Is that the same "peanut butter shot" from boot camp? We were told it was one of the gajillion vaccinations, but God damn if you didn't just describe it to a tee, INCLUDING the hand-warming.Among the duties I had was to administer the treatment for the clap to the sailors who tested positive. It was 4.8 million unit of Y-Cillin K in each cheek (about 5 cc per shot). The needles looked like framing nails and were roughly five or six inches long. They were refrigerated and had the consistency of thick peanut butter. To soften them so that we could push in the medicine within a reasonable length of time (typically 1-2 minutes), we had them hold the syringes in their hands to warm them up for about 15 minutes.
My family is having Thanksgiving dinner a night early due to work schedules tomorrow, so I look forward to testing out Beth's hypothesis from the first line of the article tonight!Here's a gripping conversation starter to bring up over your family's Thanksgiving feast this year
Is that the same "peanut butter shot" from boot camp? We were told it was one of the gajillion vaccinations, but God damn if you didn't just describe it to a tee, INCLUDING the hand-warming.
The point where someone clearly refuses to cooperate with public health officials. That doesn't appear to have happened here, at least not yet. Typically it takes quite a bit more than you'd think, especially since this is not as easily transmissible a disease as TB.Thinking back to that case of the woman with TB recently - at what point should an infected person spreading disease move from 'health officials reached out' to 'judges issue commands'?
yes. This falls under permitted use.Is there some kind of HIPAA exception for this sort of thing
I wouldn't be surprised if the Y-Cillin K could also have been administered with a simple to swallow pill, but that they found that this route of administration was superior in preventing recurrence of the disease...This reminds me of what I used to do way back in the last century.
Back in my Navy days toward the end of my enlistment, I was rotated from the ER, where we used to be dispatched for calls, to the Navy base branch clinic where we'd work the clinic doing physicals and immunizations when we weren't out on medical emergencies.
Among the duties I had was to administer the treatment for the clap to the sailors who tested positive. It was 4.8 million unit of Y-Cillin K in each cheek (about 5 cc per shot). The needles looked like framing nails and were roughly five or six inches long. They were refrigerated and had the consistency of thick peanut butter. To soften them so that we could push in the medicine within a reasonable length of time (typically 1-2 minutes), we had them hold the syringes in their hands to warm them up for about 15 minutes.
So they'd sit there, holding a syringe in each hand, looking at them, forlornly contemplating their less than stellar life decisions for the full 15 minutes. I'd give them their shots, and they'd hobble out back into their lives.
That was before super-bugs were a thing. We definitely live in different times.
I wanted to post something, but the first few comments beat me to it. I am not disappointed. Happy Turkey day ARSians.I’m sure there’s a ‘stop or you’ll go blind“ gag in this somewhere…
Thanks for letting all of us know what your lunch routine is like.Thanks for putting this article up right during lunch!
This is actually very concerning:
Because HIV is no longer a death sentence -- actually, it's almost a "solved" problem, these days -- everyone's got real loosey-goosey with the "safer sex" things like condoms and dental dams.
Because, y'know, the clap just isn't all that scary to most people. It should be, though -- antibiotics aren't a panacea and there's surely some long term effects that aren't immediately evident.
I mean, that just isnt how this sort of sex works.
I wouldn't be surprised if the Y-Cillin K could also have been administered with a simple to swallow pill, but that they found that this route of administration was superior in preventing recurrence of the disease...
Iirc dental dams don't really make any difference practically speaking, they were more a thing because lesbians felt left out than anything else.
Ya see, the "give up eating meat" in this case might just be a misunderstanding of what you're trying to conveyAnd I get responses like I've just asked someone to give up eating meat. It's just mind-boggling.
It might seem extreme, but maybe? Just because it seems to be the only way to get certain people to take things like this seriously.My juvenile side thought "you seem to be doing it wrong."
But really, shouldn't people who have this dangerous attitude be charged with criminal assault for this kind of thing.
As someone who has gotten two separate peanut butter shots in my brief time on this world (so far) you paint a beautiful picture of the experience, but from the other side of the table. Thankfully I never had to warm my own shots up myself, I was spared that particular detail...This reminds me of what I used to do way back in the last century.
Back in my Navy days toward the end of my enlistment, I was rotated from the ER, where we used to be dispatched for calls, to the Navy base branch clinic where we'd work the clinic doing physicals and immunizations when we weren't out on medical emergencies.
Among the duties I had was to administer the treatment for the clap to the sailors who tested positive. It was 4.8 million unit of Y-Cillin K in each cheek (about 5 cc per shot). The needles looked like framing nails and were roughly five or six inches long. They were refrigerated and had the consistency of thick peanut butter. To soften them so that we could push in the medicine within a reasonable length of time (typically 1-2 minutes), we had them hold the syringes in their hands to warm them up for about 15 minutes.
So they'd sit there, holding a syringe in each hand, looking at them, forlornly contemplating their less than stellar life decisions for the full 15 minutes. I'd give them their shots, and they'd hobble out back into their lives.
That was before super-bugs were a thing. We definitely live in different times.
