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No-Show
Of Ill, Morbidly Obese
Diabetic Patient Welcomed
Prayers of second-year resident apparently answered
NEW YORK,
NY - The no-show of ill, morbidly obese patient Gustavo Delatorre was
welcomed by his continuity clinic physician yesterday, sources reported.
Delatorre,
a 65-year old diabetic with neuropathy, retinopathy, hypertension, hyperlipidemia,
hypothyroidism, gout, and extremely poor glucose control on insulin, had
last been seen by second-year internal medicine resident Donald Sperling,
MD in December 2000, a visit which Sperling recalled vividly.
"The
guy's like totally torture," he stated prior to Delatorre's 4:00PM
appointment yesterday. "He's huge and smells terrible, and always
has like ten million problems."
"Last
time, he brought in his sugar log, and his readings were pretty much all
in the 400 range. Plus he had a toe that looked like it had pus coming
out, and needed refills on about a hundred meds too."
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Looks
like a no-show
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Sperling,
who sees four to five patients in afternoon continuity clinic once a week,
added that he had been unable to leave clinic until after 6PM due to the
length of Delatorre's previous visit.
"Man,
I'm just prayin' he doesn't show up today," said Sperling
in a break between patients.
At 4:30PM,
when he was informed that Delatorre had indeed no-showed, he was noted
pumping his fist in the air in a burst of elation, shouting "YES!"
loudly and repeatedly.
Concerned plans
to contact Delatorre regarding his deteriorating health status are not underway. |