Tumgik
#Crohn’s disease specialist
kaizengastrocare · 1 year
Text
Looking for the best Crohn's Disease Treatment in Pune? Kaizen Gastro Care specialist Dr. Vikrant Kale provides the best treatment for Crohn's disease. Dr. Vikrant Kale successfully completed Fellowship in Inflammatory bowel disease from Oxford University (U.K.) in 2018 and has knowledge in treating various IBD conditions such as Crohn’s disease & ulcerative colitis.
1 note · View note
sankttealeaf · 22 days
Text
when the chronic illness is chronic 🙀
im so tired of this its getting to the point where im so exhausted all the time :( i just want to have one day where im not in pain.
8 notes · View notes
drvasudevchowda · 4 months
Text
0 notes
contentwithit · 5 months
Text
Specialist appointment today.
Guess what all my lab work all my test look great. I hate that. I wonder if I'd be happier with a reason or if it would scare me.
For now just hope it gets better. We can do different tests in a couple weeks. For now just starve.
I went shopping for some small foods I can eat that should be easy on me. Veggies to cook, some yogurt and some juice. I guess the weightloss continues.
0 notes
balajihospital · 5 months
Text
Balaji Hospital | Contact Us for Expert Healthcare Services
Balaji Hospital's Contact Us connects patients & visitors with their dedicated healthcare team, offering phone numbers & email addresses focusing on satisfaction
Tumblr media
0 notes
Tumblr media
If you're experiencing any of the symptoms of #CrohnsDisease, OR If you have symptoms that aren't going away, feel free to Consult the experienced #IBD specialist, Dr. Vikrant Kale, and get expert advice today.
Early diagnosis and treatment are essential for managing Crohn's disease and improving your quality of life.
0 notes
harmeet-saggi · 9 months
Text
What Is A Gastroenterologist? Signs It's Time To See A Gastroenterologist
Do you ever wonder what goes on inside your body after you've enjoyed a delicious meal? How does the human digestive system work, and what happens when things go wrong? If you've been experiencing stomach issues or gastrointestinal discomfort, it may be time to seek the expertise of a gastroenterologist. In this comprehensive blog, we'll explore the wonders of the digestive system, what a gastroenterologist does, and the signs that indicate it's time to see one. We'll also touch upon essential conditions such as Crohn's disease, inflammatory bowel disease, and ulcerative colitis. So, let's dive into the world of gastroenterology and find out how you can address your digestive concerns. If you're searching for a "gastroenterologist near me" or a "gastrologist near me," this blog is the perfect place to start your journey.
0 notes
gimedicalservices · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
Discover top-notch care for your digestive health with our GI Medical Services skilled team of Gastrointestinal specialists in Staten Island. From diagnosing and treating digestive disorders to providing personalized solutions, our experienced doctors are dedicated to your well-being. Health specialist doctor digestive Staten Island Experience relief and improved digestive wellness with cutting-edge treatments tailored to your unique needs. Trust us for compassionate and effective care. To schedule an appointment, please feel free to contact Us: 718-605-5000
0 notes
delta-hexagon · 2 months
Text
Chronically Ill Hexagon asking for help
im desperate
on July 4th i returned home from a small family vacation and caught something on the plane that triggered a bad crohns disease flare. i went to the ER twice in excruciating pain and each time they sent me home telling me it was just a stomach bug
on July 17 i finally got my remicade infusion 2 weeks late, and on July 19 i had a gastroscopy. on July 24 i had a CT scan
i still havent heard about the results from either, and my specialist hasnt returned any of my calls asking for a letter so i can go on medical leave
my workplace similarly has NOT responded to my request for a Record of Employment, which keeps me from going on EI
i have not been able to work since July 4th and have had zero money coming in because i cant apply for EI without any of the paperwork ive been asking repeatedly for. after barely managing to pay rent, im solidly at -5 dollars
this entire ordeal has been awful. i feel like im being failed at every opportunity by medical professionals and my workplace and i dont know what to do. i can barely eat, drink, or walk without pain, and while im slowly recovering, i still dont know when i'll be able to return to work
so im asking here for help. for anything to help get me food i can actually keep down while i recover
447 notes · View notes
lifblogs · 1 year
Text
Happy Disability Pride Month to
The GI issues! No one wants to talk about GI issues, but here we go! Some of them are:
Celiac Disease
Lactose Intolerance
Crohn’s Disease
Irritable Bowel Syndrome
Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease
Barrett’s Esophagus
Colon Polyps
Cyclic Vomiting Syndrome
Diverticulitis
Dumping Syndrome
Exocrine Pancreatic Insufficiency
Gastroparesis
Intestinal Pseudo-Obstruction
Microscopic Colitis
Stomach Ulcers
Ulcerative Colitis
Zollinger-Ellison Syndrome
If it seems like most of these were found on a list somewhere, you are correct, but I read up on every condition.
