Comment by dfxm12

Comment by dfxm12 3 days ago

5 replies

I mean considered per patient. Pro wrestler Kerry von Erich had to get his broken foot amputated because he thought it felt good enough to walk across the room to get a cheeseburger. Not everyone can gauge these things on their own, especially considering people with broken bones may be taking pain killers. Not everyone can have professionals, or even loved ones, around them to monitor it.

darrenf 3 days ago

> Pro wrestler Kerry von Erich had to get his broken foot amputated because he thought it felt good enough to walk across the room to get a cheeseburger.

Honestly, I don't think wrestlers -- certainly those from the von Erich era -- are beacons of authority when it comes to sensible recuperation/rehabilitation from injury. Kevin von Erich said it was due to his brother trying to get some food but there are other accounts:

> Moody says Kerry turned up on crutches and was feeling too much pain, so the doctors injected a liquid-type numbing painkiller on his injured foot so he could go on. The match went under 6 minutes with Kerry beating Adias, but according to Moody, even with his foot under a painkiller influence, Kerry still felt a lot of pain, which led to the amputation of his foot.

  • dfxm12 3 days ago

    Maybe they aren't, but they also aren't unique in this regard. Obstinate tough guy types are obstinate no matter what their job is. I have neighbors and family members who had similar issues where the doctor says something like "you can walk, but take it easy" but they misjudge what "taking it easy" really means.

paulcole 3 days ago

I mean so we don't make a generally good recommendation because one pro wrestler got their foot amputated?

The fact that general medical guidance isn't tailored to you shouldn't come as a surprise. Whether you take it or not is up to you.

  • dfxm12 3 days ago

    I mean so we don't make a generally good recommendation because one pro wrestler got their foot amputated?

    Please try to converse in good faith.

    The fact that general medical guidance isn't tailored to you shouldn't come as a surprise.

    In general, doctors treat people, not ailments.

    • paulcole 3 days ago

      > Please try to converse in good faith.

      Can you just trot that out when you don't like that the other person thought your point was ridiculous?

      If you are able to say that the majority of people are bad candidates for POLICE over RICE then I'd engage with that. But it feels unlikely that you can do this because the prevailing medical wisdom seems to be that the majority of people are good candidates for POLICE over RICE.

      I will acknowledge that if a patient is a drug-addled professional wrestler who is desperate for a burger then yes perhaps they should just stay off the foot.