I have made another attempt at a public study perhaps Matthew Lutz, PA - Watauga Surgical Group would like to reply to my inquiry...
LINK:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QrirUl2UOG4(Following are the questions and concerns I have posted at Matthew Lutz, PA's site shown above...)
"@RichardEasley-m5t
0 seconds ago
"I am inquiring whether Dr. Edmisten and hospital staff treat immunocompromised patients differently than regular patients?
If Dr. Edmisten and hospital staff treat immunocompromised patients differently than regular patients, then what extra precautions are to be expected? Would strict masking be required amongst hospital workers and all those who might approach the patient in the care of Dr. Edmisten?
There is Immune Decline in Seniors...
I assume healthcare is supposed to mask and make accommodations for immunocompromised people therefore we should mask in all healthcare areas to accommodate the seniors and elderly who walk into healthcare facilities
Seniors are considered immunocompromised due to reduced, slower immune responses
therefore, Masking should mandated for the sake of the elderly seniors for whom healthcare serves. Following is my reasoning based on scientifically established facts typically agreed upon in the medical establishment.
MEDICAL FACTS:
77-year-olds generally have weaker immune systems due to a natural process called
immunosenescence, making them more susceptible to infections, severe illness, and poorer vaccine responses. While not always classified as clinically "immunodeficient" (a term for specific diseases), they are considered immunocompromised due to reduced, slower immune responses
Key Aspects of Immune Decline in Seniors:
Reduced T-cell Production: The body produces fewer new T cells (which fight infection) and existing ones are less effective.
Inflammaging: A state of chronic, low-grade inflammation often develops, hindering the immune system's ability to respond to new threats.
Delayed Response: The immune system takes longer to identify and clear viruses or bacteria, allowing infections to become more severe.
Reduced Vaccine Efficacy: Due to slower responses, vaccines may not work as well or last as long as they do in younger people.
Impact: This, along with potential co-existing conditions, makes seniors more vulnerable to severe illnesses like COVID-19 or influenza
Since seniors are immunocompromised and considered to be 'at risk' patients and in light of the aforementioned medical facts, Will doctors and nurses be wearing a mask in advance and have staff and those in contact with senior patients also wear masks in advance for this population of seniors prior, during and after surgery for instant gall bladder surgery?
We are about to enter a hospital for gall bladder surgery and I am concerned maskless members and maskless guests of the hospital might expose her to airborne illness and airborne diseases because they might not mask without my presence and my prompting them to do so on the grounds of the hospital.
Feel free to reply and add any followup studies to deepen my understanding as to why masking should or shouldn't be mandated in the areas my 77 year old loved on is about to enter for surgery
Me and my loved one have been masking publicly for 6 years now and have not gotten a single airborne illness or airborne disease in 6 years and I plan to maintain that record. I am caretaker and protector of a 77 year old woman.
Last time my loved one and I went to the hospital I had to request and prompt nurses, doctors, and staff to mask for her and us by saying "We prefer you mask for us if that is alright" and they promptly masked for us on our behalf. Since your agency appears to be renting space and machine on hospital grounds I will be right outside the surgery door in my mask in the hallway off to the side playing a game of of online checkers from my cell phone, or reading a book. I will be there discretely off to the side in the hallway while you all do surgery in a sterile environment. I will also politely to prompt any nurses, doctors or staff (that aren't affiliated with your agency) that approach my loved one directly after the surgery to mask before accommodating us in hallway.
Thank you,
Richard Easley/The Masked Man
P.S.
Keep in mind the percentage of seniors that go to the doctor office.. seniors make up a hefty portion of clientele for these doctors and are good customers...
...Currently
Adults aged 65 and older are the heaviest users of physician office services, with this demographic visiting the doctor
twice as often as adults aged 18 to 44. While seniors represent roughly 17-18% of the U.S. population, they account for over 35-40% of all physician office visits.
Emergency Care: Adults aged 65 or older account for 38.3% of all EMS transports to emergency departments. For those 85 and older, EMS is the most common mode of ED arrival (60.6%).
