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Tantra's avatar

Hi Tom I actually am one of those rare people that had to have emergency decompression surgery for ces. 12 weeks before this I had a stroke, pretty unlucky time just as the covid pandemic started, unfortunately when I went to a&e I was kept in 12 hours then discharged under sciatica, although I told them all the red flags and even asked if it could be ces but they didn’t listen, two days later after given an mri I was sent straight to surgery, I think there is so much more that needs to be taught to drs and nurses, students to be able to be more aware of ces red flags, as in my own personal experience very few drs, surgeons, nurses, still have very little knowledge of it and the aftermath destruction of lifetime disabling issues and pains were left with and still not believed or have a aftercare pathway. However I’m more than happy to help in any questions to better help drs nurses students gain more knowledge of ces.

Kind regards

Tantra

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Ian Stevens's avatar

So clear and well written Tom. Graeme’s comments on common things is important too I feel . This is the way inservice education should be ! Do you refer to Jon stones scan negative research? The biomedical information is obviously important but so too is the amount of complex stress patterns coupled with depression etc . In a back clinic I worked in so many cases were a complex mix of things seldom needing neurosurgery intervention. Ian

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