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LucyGransnet (GNHQ) Thu 20-Feb-14 10:39:56

Doctor's Notes

Dr Rosemary Leonard, GP and BBC Breakfast's resident doctor, recalls the weird and...well, mainly just weird encounters of a medical professional over the years. From Buzz Lightyear to Creme Eggs - there's a place for both, and that's not where they ended up in these instances.

Dr Rosemary Leonard

Doctor's Notes

Posted on: Thu 20-Feb-14 10:39:56

(61 comments )

Lead photo

To infinity...and beyond!

We had a big family supper last night, and as both my younger son and my niece are clinical medical students, the conversation, as usual, turned to matters of health and wellbeing. Only this time, rather than discussing the merits or otherwise of new treatments, we ended up in the realm of the extraordinary, and how real life often is stranger than fact.

It was my niece who started it. She recalled how she had recently seen a bizarre case involving the toy Buzz Lightyear. Apparently a man had placed - for reasons best known to himself - one of these inside his back passage. The battery was still operating, so the toy's arms flailed outwards, which meant it was impossible to remove. During the major operation that followed (which involved cutting open his abdomen and his bowel) quite understandably the medical staff found it difficult to keep a straight face as a voice kept being heard, not from the patient's mouth, but from the other end of his body.

It reminded me of a similar case involving a creme egg, which had been placed by an amorous boyfriend in his girlfriend’s vagina. They rang me in the surgery in some distress when the chocolate, rather inevitably inside a body with a temperature of 37 degrees, began to melt, and they were unable to retrieve it. I think they expected me to undertake a rather unusual Easter egg hunt, and they weren’t too impressed when I suggested the solution was merely to take a long, hot bath.

The medical staff found it difficult to keep a straight face as a voice kept being heard, not from the patient's mouth, but from the other end of his body.


There have also been many times when I have felt I have been working more like a detective than a doctor.

Every GP sees patients with sexually transmitted diseases on a fairly regular basis, but having three young women come into my surgery within a matter of weeks, all pregnant, and all with gonorrhoea, was highly unusual, especially as the father of the child in each case had recently proposed. As is usual, the source of the infection had to be traced, and when eventually a single culprit was found, it was extremely tempting to ask him if he knew that polygamy was against the law.

Then there are the patients who never let on that they are taking other medicines from abroad. Though it's understandable to foreigners to think that medicines from their home are trustworthy, medical practices in far flung lands, especially the Far East, can be very different to those in the UK. I have had more than one case where abnormal blood test results have been found to be due to a foreign "remedy" and also had instances where the puzzling failure of my prescribed medicine to have any effect was due to the patient simultaneously using a foreign medicine with an opposite action.

If any of these story lines appeared in a soap opera, I suspect there would be cries of disbelief, but after 25 years as a GP, I now expect the unexpected. It is one of the many joys of my job.

Rosemary's book, Doctor's Notes.

By Dr Rosemary Leonard

Twitter: @DrRosemaryL

loop50 Mon 03-Mar-14 12:29:26

Gives another meaning to the phrase - "To Infinity and Beyond".

Which is where the person involved was obviously aiming.

Lilygran Wed 26-Feb-14 09:43:03

I think we all look for humour to make our working lives pleasanter and in some cases, tolerable. And there must be some reason for the popularity of books written by members of different occupations about their working lives! How about Call the Midwife?

jinglbellsfrocks Wed 26-Feb-14 09:09:04

"distorted sexual drive". Really eleothan? Is that what you think it is? hmm

Good one FlicketyB. And I like Shakespeare's "wise enough to play the fool".

FlicketyB Wed 26-Feb-14 09:02:30

I would never laugh at a named individual with a mental and physical problem but I can laugh at an anonymised story about someone's bizarre behaviour, whether medical or anything else.

I do feel we are reaching a point where we are not allowed to laugh at anything because just possibly someone somewhere might ever so slightly not like the joke. DH has at various times picked up books making fun someway or another at his profession, his nationality and his hobbies. These books are full of stories of unfortunate things that have happened to other people in a context he is familiar with, some of which he can identify with. No individual is identified so no one personally affected. Some of the stories I suspect are apocryphal anyway.

Didn't Elizabeth Bennet in 'Pride and Prejudice say 'I hope I never ridicule what is wise and good. Follies and nonsense, whims and inconsistencies do divert me..'

Eloethan Wed 26-Feb-14 00:17:43

I don't think I'm po-faced or a killjoy but I don't find these anecdotes funny - I think they're bizarre and rather sad. Would you laugh about a person who has an irrational hatred of, for instance, one of their legs and pleads with a doctor to amputate it?

The people that this doctor found so amusing may well have some sort of mental health issue/distorted sexual drive that leads them to behave in a way that is potentially dangerous.

Nonu Tue 25-Feb-14 20:52:19

Jess . in theory not a bad idea , but cannot really see it happening !!

JessM Tue 25-Feb-14 20:39:04

Well there had to be some men going into gynaecology for that very reason didn't there, whether conscious or unconscious. I always thought it would be nice if it could be an all female profession. How politically incorrect is that grin

FlicketyB Tue 25-Feb-14 19:43:48

I have no medical antecedents, but I see no problem in telling the stories providing the patient is not identifiable.