I invite anyone to use this post to discuss their own GI issues, and to add ones I have missed. Let’s get people talking about this! And let’s take stomach aches seriously. Many people go undiagnosed for a long time because of how abdominal pain and symptoms are brushed off. It’s important to listen to what you’re body is telling you, and to seek out help as soon as you can if it’s telling you it’s not feeling good. And going to a GI specialist can feel weird because who even wants to discuss excrement issues and vomiting? But come on, let’s do it. It’s okay to not feel well with your GI tract, and you’re not gross for it.
(A video I wanted to add to this post, but thought it would ruin the tone.)
717 notes · View notes
Text
I’m having so many health issues atm I’m legit exhausted
Like, I’ve genuinely spent the past 3 days exclusively doing medical things - meeting with doctors, nurses, running tests, picking up prescriptions etc, and I just got a call from the doctor saying she’s consulted a specialist + had some tests back and so I now also have 2 more prescriptions to collect, as well as a minimum of 4 more doctors appointments in the next week. I’ve just found out today that I’ve also got a severe ongoing infection, possible autoimmune disease, likely Crohn’s disease or ulcerative colitis, a thus far mystery blood clotting disorder (that I had to go to the ER for last week + has caused me daily nosebleeds for the past 4 weeks) and I am in a new cluster period with my cluster headaches.
I am so fucking drained
92 notes · View notes
drvasudevchowda · 6 months
Text
0 notes
covid-safer-hotties · 30 days
Text
I loved my teaching career. COVID normalization stole it from me - Published Aug 23, 2024
It might not have been the most favourable, but one of the most memorable comments I ever received on a student evaluation was that I could be “a bit hard to follow, but that was more an example of [my] passion for this subject over anything.” That subject was creative writing. And yes, sometimes, I had difficulty tempering my excitement throughout a teaching career that has now been cut short.
I have – or had – been teaching as a contract or “sessional” creative-writing instructor. Given the competitiveness of the academic job market and my age (I was nearly 40 when I earned the requisite degree, though I had already published four books), I had come to accept that it was unlikely that I would ever have a faculty position. But I could live with that because I still had the rare privilege of making a (barely) livable wage doing something I was very passionate about.
The COVID-19 pandemic took that from me. Actually, that’s not quite right. It was the perceived “end” of the pandemic that really ruined my teaching career.
I am immunocompromised and rely on medication to manage an autoimmune disease. This means vaccine protection from the virus is probably less effective for me than for most people. Also, my particular illness – Crohn’s, an inflammatory bowel disease – has been shown to put me at significantly greater risk than most for long COVID: a potentially chronic condition that can be very debilitating. And despite how it may seem, COVID circulates widely much of the year: We are still in a pandemic.
When universities returned to in-person learning in early 2022, a brief letter from my specialist was all I needed – because of my medical condition – to continue teaching online. But all that changed about a year ago.
Ironically, it is now harder for me to receive accommodation to teach online even though there is less protection in the classroom against COVID. I cannot require masking, which is perhaps our best tool against transmission (particularly respirator-style masks such as N95s), in the classroom. Nor does one-way masking offer as much protection as universal masking. Also, current air filtration in classrooms is generally insufficient. In other words, classrooms are not safe and accessible workplaces for medically vulnerable people. But that’s certainly not how university administrators, and even those who were supposed to represent employees’ interests, perceive things these days.
