Received this message from my sister in-law Leigh about Dave.
His Coming Home later today! At first, we thought a tad early since the drains only came out yesterday but after talking with Respiratory Team just now and worked through our concerns, we are now confident with his Discharge today! Follow up with GP next Tuesday, Follow up bloods and Xray in 4 weeks, fast tracked if he was to represent back to ED with complications!
Hi all, I am posting this update about my brother, these are text messages sent by my sister in-law.
Sunday 7 June
We have some beautiful nurses today making regular calls to the Theatre team to see if his still to be done today, his still on the list for today so far and unfortunately just playing the waiting game again!
Cancelled for the 4th time, doing it all over again tomorrow!
I’m thinking they took him off the emergency list when his bloods improved so not so urgent but surely it would be making scare tissue and adhesions etc
Monday 8 June
They have collected him for surgery just now! Should be approx 1hr plus up to 2hrs recovery! Won’t know yet if he will go to ICU or a ward but they will call me when he hits recovery! all goes well and his recovery can start! Thank you so much for your love and support, will update again when his out!
And please sisters don’t panic if he does go to ICU they have a bed ready for him in icu just in case he needs it and it’s could just be a cautionary me to send him there because of his diabetes in her blood pressure
Tuesday 9 June
Hey all, his still in recovery, his asking to hold off visiting until he hits the ward as only 1 visitor at a time and his sleeping on and off still! His had a reasonable sleep overnight a little pain on coughing but has a pain button to press every 5 mins if needed! No details from the surgeon yet on how it went, didn’t have to open so just 2 chest drains for a few days and small wounds to heal!
At this stage he will get a bed F3 bed 12 but won’t be ready till 11ish but nurses talk will be 3pm lol.
I will add that on Monday Leigh told the hospital that if he didn’t have his surgery today, she wanted him transferred to Newcastle Private Hospital this is the hospital where they both work, Leigh as a nurse and Dave is in charge of the back-dock.
She filled in forms and lodged a complaint as Dave had been told he would have his surgery only to have it postpone 4 times and we all felt this was a joke
Hello everyone I have decided to do some posts about some deadly creatures found here in Australia, starting with one that we don’t consider dangerous but has caused around 20 deaths each year.
Most deaths are from falls while riding, with most victims being over 45 years old.
Horses are responsible for around 31% of all animal related deaths.
Around 3,000 to 4,000 Australians are hospitalised each year due to horse‑related injuries. Horses consistently rank as one of the top causes of animal‑related hospital admissions in the country.
These include:
Falls while riding
Being thrown
Being crushed or kicked
Farm accidents
Trail riding accidents
The most common injuries are
Fractures (especially arms, ribs, spine)
Head injuries
Soft‑tissue trauma
Internal injuries from crushing
Those most likely to come a cropper are those over 45 and children aged between 10 and 14.
Had a pretty good night I got up at 4.10am as I was feeling restless, I have tossed a load of clothes on to wash, cleaned the kitchen and swept the hallway and loungeroom.
It is 11c or 52f at 5am, by 6am I started to feel really tired so I don’t think I will go for a walk.
At 6.20 Leigh posted to the family chat that Dave was back at the JHH, they rang him last night saying he had to go back due to his last blood tests showing what they think is Ecoli.
So much for him improving he is worse and now it looks like he will need surgery to drain the fluid from his long as it has increased during the week. This is serious Sandy came over and told me in person then she went and told Sue and will tell Jeannie as well.
Had a pretty good night I got up at 4.10am as I was feeling restless, I had a shower and dressed for the day it is 10c or 50f at 5.30am.
Went and had my CT scan done and after that Sue and I went to visit Dave and we are both glad we did as he didn’t look as bad as we both thought he would.
He is hoping to be operated on tomorrow.
I have had a great day Parkinson’s wise the best day I have had in a long time.
Steps: 7,633= 3.2k’s or 2.3 miles
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I was up and dressed by 5am after a nice 8 & half hours of sleep, it was 14c 57f not supposed to be as cold as yesterday, but we will see.
I am really cold this morning, but I still went for my walk.
Dave thought he was going to have his surgery today but by 5pm he was told that it might not be done till Saturday this is so frustrating.
I am so very tired this afternoon and will be in bed quite early.
I slept straight through the night waking with the alarm at 5am, I had around 8hrs of sleep
It was 13c or 55f.
I was feeling good this morning but around 10am that changed I got a headache and started to feel like shit. Thankfully after around an hour I started to feel better.
I have spent an hour or so each day sorting out the spare room and I am nearly done, hopefully tomorrow will be the last day then I am going to start on Tim’s office which is a right mess.
I slept straight through the night waking with the alarm at 5am, I had around 8hrs of sleep
It was 13c or 55f.
I was feeling good this morning but around 10am that changed I got a headache and started to feel like shit. Thankfully after around an hour I started to feel better.
