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. Of course, we all know that Prince's cause of death was FENTANYL TOXICITY. . I am assuming you are a doctor ( I know I should not assume), because you are defending both doctors and Andrew's behavior. I understand you work in the medical field, but we can sit here until the cow's come home and keep painting different scenario's of what happened to Prince in the days leading up to his untimely death, and we end up back at square one again! . Like I said many times before, the help came too late. I guess it's no one's fault. No one is to blame. Thank you Howard Jones!
"With love, honor, and respect for every living thing in the universe, separation ceases, and we all become one being, singing one song." - Prince Roger Nelson (1958-2016) | |
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. Great! We both agree on one thing at least. Dr. K and Andrew should be held accountable for transporting controlled substances without a license across state lines! Thank You! . Well, it was Andrew who made the 911 call, so he has indemnity with regard to the pills in his backpack and what/who they were intended for. . Your last paragraph. I would agree with you, IF Prince's team and both doctor's hadn't already agreed to and move foward with their plans for an intervention/treatment for Prince. Their plan was already in action before Prince died. I feel all 3 of them are to blame because when you are offering treatment and you are dealing with a life and death situation, you act on it immediately -- not 24 Hours later. . We keep butting heads on that part. .
[Edited 4/25/17 15:22pm] "With love, honor, and respect for every living thing in the universe, separation ceases, and we all become one being, singing one song." - Prince Roger Nelson (1958-2016) | |
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. It's fine.
"With love, honor, and respect for every living thing in the universe, separation ceases, and we all become one being, singing one song." - Prince Roger Nelson (1958-2016) | |
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Welcome to "the org", Mumio…they can have you, but I'll have your love in the end | |
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MMJas said:
Yes he could. But that would also mean too much exposure. Remember, he was a loved community member. Word would get out. Unfortunately, I'm pretty certain Prince would have wanted his rehabilitation to remain as private as his addiction. An out of town doctor would allow for more privacy, perhaps. But yet Prince went to Dr S and also walked himself into Walgreens to pick up a prescription. That does not seem like he was worried about being exposed. As stated by ISLIJAG earlier the Dr in Cali is an out patient Dr he was not going in anywhere...although that makes no sense as how is an outpatient Dr in Cali going to treat a Minnesota patient. That Dr should have referred him to a local outpatient Dr. Minnesota is more discrete than Cali and the reason Prince said he lived there | |
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cloveringold85 said:
. Regarding the neck and hand swabs; I don't know what to think about that one. It does seem rather odd that they would do that, without good reason.
And have it with Andrews warrant not the first one which had some of Kirk mentioned or Dr S warrant. | |
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Oh, I misread that. I thought it was Andrew's hands and neck ( I figured people touch their neck often if nervous) so by swabbing Andrew's hands they could determine that he did or did not touch any meds that morning. . It was P's neck and hands swabbed on Andrew's warrant? | |
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MMJas said:
Yes he could. But that would also mean too much exposure. Remember, he was a loved community member. Word would get out. Unfortunately, I'm pretty certain Prince would have wanted his rehabilitation to remain as private as his addiction. An out of town doctor would allow for more privacy, perhaps. I agree. I think it was the issue of privacy. [Edited 4/25/17 16:34pm] | |
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I understand that people are tormented about the last hours of Prince's life out of their own grief and pain. But at some point, even the most grief-stricken will have to accept that there are things about those last hours and days that will not be known in our lifetimes.
What we DO know, and can reflect upon, is that Prince , throughout his life, was unreachable by others with good advice, a different perspective, tough love, during critical junctures in his life and career. I reference the never-ending WB thing which grossly interrupted the flow of his music to the wider world during his productive apex, the JW immersion, the gut-wrenching aftermath of the loss of his son and marriage when many believed he was unable to process his grief in a healing way, his loneliness, his physical and emotional pain.
There is no one to blame. It should come as no shock to anyone who followed him for 30 years that he was emotionally and mentally unreachable, stubborn, not aware of his own reality (pain + pills and pills and pills=death) isolated, surrounded by hangers-on, many of whom did not have his best interests at heart. This is why he died too soon. The last pill was the smallest part of it. Prince died the way he lived. Alone.
This is the time to be thankful for his precious life and the gifts he shared with us...and dance on. | |
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cloveringold85 said:
. I just think it is ridiculous to have that kind of mind set regarding Prince worrying about his treatment getting out to the public, when his LIFE was at stake! . I know a person has to be willing to seek help and get treatment, however, when his associates and both Dr. K and Dr. S considered Prince to be having a serious medial issue and/or emergency, and did not react immediately, that is where I have a problem. . If someone overdoses, you don't just stand around and wait for it happen again.
