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    Emergency Services

     

    In this section, all known emergency room visits from patients who wish to share their stories will be uploaded. These will be duly verified firsthand, both in the emergency room and with documentation.

    If you'd like us to follow up on your case, please send us an email or call us.

    THEY ARE ALL REAL CASES.

     

    July 13, 2025: A 62-year-old woman is picked up by the SMS ambulance service. Her son calls the emergency room (around 3:00 p.m.) when he finds her at home, barely able to speak (the patient is on an oxygen machine). At approximately 3:50 p.m., they arrive at the emergency room entrance of the Morales Meseguer Hospital in Murcia.

    Once there, she is taken to the small nursing examination room on a stretcher, an X-ray is taken an hour and a half later, and she is taken back to the small nursing room.

    At around 1 a.m., he was discharged home, according to his son, in the same condition, an episode of almost 10 hours of waiting, remaining on a stretcher, in pain and unable to speak.

     

    July 19, 2025: After a week at home with pain, dark-colored vomiting, and diarrhea, and two home visits to the doctor, on Saturday the 19th, he was admitted to the ward. Iremeos is gathering information and uploading it as we learn.

    Was it necessary to wait a week to be admitted with this condition? Who are we in the hands of?

     

     

     

    07/21/2025: A 48-year-old woman came to the emergency room due to palpitations and heart rate disturbances.

    Despite being mentioned in triage, the ECG was performed almost an hour later because the patient went to the emergency room at 11/12 to request it. (123-2025)

    An X-ray, blood tests, and an electrocardiogram were performed. Primary diagnosis: Symptomatic atrial ectopics.

    Emergency treatment: Bisoprolol 1.25 mg.

    The decision was made to discharge her at approximately 1:25 a.m. The discharge report does not include all the information from the tests performed, nor is a copy of the ECG performed provided. They simply limit themselves to saying the usual copy/paste "no relevant alarm alterations", which makes it impossible for the patient to go with that report to another more reliable hospital where they could read that information, and this "terrible management" is preventing citizens from being able to go to better qualified professionals and provide that public report. (report 32/2025 episode 123/2025)

     

     

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