I have spent an hour or so each day sorting out the spare room and I am nearly done, hopefully tomorrow will be the last day then I am going to start on Tim’s office which is a right mess.
I slept straight through the night getting 10&1/2 hours of sleep it is only 8c or 46.4f.
I found Tim already up and at his computer. He told me he couldn’t get into Facebook or his emails, when I checked he was using a different browser and when I clicked on the one I use, he was signed into both sites. He said I never told him to use that browser, but I know I did.
The day has warmed up it is 18c at 2pm
Jessica came down to help Tasha with something and gave me a big hug and thanked me for her birthday card and gift.
Let’s start with what the hell is wrong with me I wrote this and forgot to hit publish on Tuesday and the Wednesday and now here we are at Thursday, talk about getting distracted and having a scatter brain.
This week we are looking the eye condition called Diabetic retinopathy. This is a condition that some who has diabetes may develop it causes damage to the tiny blood vessels in the retina and can lead to vision loss or blindness if untreated.
It’s a complication of both type 1 and type 2 diabetes where high blood glucose gradually harms the retinal blood vessels. These vessels can:
Swell and leaks
Close off, stopping blood flow
Grow abnormal new vessels that bleed easily
Over time, this damages the retina and affects vision.
There are two stages the first is non‑proliferative diabetic retinopathy (NPDR). In this stage the following may happen
The blood vessels weaken and leak
The retina swells
The macula may swell known as macular oedema, this causes blurred vision.
The next stage is proliferative diabetic retinopathy (PDR) in this advanced stage, the following happens new fragile blood vessels grow, these can bleed into the vitreous (causing floaters or major vision loss) and scar tissue can form and pull the retina away as in retinal detachment.
Early on, there may be no symptoms at all.
However, as it progresses, people may notice:
Blurry or fluctuating vision
Floaters (dark spots or cobweb-like shapes)
Dark or empty patches in vision
Poor night vision
Sudden vision loss
How is this diagnosed?
To start with a dilated eye exam is essential during this the eye specialists may use the following.
Optical coherence tomography (OCT) to measure retinal swelling
Fluorescein angiography to detect leaking or blocked vessels (the dye test shown in the widget above)
Treatment depends on the stage, usually starting with
Control of diabetes, blood pressure, and cholesterol which is the foundation of preventing vision loss
Anti‑VEGF injections (e.g., Eylea, Lucentis) to reduce swelling and stop abnormal vessel growth
Laser therapy to seal leaking vessels or shrink abnormal ones
Vitrectomy surgery for severe bleeding or retinal detachment
Good evening, all! Yesterday I received these updates about Dave but decided to wait to post them here so I could share as much as possible. These were written by my sister in-law.
A bit of an update overnight, Daves ok but his back in ED but not by choice. We received a call from a JHH Dr at 9pm explaining one of his tests from Monday has come back positive for Ecoli in his blood. He asked Dave a series of questions and explained since he still isn’t well he needs to go back to ED for further treatment, we got up there about 9.30, he got a bed in ED maybe about 1am, bloods again, ECG, Xray and IV antibiotics, their waiting for the Respiratory team to start at 7am to see if his to stay in hospital for IV antibiotics or if he can go home on oral antibiotics. I’m heading back up there now after leaving at 3am to get a few hrs sleep so I can be there for when the Respiratory team is there. I’ll keep u all updated!
His had some sleep and pain relief, he asked for O2 just to make the alarm stop lol O2 is 93-96% ED Dr said from what he could see he thinks the Plural Effusion might be a bit bigger but wants to wait till he speaks to the team to see if he goes for further scans.
ED Dr has just come in, they’re going to do an ultrasound to see if there’s enough to drain so they can test it, then that may change the treatment and how long he stays in hospital.
Ok it is now 12.30pm and I just had a visit for my sister Sandy; she came to tell me the latest about Dave and it’s not good. He is going to have to have surgery to remove the fluid at the base of his lung which has increased from 1cm’s on Monday to 3cms now, the fluid is in bubbles at the base of his lung and Sandy said the area looks like a spider web.
This is not good in anyway at all and both me and Sandy had a cry, he will be in hospital for around 3 weeks, how soon the surgery will happen we don’t know yet.
After telling me Sandy went and told Sue and she also Jeannie, I am really concerned about him.
Monday update from Sandy
Respiratory team just reviewed him, Aiming for surgery tomorrow but could keep getting bumped due to other emergencies, they will try keyhole but may have to convert to open, will have chest drain post op for a few day, will be in hospital for a few days after the chest drains are removed then long term IV antibiotics but can be done as an outpatient everyday through the JHH. They are investigating his diabetes and waiting for a renal ultrasound to investigate his and manage his high blood pressure.
Me and Sue went and saw him today and we both felt better as he looked and sounded ok, he was in good spirits joking that he will be operated on tomorrow and home on Friday, but that’s not going to happen he should be in between 2 & 3 weeks.
I will end this with a big thank you to all who have prayed for Dave, it is very much appreciated by me.