...Seniors are considered immunocompromised due to reduced, slower immune responses
therefore, Masking should mandated for the sake of the elderly seniors for whom healthcare serves."
As caregiver all I do is focus on the wellbeing and what is best for the patient. I ignore what the board feels or wants..I ignore whether mandates are in place or not and simply do what is in the best interest of the patient..Whether someone is a democrat or republican doesn't apply .. I simply abide by the Hippocratic oath and act in accordance to whatever the medical studies say and I do what is best for the patient. The modern, commonly used version of the Hippocratic Oath includes the proactive commitment: "
I will prevent disease whenever I can, for prevention is preferable to cure". So that's why I prefer me and my loved one and others in healthcare settings to be masked so as to lessen the event of airborne illnesses and airborne disease occurring to an at risk senior patient who is naturally immunocompromised.
..Given the age of the patient... the scientifically established medical facts that seniors have weaker immune systems due to a natural process called immunosenescence"... Given The demographic fact that hospitals often treat and bring incoming patients with airborne illnesses and airborne diseases, I have reason to believe my very patient/client/significant other who is a senior's very life would be compromised around maskless people at a hospital therefore, I Richard Easley/Masked man promise to follow and obey the Hippocratic Oath which includes the proactive commitment: "
I will prevent disease whenever I can, for prevention is preferable to cure" and so I agree to mask and take precautions and preventions around patient and will prompt or state my preferences freely to others in Healthcare settings to do use the mask as I am bound by oath to.
...That was my You Tube comment/question/concern and public notice and declaration of my views and plans for loved ones gall bladder surgery.
Now back to you Data Report Info viewers,
By the way, currently the nature of what draws people to Data Report Info combined with this particular topic has generated 1624 views in about 3 months time while the doctor's site has 367 views in 8 years... obviously people are interested in my questions for the doctors!
Also for what it is worth we are paid up with our bill; in other words we are patients of these doctors and their assistants and so we(me and masked woman) are clients in good standing and so we paid for the pre surgery/consultation fee already and are simply asking our questions openly in public. I deem there is nothing wrong with requesting a written account or view from the consultation we paid for....
... I take it that it is in the best interest of all parties concerned to share discourse on and ask questions about the Hippocratic oath, masking and procedures for patients who are immunocompromised. No doubt anyone interested in health and well being of patients are willing to openly discuss policies and customs in regards to healthcare and there is nothing in regards to my questions that are somehow taboo or forbidden to discuss openly.. in other words it is every free person's right to ask such questions and so I assume doctors and those in healthcare are at liberty and will even fully embrace the opportunity to reach out to a multitude of people to discuss their views openly and online to the public and to their clientele that request such important information and discourse.
So to summarize and clarify:
the surgeon and assistant aforementioned is renting a space and a machine at a local hospital to operate on a 77 year old and I am asking specifically whether the aforementioned surgeon and assistant will request those who might approach their client to wear masks and so far I can't get a straight answer even though I paid them and am a client. What I am seeking is a straight answer with clarity, accountability, and integrity that reflects humanity and a code of ethics in medical establishments and treatment for my loved one. I am establishing whether or not the medical establishment and those who work in them embrace the scientifically established MEDICAL FACTS aforementioned above such as:
"77-year-olds generally have weaker immune systems due to a natural process called immunosenescence" and I'm trying to establish whether the surgeons assistants and staff at the medical establishments where the operation is taking place will fully accommodate seniors who have weaker immune systems due to a natural process called immunosenescence by taking extra precautions such as masking while she is in this rented out area of hospital? In other words are there going to be unmasked people around my loved one? and are the surgeons or assistants going to do anything about it personally to provide a fully safe environment with no maskless people at all times prior, during and after the surgery by making sure people wear masks around her or not?
I have asked these questions privately of the surgeons and assistants with no success so perhaps by asking them publicly to make a written statement we will be more successful in communication and all parties will be fully satisfied... which is why I have appropriately entitled this topic a "public Study".
