Thursday, 24 April 2025

Ongoing Project

(if you don't have a sniper's vision, find the excerpt below in English)

Every writer's dream is to make a living with writing. I'm modest. All I want is a little house in the Bahamas. So I'm working hard at my writing. And maybe so this little country will come closer to me.

Generally, writing inspirations seek me out when I'm busy with other things – sleeping, taking a walk, reading or showering. But there are some topics that strike me, and our encounter is so violent that I find it hard to think of anything else; and when this happens, I write as if possessed, as if I am struggling in the dark and searching for light or struggling for air. 

The engine, though, with these topics is always the same - the outrage. That's how The Corporation’ came into being. The whole text is actually an outrage, and a call for others who feel the same to join me, with the aim of initiating the change.

Interacting with jobber-doctors (money-grubbers) and lackadaisical-doctors (bland, uncaring) served as inspiration for ‘Health Care Failures’, a non-fiction book about unpleasant experiences at the doctor's, about why it is important to ask for a second medical opinion and what to look out for when receiving a treatment plan.

The Argeș Magazine allowed me to publish an excerpt in its pages, for which I am particularly grateful (and special thanks go to Mrs. Simona Fusaru).

If you want to read the full issue (in Romanian), you can find it here


Below you can find the English translation of the excerpt that was published in the magazine:


Jobber-Doctors and Lackadaisical-Doctors

 

I’ve been living with the feeling of helplessness in dealing with doctors from various specialties over the last few years and if I could, I would have given anything to avoid the unpleasant experiences I have had. Talking to people, I discovered that I am not alone. That other people experience some things, as my dad would say, that boggles the mind. That others suffer too and feel terrified by their illness, terrified that they can no longer trust doctors and their advice. I have learned (from experience) or understood that it is better not to practice self-medication because then you can create even worse health problems. But in a world where there is this growing feeling that you are being ripped off or being treated just to pay good money, without any care for the patient or decency, how much trust can you put into doctors anymore?! In an increasingly ageing society in need of medical care, can we afford to lose faith in the health care system and hide the fact that some doctors are doing great harm, both to patients and to the health care domain?

I have been carrying this indignation with me for years and, unfortunately, it is growing, because around me doctors are no longer behaving as they should, but more like speculators or jobbers whose only aim is to build that villa with a swimming pool and not to give the best advice to patients. And in the end, the villa with the pool would not be a problem, except that it is already clear to me that they are not sparing their efforts only for themselves, but also for their future generations, and we patients are just good cows to milk.

A stinking and dangerous slime is spreading everywhere in medicine, and I am afraid we are all beginning to have the same reaction as we would regarding some corrupt politicians – they stole, but at least they did something for the community.

This book has as anti-heroes the doctors focused on making money, the jobber-doctors, and the blasé, uncaring doctors, namely the lackadaisical-doctors.

The heroes are the patients who have gone through more or less traumatic experiences and who have paid dearly and very dearly, i.e. at the expense of their health, for falling victim to the above categories of doctors, believing that they would consider the Hippocratic oath - which encompasses the moral duties of doctors in the exercise of their profession and which can be succinctly explained as Do no harm!.

……

 

Periodontitis

According to the statistics, 8 out of 10 Romanians suffer from periodontitis, being the sixth most common disease in Romania. In recent years, there has been an increase in the number of cases of periodontitis in young people, although a few years ago this disease was only attributed to elderly people.

What is periodontitis?

Periodontitis is the inflammation of the tissue that supports and anchors the teeth. The disease is manifested through inflammation and infection of the gums, and in advanced cases, pus pockets can also develop, which destroy the gum tissue and affect the structure of the teeth, which begin to wobble and fall out. As there is often confusion between periodontitis and gingivitis, it is important to understand that gingivitis is a superficial inflammation of the gums that, left untreated, can lead to periodontitis.

There is an explosion of periodontal treatments, as well as naturopathic treatments, and here too, speculating on Romanians' fear and confidence that they can heal themselves, various miracle solutions are being promoted that can completely regenerate your gum tissue and solve advanced periodontitis. Of course, there are also marketing gimmicks. A simple Google search for herbal treatments led me to the product title tincture for periodontosis, but the product label clearly, albeit small, mentions tincture for gingivitis.

Another wonder-product I found is a gum-regenerating solution, but the product's English-language label claims that the solution is recommended to be used only after dental procedures (scaling, tooth extraction, etc.) for gum pain relief. So, scams go hand in hand everywhere, and if you are gullible or desperate enough, you try them all, sometimes causing more harm. I'm not discounting the importance of herbal treatments for certain mild conditions, but I understand that severe ones cannot be treated with hawthorn tea, for example.

We also learn about miracle solutions from TV commercials. For example, certain toothpastes that promise a cure, or in the case of periodontitis, this is impossible with just using toothpaste.

I was terribly amused by a dialogue from the Argentinian TV series "Envious", which I reproduce below.

Mom: She's beautiful now, but you'll see in some years that beauty doesn't last. You know, don't you?

Son: Mom, it's not about that.

Mom: Oh, but it is! You think everything stays in its place?! No. I'm telling you, everything goes down. All of it! You know what’s the only thing that goes up?! Gums!

 

Periodontal Flap Surgery

If we are talking about periodontitis that has already passed the incipient stage, dentists recommend periodontal flap surgery. This involves subgingival cleaning of dead tissue, tartar deposits and possibly pus pockets. Because this procedure is quite invasive, and the gums need time to heal afterwards, it is not recommended to do it too often, possibly every five years. But when money is at stake, what does the fragility of gum tissue matter?

 

Excerpt from ‘Health Care Failures’, a book about jobber-doctors and lackadaisical-doctors

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