I understand where you are coming from. However, unless one has been proven to not be of sound mind, or an immediate threat to oneself (meaning one has to legally obtain medical power of attorney, etc.) there is NOTHING anyone can do to force someone into the hospital, rehab, any of it. Yes, one can call 911, doctors, therapists, but the bottom line is if the person refuses treatment no one can force them. You could physically tackle and drive that person Into rehab/hospital and within minutes that person can walk right out the door on their own accord. Sadly. | |
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PennyPurple said:
I actually think that the 1/4 & 1/2 pills are because he needed more, not less. Agree. "Remember when you told me that love was touching souls?" ☔️ A Case of You ☔️ | |
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PurpleDiamonds1 said: Mumio said:
[Edited 4/24/17 19:08pm] Phaedra has conflicting dates with when she worked with Prince. She has been caught lying, and had settled out of court recently with the Estate. She was one of three people with Prince at the WB meeting to get his masters back And some questioned if she may have been Ps POA. About that.....POA because with dependence and withdrawals he had not been in a state of mind to make rational decisions? And, that being said, if she had POA, she would be in a position to make medical decisions. "Remember when you told me that love was touching souls?" ☔️ A Case of You ☔️ | |
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. ^^^^
"With love, honor, and respect for every living thing in the universe, separation ceases, and we all become one being, singing one song." - Prince Roger Nelson (1958-2016) | |
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No, POA probably wouldn’t be applicable here. When you give someone POA it can be for a specific project or specific amount of time. I doubt P gave POA to anyone for everything. I gave my attorney POA when I sold my first house because I didn’t want to be at the closing. He signed all the documents at the closing for me but definitely could not make any other decisions and certainly not health decisions. | |
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. Thanks, you summed it up perfectly.
"With love, honor, and respect for every living thing in the universe, separation ceases, and we all become one being, singing one song." - Prince Roger Nelson (1958-2016) | |
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You know, some people here have a bad habit of disregarding other's who clearly know what they are talking about because they don't like what they are being told or they don't agree with it.
That said: Benni and I don't see eye to eye on certain things, however she is SPOT ON with what she is saying in regard to medical procedures, medical policies, HIPAA, and patient rights. It doesn't matter in the slightest that someone doesn't like what she is saying, she is speaking with authority on these matters because she knows that this is how it is in the medical world. So while you can disagree regarding an opinion, she is not giving opinions when she has expressed what the protocol is regarding the above. So please stop making yourselves look silly by continuing to argue about things that are pretty much set in stone throughout the healthcare industry. She is correct with what she is telling us here. [Edited 4/25/17 16:54pm] Welcome to "the org", Mumio…they can have you, but I'll have your love in the end | |
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. Your first paragraph: You are right. . Second paragraph: I agree and feel the same way you do. I also think that Prince had a dependency, not an "addiction". He was seeking relief from his pain. Not doing it to get high. . Third paragraph: I'm not so sure about his team who left him alone, because they obviously knew that things were not "right" and they were concerned enough to contact/set-up intervention with Dr. K. . Lastly, I suppose you are right -- they did not see Prince as having a life or death emergency, but yet they were concerned enough to call a doctor in CA. . Ultimately, it was the Fentanyl that took his life.
"With love, honor, and respect for every living thing in the universe, separation ceases, and we all become one being, singing one song." - Prince Roger Nelson (1958-2016) | |
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. You are right. . It's a very unfortunate situation and such a tragedy that could have all been avoided.
"With love, honor, and respect for every living thing in the universe, separation ceases, and we all become one being, singing one song." - Prince Roger Nelson (1958-2016) | |
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cloveringold85 said:
. You are right. . It's a very unfortunate situation and such a tragedy that could have all been avoided.
Heartbreaking | |
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And for those that may not understand the difference between addiction and dependency: Addiction can occur without physical dependence; consider cocaine or methamphetamine both have little outwardly apparent withdrawal syndrome but addiction to either can devastate lives. Non-substance addictions such as gambling, sex or internet also have no physical dependence. What is common to all these addictions is the unnatural cravings that prompt the compulsive behaviors. Physical dependence can occur without addiction; this is the common experience of most chronic pain patients who are able to take their opioid medication as prescribed for pain but don't develop the uncontrollable compulsion and loss of control. A desire to avoid withdrawal is not addiction. Addiction and Dependence ...rien, M.D.
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benni said:
They said he was in a grave medical emergency before he took the damn pill. You can discount that to fit your theory, but that is not the information that has been given | |
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Mumio said: You know, some people here have a bad habit of disregarding other's who clearly know what they are talking about because they don't like what they are being told or they don't agree with it.
That said: Benni and I don't see eye to eye on certain things, however she is SPOT ON with what she is saying in regard to medical procedures, medical policies, HIPAA, and patient rights. It doesn't matter in the slightest that someone doesn't like what she is saying, she is speaking with authority on these matters because she knows that this is how it is in the medical world. So while you can disagree regarding an opinion, she is not giving opinions when she has expressed what the protocol is regarding the above. So please stop making yourselves look silly by continuing to argue about things that are pretty much set in stone throughout the healthcare industry. She is correct with what she is telling us here. [Edited 4/25/17 16:54pm] Back at ya | |
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cloveringold85 said:
. Regarding the neck and hand swabs; I don't know what to think about hat they would do that, without good reason.
When someone goes in cardiac arrest, I think foam starts coming out your mouth eventually. I asked Prince what he was planning to do. He told me , I'm going to look for the ladder. I asked him what that meant. All he said was, sometimes it snows in April. - book D.M.S.R. | |
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benni said:[quote]
Well everything is just what people said. I would assume that dr k's attorney was speaking on his behalf, and they had discussed what would be said in advance. Or dr k's attorney made that up and dr k just went along with it? | |
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