I've had this conversation with my friends in the gay community. Because most everyone is on PREP, it's being used as a prophylactic. This means the use of condoms has plummeted, and the rest of the STI army has started to run amok. Remember when MPox blew thru? Not hard to figure out why. (for the record, I'm not victim blaming, but the use of condoms would have made that outbreak a lot slower).This is actually very concerning:
Because HIV is no longer a death sentence -- actually, it's almost a "solved" problem, these days -- everyone's got real loosey-goosey with the "safer sex" things like condoms and dental dams.
Because, y'know, the clap just isn't all that scary to most people. It should be, though -- antibiotics aren't a panacea and there's surely some long term effects that aren't immediately evident.
I don't think that's entirely fair to him. Looking at the whole article when contacted the first time he was probably thinking "I went to the ER and was treated for herpes, so I couldn't have been the source." Once found and contacted with five cases, he made an appointment and kept it. He also accepted treatment. He did refuse to name all his sex partners, but so did at least one of the women.Everyone in the article was treated. Guy's still a massive douche, but end of the day everyone in the article appears to be fine.
Uh…don’t want to be pedantic but TB is not easily transmitted at all. It takes you hours spent together with a TB+ patient to catch the bacteria . Source: been around a lot of active TB patients in the emergency room. Been through several tests already. Never turned positive and this is what the hygiene experts always tell me.The point where someone clearly refuses to cooperate with public health officials. That doesn't appear to have happened here, at least not yet. Typically it takes quite a bit more than you'd think, especially since this is not as easily transmissible a disease as TB.
Questions like, “haha, what the fuck?” and “why am I looking at this when I could be playing with the new Procreate animation app?”raising questions
I assume the chart was signed by Dr. Nick Riviera?...in January of 2022 he had gone to a hospital emergency department for ulcerative genital and anal lesions. At the time, he was treated for a presumed herpes infection—but his herpes test was negative and he was not tested for syphilis.
That's all well and good but the specific patient I'm talking about had a particularly transmissible version of TB. The relative lack of transmissibility is also due to most cases not being all that advanced yet. It's highly transmissible in enclosed spaces where advanced cases are present. This is why it's such a major issue in prisons and jails, for example.Uh…don’t want to be pedantic but TB is not easily transmitted at all. It takes you hours spent together with a TB+ patient to catch the bacteria . Source: been around a lot of active TB patients in the emergency room. Been through several tests already. Never turned positive and this is what the hygiene experts always tell me.
In follow-up interviews, both patient A and patient B stated that the male sex partner had a sore on his penis in January 2022.
OK, I know half of the crowd will downvote this, but yes, how the hell did it happen? Did it involve some kind of biological projectile transfer of bodily fluids?One question not likely to be asked is, "How did this transfer happen?"
EDIT: Ocular syphilis is considered secondary or tertiary syphilis and generally from systemic spread and treated as neurosyphilis. The article is pointing out that usually other health symptoms will be present by the time the eyes are involved and the question is whether this is a variant that predominantly affects the ocular and nervous system. Worth investigating and the case report so doctors keep their eyes out for more cases.One question not likely to be asked is, "How did this transfer happen?"
Pretty sure you’re thinking of the wrong cheeks. The medication described is normally a deep intramuscular depot shot, so they likely meant buttcheeks.I had to read that several times before it finally sunk in that you weren't sticking a 5 inch needle into their faces.I could not figure out why you needed a needle that long when most people's cheeks are only ~0.25-0.5 inch thick. I would definitely be pondering my life's choices if you needed to stick something that big into each side of my face!
That’s not really the point of the article though. Syphilis is not uncommon as an std, the point of interest is the cluster of eyeball syphilis is a warning, if only one data point. It Could serve as a canary in the coal mine for public health officials to look for more widelyEye wouldn't.
More seriously, this is what happens when Syphilis spreads inside and throughout the body from the original infection. The, uh, originating act doesn't have to have anything to do with eyeballs.
FORTUNATELY these cases were all caught relatively early and treated.
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I'm glad the specialists decided not to keep a lid on this.
Heh. I remember back in training where we got a pretty thorough look at some of the results of various STDs and biologicals.Pretty sure you’re thinking of the wrong cheeks. The medication described is normally a deep intramuscular depot shot, so they likely meant buttcheeks.
I knew a guy who was a Navy Medic, who ended up in a port VD clinic. He said as you saw the same people multiple times the shot went in colder and faster, but most were back in a month or two.Is that the same "peanut butter shot" from boot camp? We were told it was one of the gajillion vaccinations, but God damn if you didn't just describe it to a tee, INCLUDING the hand-warming.
Well sure but this is also a great way to cost your org a ton of money and possibly open yourself up to litigation, too.I would also have told him that if he didn't provide contact info for all of his partners the health department was going to public advertise that people who had had sex with him should come to see them for testing and treatment. Most guys I think at that point would name names, rather than being outed as "Syphilis Sidney".
Hmm. I feel like I might be getting old (though not really, compared to the age of the people in the article given as "40‑60"), but when I still used to go clubbing with some of the associated (consensual) ONSs, having and using a condom was pretty much expected by both parties. Up to the point that I might have asked the partner if she had one, when I totally forgot to have one on hand a few times, and if she didn't, we'd just snuggle or pleasure each other in a non‑penetrating way. Guess the times have changed...I mean, that just isnt how this sort of sex works.