Does anyone remember the 'Doctor in the House' series of books? I read the first one about the eponymous doctor's student days and thought it hilarious - then went to university myself and realised it was accurate.

I was at a university with a medical school and knew a medical student who was generally referred to as 'fingers' among female students who knew him. We exchanged stories about how soon after meeting him he tried to get his hands all over you. Once I casually asked him what he intended to do when he graduated, thinking he might be a GP like his father. His answer was 'gynaecologist'. I vowed then and there that if ever I needed to see a gynaecologist, my first recourse would be to a medical directory to find out where he was working, just in case he was at my local hospital.

Dragonfly1 Mon 24-Feb-14 10:11:36

My days of relying on my memory for anything seem to be long gone! Last week I bought a t shirt that I'd already bought, washed and put to be ironed....and forgotten about!

Elegran Mon 24-Feb-14 09:16:53

I was relying on my memory (I hate using that terrible search engine).

On a search I have found that Jaxie posted four times in 2011, and once on the thread testing Boots Number 7 facecare. Buffersmoll posted a total of five scattered times in 2013. So neither is a completely new member, they really come into the first category I mentioned - people who read the forums but (hardly ever) post anything.

Dragonfly1 Mon 24-Feb-14 08:58:11

You just do a search, Elegran, using the search box at the top of the page.

Elegran Mon 24-Feb-14 08:52:38

Dragonfly I have not seen any other posts, but thank you for pointing that out.

rockgran Mon 24-Feb-14 00:21:39

If you are daft enough to stick a Buzz Lightyear up your bottom then you don't deserve anyone's discretion - poor Buzz! shock

janeainsworth Sun 23-Feb-14 23:25:31

blushblush
grin

harrigran Sun 23-Feb-14 23:18:16

I thought you would have come across jaxie jane it is in common usage here in the north east. On second thoughts your speciality was the other end, so maybe not grin

Dragonfly1 Sun 23-Feb-14 22:31:10

Both have posted previously.

janeainsworth Sun 23-Feb-14 22:09:14

Elegran I am indebted to you - I have learned a new word today. But it seems that I am not the only one ignorant of the meaning of the word 'jaxie'
hollywoodlife.com/2014/02/07/mackenzie-mckee-gives-birth-baby-girl-jaxie-taylor-teen-mom-3/

Elegran Sun 23-Feb-14 16:43:46

And, on a thread about the strange things that some people decide to stick up their jaxies, the choice of Jaxie as a username does seem to show a pretty robust sense of humour. I don't think he/she will wilt away.

Elegran Sun 23-Feb-14 16:40:17

One of my alternatives was that they are members who have been around a while but never posted before. If so, they will be post again. Neither of them seems like a fragile bloom who will be put off posting as easily as you imagine.

rosesarered Sun 23-Feb-14 16:24:39

riverwalk and elegran ; rather strong words there from you to perhaps 2 new members of the forum?Enough to put them off from further comments I should think.

rosesarered Sun 23-Feb-14 16:19:24

I found the anecdotes slightly amusing, I must say, but also rather horrifyingly so; not because a doctor said it [after all, as somebody has already mentioned, there are no naming of names] but because how stupid and disgusting the man was to do that in the first place.Yuk! From reading the posts, it seems as if this is not a rare occurrance, although it may well be a first with a Buzz Lightyear.What weird people there are in the world.

Tegan Sun 23-Feb-14 16:07:49

When I'm channel hopping I often end up watching Embarrassing Bodies [or Flog It]. I wish there were programmes like that when I was younger and found most trips to the doctor terribly embarrassing [used my son as an excuse to ask about piles once,only to find my son actually did have an infection and needed antibiotics blush]; I'd hope that they give people the courage to see a doctor about an awkward medical condition. But what I don't understand is why sometimes people go on the programme that have been treated by the NHS and are still suffering, but, once they see Dr Pixie their ongoing problem is cured. Is a lot of it down to money, I wonder?

jinglbellsfrocks Sun 23-Feb-14 15:19:21

Riverwalk! shock Who was laughing at soldiers being blown to pieces?!

I am sure soldiers, like many other young blokes, get up to all sorts. Not sure how keen I am to hear about them though. grin

Elegran Sun 23-Feb-14 09:40:31

A lot of people find it amusing that people who have done stupid things have got their come-uppance - see the Darwin Awards but those who don't find it funny are not being PC. They are reacting instinctively and saying how they feel.

I can't find any other posts by Jaxie (or by buffersmoll) so I suspect that he/she is either a member who has never found that any post so far has affected him/her strongly enough to trigger a post, or someone who found the stories so hysterically funny that they just had to join and post to defend the book from someone who was not amused. Or possible to abject to all people over 50 as too PC and straightlaced.

Riverwalk Sun 23-Feb-14 09:25:44

Jaxie I'm confused at your comment .... would never have thought so many grans would be so smugly politically correct as those of us who were not amused are clearly in the minority.

buffersmoll yes I'm sure army medics would have many amusing anecdotes ..... soldiers' blown to pieces, ha ha.

Some events are not for public amusement.