Is it just me?? Accused of being suicidal, with no evidence
The grocery store manager apparently just wanted me out, so they called a cab to take me home, which they paid for.
The cab dropped me off at my home, but did not stay to see that I actually got inside the door, before leaving.
I collapsed on my front driveway, without having been able to reach my door.
I was unconscious for four hours, till my partner found me almost lifeless, my lips were white, hardly a pulse, and completely unresponsive. Of course she called 911 right away.
I almost died in the ambulance and was rushed to the ER (I don't recall any of this, my partner told me about it after).
They got me back to life in the ER, but my level of consciousness was only minimal during that evening and all through that night.
I can only remember the doctor yelling at me, "WHAT DRUGS DID YOU TAKE?!" .... and I had no clue what they were talking about, and couldn't answer.
They ran a full blood analysis, and found no drugs of any kind in me.
However..... the doctor treating me wrote me up as a "Suicide Attempt" and that I'd tried to overdose on narcotics -- even though no narcotics at all showed up in my analysis. Nobody ever asked me what happened or asked whether I was suicidal, at all.
Later the next day, my partner told me that the two police officers who were among the first respondents to the 911 call, told the ER physician that "We found a lot of drugs scattered all around her where she was found." Yet, they could not say what type of drugs, or how much of it, and claimed they had *lost* all evidence they'd supposedly collected.
What happened here, and why? Does anyone have any insights?
By the way, my hospital record STILL states that I attempted suicide by narcotics overdose.... this is stapled to the results of my analysis showing zero narcotics or anything else in my system, at the time.
Is there any logic to this, and why would cops try to work a drug scam on me? Are doctors actually so stupid or is there some deliberate malice in the system?
All I can say is LAW SUIT.. Against both police, paramedic company, the hospital, the town or county in charge of the police for defamation of character and deceitful practices (police), medical malpractice (wrong diagnoses resulting in perminant public record) and falsification of records both police and medical and tampering of evidence. If what you say is true you have a strong case hun!
I'd drag these people through the mud and back.
ER docs frequently suspect drugs in people who are young and otherwise look healthy: drug seeking is one of the most persistent daily problems in ER's, and seeing people on drugs is similarly a daily occurrence.
If you're a young person and you present to the ER with altered consciousness, drugs will be the prime suspect, because drugs are typically the prime cause for young people in ER's with altered consciousnesses.
The doc probably wrote up your "suicide attempt" due to the police report.
The police lying about your situation is rather strange - police lie. They lie to people they arrest, lie to family members of people they arrest, lie to people they just don't like and wish they could arrest, and they lie to cover their own asses. Not all of them, but many - at least in my experience. but lying about your situation seems kind of odd. I assume you didn't have drugs scattered around you, so assuming they lied about that, I guess the most likely reason is to cover their asses... but what could they be covering their asses for?
Police once searched my car diligently for "drugs" during a traffic stop. They can search your property without a warrant if they have reasonable suspicion - their "reasonable suspicion" was that they "thought they might have caught a whiff of something" after pulling me over and confusing me for another person of the same name who had many drug arrests. I have had no arrests and definitely didn't have any drugs aside from my own prescription for Adderall, which was not in a labeled container and so they arrested me for that and made me prove it was prescribed to me.
Police also once arrested my husband and would not tell him why. hours later they told him he was arrested for a warrant due to not paying a seat belt ticket he had definitely paid 4 years ago. Rather than be held accountable for wrongfully arresting him, they invented that he had not paid for a no-insurance ticket.
My husband is an insurance agent and has written his own insurance policy for years. He definitely had insurance.
So... it happens, but you should be able to get this crap cleared up.
Sorry to hear you went through such a scary situation. Hope you are feeling better now.
I have heard of situations where people go into diabetic shock during an outing and left on the ground or even forced to leave the venue by bouncers because they assume the person is drunk and can sleep it of outside.
I understand that basing initial actions on assumptions makes life easier for most people and after making making that assumption it takes more time to change your view on that assumption than it took to make the initial one.
You did nothing wrong they did I hope you will be able to make them aware of that and that they correct the report.
_________________
We shall not speak of rules until they are broken, once rules are broken rule-breakers will be retroactively penalized.
Thank you for everyone's comments. It does seem to be a systemic practice/problem.
I don't have the means or energy to start a big inquisition. I mean being Aspie I can barely leave the house let alone fight legal wars against people or institutions.
But I'm a bit pleased that I wasn't singled out for some reason. Apparently this is something that happens with a bit of regularity everywhere.
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