The halls are dusty, the moats are a mess, and the lawn and gardens need grooming. The Kingdom is in disarray.
Dust in the Great Halls, spider webs from the ceilings, the echoing of loneliness -
NAG, NAG, NAG! Can't a Bunny get a little time out for a case of the snuffles without getting deluged by complaints? I'll get to it, I'll get to it (hack, wheeze,
sniff!)
And oh, yeah - the moats are not my responsibility. Got more on my paws than I can handle even on my good days as it is . . . .
It sounds as if a visit to Georgia is very much in order. Either that or contact between your present doctor and the Ga OBGYN.
Y'know, I've seen a picture of an old map that had the known territory drawn in, and nothing at all on one side, other than the note, "beyond this point, there be dragons."
Em, honey, I know this has got to be incredibly frustrating for you. But I think you should remember that, though nausea and vomiting are experienced by most pregnant women, most can hold it together enough to at least maintain weight and hydration. Those that can't are a very small minority. And of those, cases that are as unrelenting and unresponsive to treatment as yours are rarer still. I'm thinking that for probably 99% of OB/GYN's, you are in dragon territory. I'd even be willing to bet that most of those who
have seen cases as bad as yours can probably count them on one hand.
As I recall, you live a little bit south of Orlando, so anywhere in Georgia is going to mean a car ride of several hours for you - something that gets frowned upon for women with "normal"pregnancies. Because your condition gives you a much higher risk than normal for blood clots, I'd think most would consider it a high risk proposition. While I agree that consultation and conferencing seem called for, I'm not sure whether the benefits would outweigh the risks when it comes to actually seeing your previous OB face-to-face.
I don't know what the infectious disease doc saw going on, or even what he meant by "a very long time." Urinary tract infections can be sleepers, or they can blow up in a matter of hours. Everybody would be aware of the risks with that PICC line in place, so the possibility of infection stemming from it would never be far from anyone's mind and they should have been monitoring specifically for it. I cannot imagine how they could have missed it, frankly.
At a time fraught with so many fears and uncertainties anyway, it really stinks to feel that you can't trust your doctor.
Prayin' for ya!