Last time my loved one and I went to the hospital I had to request and prompt nurses, doctors, and staff to mask for her and us by saying "We prefer you mask for us if that is alright" so while I'm sitting in the waiting room in my mask around a bunch of sick maskless people I wanna know who is going to make those mask for my loved one prior, during and after her surgery!? I think that is a fair enough question for doctors and nurses that I am paying and who went to medical school to have enough intelligence and integrity to answer to.
Keep in mind the percentage of seniors that go to the doctor office.. seniors make up a hefty portion of clientele for these doctors and are good customers...
...Currently
Adults aged 65 and older are the heaviest users of physician office services, with this demographic visiting the doctor
twice as often as adults aged 18 to 44. While seniors represent roughly 17-18% of the U.S. population, they account for over 35-40% of all physician office visits.
Emergency Care: Adults aged 65 or older account for 38.3% of all EMS transports to emergency departments. For those 85 and older, EMS is the most common mode of ED arrival (60.6%).
...Seniors are considered immunocompromised due to reduced, slower immune responses
therefore, Masking should mandated for the sake of the elderly seniors for whom healthcare serves.
In my mask, I prefer sit right outside the door where the surgery is taking place and monitor, babysit and make my mask request to all those that might approach the room or my loved one who are maskless. I prefer people to take precautions and mask to prevent unnecessary risk of airborne illness and airborne disease in the hospital near my loved one prior, during and after surgery because I have taken an oath to protect my loved one and I love her. I am also her caregiver and am also in possession a certificate that has deemed her severely disabled by her physician so that she is dependent upon me to protect her needs and rights.
So even if I can't get a straight answer then I don't have to play by any rules either right? If the rules aren't stated clearly then my conduct can't be accounted for either.... If they don't have any rules or code of conduct then we will just use mine.. she's my client! I'm just gonna hand whoever comes to take her from the waiting room a certificate of disability and say "We prefer you mask for us if that is alright" then I will walk with them... I'm going to grab a loose chair if one is around and say outloud "It's alright, I'll be right outside the door in the hallway" ... if anybody objects then let them object..I'll just hand them a certificate of disability and calmly say "okay, I am required to be with her in person so instead I'll just be by the door". That's what I prefer anyway. I'll be right outside the door in my mask in the hallway off to the side playing a game of of online checkers from my cell phone, reading a book, or posting something at Data Report Info while loved one safely gets her surgery.
So far regardless of rules or mandates, whenever I walk into a hospital or doctor's office I simply say "We prefer you mask for us if that is alright" and they always do it so I guess I'm the boss. so that's what I'll do when I get to the hospital..I'll just call the shots as usual. They can object if they want. I'd like this to be professional and legit to make written arrangements and agreements prior to surgery about my preferences in regards to precautions in the hospital workplace but if that doesn't materialize we will just have to deal with it when we get there.
As I said in my YouTube statement to the surgeons's assistant:
"As caregiver all I do is focus on the wellbeing and what is best for the patient. The modern, commonly used version of the Hippocratic Oath includes the proactive commitment: "
I will prevent disease whenever I can, for prevention is preferable to cure" and so I agree to mask and take precautions and preventions around patient and will prompt or state my preferences freely to others in Healthcare settings to do use the mask as I am bound by oath to.
Also as concerned caretaker I took the Hippocratic oath...
"Given the age of the patient... the scientifically established medical facts that seniors have weaker immune systems due to a natural process called immunosenescence"... Given The demographic fact that hospitals often treat and bring incoming patients with airborne illnesses and airborne diseases, I have reason to believe my very patient/client/significant other who is a senior's very life would be compromised around maskless people at a hospital therefore, I Richard Easley/Masked man promise to follow and obey the Hippocratic Oath which includes the proactive commitment: "
I will prevent disease whenever I can, for prevention is preferable to cure" and so I agree to mask and take precautions and preventions around patient and will prompt or state my preferences freely to others in Healthcare settings to do use the mask as I am bound by oath to".
.