 books in Finnish.

    Along the way, Maija’s health has fluctuated, she eventually got a diagnosis of MEcfs, moved to the Netherlands partly for healthcare reasons in 2010, but she has never been totally healthy again. Of course, having undiagnosed and unrecognized symptoms, and then getting a diagnosis of a medically marginalized disease, means Maija had to have numerous encounters with the health care system. Encounters that more often than not, would be stressful and trauma inducing.

    But Maija has taken her lived experience with the chronic disease MEcfs, and her more recent experience with Long Covid (aka post Covid syndrome), and her encounters with the health care system, and uses those elements to inform her writing. Maija makes the point that medical trauma is different from post traumatic stress. As Maija writes in her article,

    “Another aspect that makes medical trauma particularly pernicious is the way we may be forced to face our abuser and pretend nothing has happened. Even if we manage to cut them off, their pointed comments may stick in our medical files.”

    And that’s exactly what distinguishes PTSD from continuous medical trauma. If you have a complex chronic illness, especially one that is medically marginalized, you probably cannot divorce yourself completely from the health care system to try to protect yourself from further abuse and trauma. You are forced to continue to engage with your traumatizer, both the physician and the health care system -- and that makes medical trauma continuous, and some would say, chronic trauma.

    Connect with Maija Haavisto

    Twitter: @DiamonDie

    Maija’s Medium article:

    https://maija-haavisto.medium.com/medical-trauma-6fa90c6ecab0

    Website http://www.fiikus.net

    Maya’s CFS/ME book http://www.brokenmarionettebook.com

    YouTube - hypnosis and meditation audios

    https://www.youtube.com/user/diamondie

    Be a podcast patron

    Support Medical Error Interviews on Patreon by becoming a Patron for $2 / month for audio versions.

    Premium Patrons get access to video versions of podcasts for $5 / month.

    Be my Guest

    I am always looking for guests to share their medical error experiences so we help bring awareness and make patients safer.

    If you are a survivor, a victim’s surviving family member, a health care worker, advocate, researcher or policy maker and you would like to share your experiences, please send me an email with a brief description: [email protected]

    Need a Counsellor?

    Like me, many of my clients at Remedies Counseling have experienced the often devastating effects of medical error.

    If you need a counsellor for your experience with medical error, or living with a chronic illness(es), I offer online video counseling appointments.

    **For my health and life balance, I limit my number of counseling clients.**

    Email me to learn more or book an appointment: [email protected]

    Scott Simpson:

    Counsellor + Patient Advocate + (former) Triathlete

    I am a counsellor, patient advocate, and - before I became sick and disabled - a passionate triathlete. Work hard. Train hard. Rest hard.

    I have been living with HIV since 1998. I was the first person living with HIV to compete at the triathlon world championships.

    Thanks to research and access to medications, HIV is not a problem in my life.

    I have been living with ME (myalgic encephalomyelitis) since 2012, and thanks in part to medical error, it is a big problem in my life.

    Counseling / Research

    I first became aware of the ubiquitousness of medical error during a decade of community based research working with the HIV Prevention Lab at Ryerson University, where I co-authored two research papers on a counseling intervention for people living with HIV, here and here.

    Patient participants would often report varying degrees of medical neglect, error and harms as part of their counseling sessions.

    Patient Advocacy

    I am co-founder of the ME patient advocacy non-profit Millions Missing Canada, and on the Executive Committee of the Interdisciplinary Canadian Collaborative Myalgic Encephalomyelitis Research Network.

    I am also a patient advisor for Health Quality Ontario’s Patient and Family Advisory Council, and member of Patients for Patient Safety Canada.

    Medical Error Interviews podcast and vidcast emerged to give voice to victims, witnesses and participants in this hidden epidemic so we can create change toward a safer health care system.

    My golden retriever Gladys is a constant source of love and joy. I hope to be well enough again one day to race triathlons again. Or even shovel the snow off the sidewalk.

  • One of the good things about interviewing people about their medical error experiences is the feel good stories about making the health system safer, and making meaning out of trauma, a phenomenon known as post traumatic growth.

    In this interview with Jessica Pin, she shares the insights she’s learned about the gross deficiencies in the medical system where it intentionally maintains blind spots about female anatomy and female sexuality. A medical system where surgeons are performing procedures on female genitalia with shocking little understanding of the female body.

    Jessica, the daughter of a surgeon, recounts her own experience receiving a surgical procedure that she did not consent, and to which the doctor had no understanding or training. This unwarranted surgery would impact Jessica’s intimate relationships, her relationship with her parents, and her relationship with herself.

    In her efforts to make meaning out of her medical injury, Jessica sought the support of psychiatrists and therapists -- but she again experienced dismissal, minimization and invalidation. Essentially further harming Jessica as invalidated trauma deepens trauma.

    Eventually, through her own efforts and self education about recovering from trauma, Jessica focused her efforts on changing the system to prevent more women from being physically harmed, sexually diminished, and psychologically traumatized.

    Connect with Jessica Pin

    Twitter @MediClit

    https://www.instagram.com/p/CD7VMj2pZ_q/?igshid=163uygx8r1ibq

    Be a podcast patron

    Support Medical Error Interviews on Patreon by becoming a Patron for $2 / month for audio versions.

    Premium Patrons get access to video versions of podcasts for $5 / month.