Last year, trying to discourage me from requesting to teach online, a union rep told me that he “believed in in-person learning.” The most frustrating thing about this comment, and the widely held opinion it represents, is that I too very much miss teaching in person and would, if it were safe to do so. (That said, I believe I am every bit as effective a teacher online.)
On another occasion, a university administrator, after I had submitted my medical documentation, thought “the solution” was for me to co-teach the class so it could include an in-person component and, consequently, less pay for me. After a struggle that went on for months, I taught the class entirely online, but the accommodation agreement I had to sign stated I had “a medical condition that needs limited exposure to as many people as possible.” I nearly refused to put my name to this bizarre description of what is a prevalent disease, but it was too late to apply elsewhere.
It is clear it will only become increasingly difficult for me to teach online as time goes on. The back-and-forth with administrators, department heads and union reps, waiting to find out if I will or won’t be accommodated, and/or what new obstacles will be thrown at me – it has all caused me significant anxiety, which in turn has made it more difficult, ironically, to manage the symptoms of my illness.
I know that the people I have been sparring with are, for the most part, decent folks: They are just ill informed. But I can’t keep trying to do the job of a public-health official to ensure my own health. It’s quite literally making me sick. I’m done. I quit. I have to.
Disability activists have fought long and hard for workplace accessibility to be a right. But the culture has not caught up to understanding the particular accessibility needs of the immunocompromised.
I do not know how to go forward from here. Online courses, especially creative writing, are few and far between. I am looking for online work that utilizes my skills and education and/or that pays more than minimum wage. I have yet to find even an opening for anything like that. For now, I’m grieving: In many ways, it’s a full-time job.
The last time I taught in person was the year I graduated from my MFA program – just months before the pandemic began. After the semester had ended, a student asked if we could have a coffee together so that I could offer further guidance on revising a piece of writing that I had told him was of near-publishable quality. And I only say that to students when it’s true. He also, to my surprise, wanted to share a bit of his own constructive criticism for me – about how I could facilitate workshop discussion a little better. I chuckled at his audacity, though later, upon reflection, took his suggestion. But mostly we focused on his creative work.
As we were getting ready to go our separate ways, he mentioned, in passing, that he had a long drive home: 2½ hours. It has always stayed with me that a student was willing to spend five hours driving for a relatively brief chat over a coffee. Clearly, he thought I was a good teacher, but with more practice and experience, I could become – like a talented, but novice, student writer – an excellent one. Unfortunately, it doesn’t seem like I will get that chance.
14 notes · View notes
balajihospital · 5 months
Text
Balaji Hospital | Care for Respiratory Conditions & Lung Health
Balaji Hospital's Chest Physician showcases their team of expert chest physicians specializing in diagnosing & treating respiratory conditions like asthma, lungs
Tumblr media
0 notes
https://www.drkalegastroclinic.com/crohns-disease-vs-ulcerative-colitis-whats-the-difference/
In this blog Dr. Vikrant Kale & his team delve into the complications of Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis, shedding light on their dissimilarities to provide a comprehensive understanding of these conditions.
0 notes
darkmaga-retard · 1 day
Text
Back in February, U.S. Republican Senator Ron Johnson from Wisconsin held a roundtable discussion titled ‘Federal Health Agencies and the COVID Cartel: What Are They Hiding?’. In attendance at that forum was an internal medicine specialist and medical doctor named Sabine Hazan, who conducts and supervises clinical trials for cutting-edge medical research, including that based on gastroenterology. Dr. Hazan investigates Big Pharma companies for corruption, a very daring and courageous effort to help the world realize how much fraud and insidious planning Western Medicine engages in, especially the Vaccine Industrial Complex.
Dr. Sabine Hazan discovered that Covid-19 mRNA gene therapy injections kill 90% of good gut flora called bifidobacteria, catapulting most major diseases and disorders
The key component that makes up 90% of our biological seat of immunity for fighting diseases is KILLED OFF by spike proteins from mRNA jabs that travel to the gut. Anyone who got Covid vaccinated could be catapulting cancer, IBS, autism, dementia and catching Covid or the next pandemic of Bird Flu, Monkeypox, or whatever other gain-of-function lab-made virus Big Pharma releases into the wild.
13 notes · View notes