    Be my Guest

    I am always looking for guests to share their medical error experiences so we help bring awareness and make patients safer.

    If you are a survivor, a victim’s surviving family member, a health care worker, advocate, researcher or policy maker and you would like to share your experiences, please send me an email with a brief description: [email protected]

    Need a Counsellor?

    Like me, many of my clients at Remedies Counseling have experienced the often devastating effects of medical error.

    If you need a counsellor for your experience with medical error, or living with a chronic illness(es), I offer online video counseling appointments.

    **For my health and life balance, I limit my number of counseling clients.**

    Email me to learn more or book an appointment: [email protected]

    Scott Simpson:

    Counsellor + Patient Advocate + (former) Triathlete

    I am a counsellor, patient advocate, and - before I became sick and disabled - a passionate triathlete. Work hard. Train hard. Rest hard.

    I have been living with HIV since 1998. I was the first person living with HIV to compete at the triathlon world championships.

    Thanks to research and access to medications, HIV is not a problem in my life.

    I have been living with ME (myalgic encephalomyelitis) since 2012, and thanks in part to medical error, it is a big problem in my life.

    Counseling / Research

    I first became aware of the ubiquitousness of medical error during a decade of community based research working with the HIV Prevention Lab at Ryerson University, where I co-authored two research papers on a counseling intervention for people living with HIV, here and here.

    Patient participants would often report varying degrees of medical neglect, error and harms as part of their counseling sessions.

    Patient Advocacy

    I am co-founder of the ME patient advocacy non-profit Millions Missing Canada, and on the Executive Committee of the Interdisciplinary Canadian Collaborative Myalgic Encephalomyelitis Research Network.

    I am also a patient advisor for Health Quality Ontario’s Patient and Family Advisory Council, and member of Patients for Patient Safety Canada.

    Medical Error Interviews podcast and vidcast emerged to give voice to victims, witnesses and participants in this hidden epidemic so we can create change toward a safer health care system.

    My golden retriever Gladys is a constant source of love and joy. I hope to be well enough again one day to race triathlons again. Or even shovel the snow off the sidewalk.

  • When you’ve been sick since a child - as Jeanne McArdle has been - you gain a preternatural insight into the world of medicine and medical care. And if you have a disease unknown or misunderstood by medicine, you get the advantage of being an ‘outsider’ while inside the system.

    Of course, this cuts both ways: having a medically marginalized disease essentially guarantees medical harm, neglect, gaslighting and distrust of doctors.

    In this interview with Jeanne McArdle, she recounts the myriad ways physicians have gaslighted her over the years -- at times, this ubiquitous gaslighting from authority figures undermined Jeanne’s own sense of her body and reality.

    Even when Jeanne used her Master’s research skills to track and plot the objective biological changes in her body, the evidence was dismissed by doctors. When Jeanne reported bodily pain, doctors would ignore or minimize it.

    It was not until Jeanne got in front of a doctor that specialized in her symptoms that the gaslighting stopped and the appropriate testing and treatment began. But as Jeanne points out, if the doctor can’t figure out the problem, the patient becomes the problem.

    Connect with Jeanne McArdle

    Twitter: @JeanneMcArdle

    Be a podcast patron

    Support Medical Error Interviews on Patreon by becoming a Patron for $2 / month for audio versions.

    Premium Patrons get access to video versions of podcasts for $5 / month.

    Be my Guest

    I am always looking for guests to share their medical error experiences so we help bring awareness and make patients safer.

    If you are a survivor, a victim’s surviving family member, a health care worker, advocate, researcher or policy maker and you would like to share your experiences, please send me an email with a brief description: [email protected]

    Need a Counsellor?

    Like me, many of my clients at Remedies Counseling have experienced the often devastating effects of medical error.

    If you need a counsellor for your experience with medical error, or living with a chronic illness(es), I offer online video counseling appointments.

    **For my health and life balance, I limit my number of counseling clients.**

    Email me to learn more or book an appointment: [email protected]

    Scott Simpson:

    Counsellor + Patient Advocate + (former) Triathlete

    I am a counsellor, patient advocate, and - before I became sick and disabled - a passionate triathlete. Work hard. Train hard. Rest hard.

    I have been living with HIV since 1998. I was the first person living with HIV to compete at the triathlon world championships.

    Thanks to research and access to medications, HIV is not a problem in my life.

    I have been living with ME (myalgic encephalomyelitis) since 2012, and thanks in part to medical error, it is a big problem in my life.

    Counseling / Research

    I first became aware of the ubiquitousness of medical error during a decade of community based research working with the HIV Prevention Lab at Ryerson University, where I co-authored two research papers on a counseling intervention for people living with HIV, here and here.

    Patient participants would often report varying degrees of medical neglect, error and harms as part of their counseling sessions.

    Patient Advocacy

    I am co-founder of the ME patient advocacy non-profit Millions Missing Canada, and on the Executive Committee of the Interdisciplinary Canadian Collaborative Myalgic Encephalomyelitis Research Network.

    I am also a patient advisor for Health Quality Ontario’s Patient and Family Advisory Council, and member of Patients for Patient Safety Canada.

    Medical Error Interviews podcast and vidcast emerged to give voice to victims, witnesses and participants in this hidden epidemic so we can create change toward a safer health care system.

    My golden retriever Gladys is a constant source of love and joy. I hope to be well enough again one day to race triathlons again. Or even shovel the snow off the sidewalk.