Lol y'all are so dang nitpicky. That is a super common thing to say when people go through surgeries well with no complications.nineteenninety3 wrote: ↑Mon Jan 28, 2019 3:40 pm Did anyone else see Chris's post about she's out and "she did amazing" amazing at what, did she do the surgery on herself?!
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JesssFam: A House Of Grime and Amazon Prime (Part 123)
Re: JesssFam: A House Of Grime and Amazon Prime (Part 123)
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Re: JesssFam: A House Of Grime and Amazon Prime (Part 123)
I’m surprised they released her so damn soon.
I’ll admit, I know very little about outpatient procedures. I’ve also never had a surgery, but I’ve had friends and family and even with less invasive surgeries I’ve seen people not get released for at least 24 hours.
This seems like a pretty major procedure. It’s not like she got an organ transplant but with all of the potential complications, I definitely wouldn’t want to be in a hotel.
Also, how long will they be in the hotel? She’s going to have to make an hour drive back home at Some point. That won’t be fun at all!
I’ll admit, I know very little about outpatient procedures. I’ve also never had a surgery, but I’ve had friends and family and even with less invasive surgeries I’ve seen people not get released for at least 24 hours.
This seems like a pretty major procedure. It’s not like she got an organ transplant but with all of the potential complications, I definitely wouldn’t want to be in a hotel.
Also, how long will they be in the hotel? She’s going to have to make an hour drive back home at Some point. That won’t be fun at all!
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Re: JesssFam: A House Of Grime and Amazon Prime (Part 123)
Apparently the standards are not the same in the US.They don't have the ability or equipment to resusitate if someone stops breathing.All they can do is call 911.It can take several minutes for help to get there.Time that is crucial.Which is what happened to Joan Rivers.She went without oxygen for too long.honeybear wrote: ↑Mon Jan 28, 2019 6:25 pm what’s so bad about a surgery centre? this is a real question. i live in canada and these centres follow the exact same safety and sterilization procedures as a hospital does. and our hospitals are so crammed 24/7, people can barely get in for emergencies, let alone cosmetic procedures.
i thought surgery centres were pretty common...
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Not to even mention being sent home or to a hotel following major surg.
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Re: JesssFam: A House Of Grime and Amazon Prime (Part 123)
Apparently the standards are not the same in the US.They don't have the ability or equipment to resusitate if someone stops breathing.All they can do is call 911.It can take several minutes for help to get there.Time that is crucial.Which is what happened to Joan Rivers.She went without oxygen for too long.honeybear wrote: ↑Mon Jan 28, 2019 6:25 pm what’s so bad about a surgery centre? this is a real question. i live in canada and these centres follow the exact same safety and sterilization procedures as a hospital does. and our hospitals are so crammed 24/7, people can barely get in for emergencies, let alone cosmetic procedures.
i thought surgery centres were pretty common...
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Not to even mention being sent home or to a hotel following major surg.
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Re: JesssFam: A House Of Grime and Amazon Prime (Part 123)
That isn’t true at all?? Outpatient surgery centers are VERY common for an elective plastic surgery. They’re basically just small hospitals, fully equipped to handle a life or death situation during surgery.sondraK wrote:Apparently the standards are not the same in the US.They don't have the ability or equipment to resusitate if someone stops breathing.All they can do is call 911.It can take several minutes for help to get there.Time that is crucial.Which is what happened to Joan Rivers.She went without oxygen for too long.honeybear wrote: ↑Mon Jan 28, 2019 6:25 pm what’s so bad about a surgery centre? this is a real question. i live in canada and these centres follow the exact same safety and sterilization procedures as a hospital does. and our hospitals are so crammed 24/7, people can barely get in for emergencies, let alone cosmetic procedures.
i thought surgery centres were pretty common...
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Not to even mention being sent home or to a hotel following major surg.
Joan Rivers was probably at a medical spa, which isn’t safe at all and isn’t anything like an outpatient surgery center.
For plastic surgery, you wake up and recover for a while in a room (like a hospital) and when you’re fully awake and alert, the nurse helps you get dressed, pushes you to your car in a wheelchair, and that’s that. The surgeon will talk to whoever you brought with you and explain what to do once you’re home (or in a hotel). Hotels are common if you live far from the center. Being in the car after plastic surgery is brutal! You leave the surgery center still heavily medicated, and once home is when you begin taking pain meds, antibiotics and anti nausea meds.
So TL;DR: surgery centers are just miniature hospitals. Surgeons who work at hospitals, work at surgery centers as well.
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Re: JesssFam: A House Of Grime and Amazon Prime (Part 123)
Not true at all. In any type of anesthesia an Anaesthesiologist is present to monitor vitals and what notsondraK wrote: ↑Mon Jan 28, 2019 7:04 pmApparently the standards are not the same in the US.They don't have the ability or equipment to resusitate if someone stops breathing.All they can do is call 911.It can take several minutes for help to get there.Time that is crucial.Which is what happened to Joan Rivers.She went without oxygen for too long.honeybear wrote: ↑Mon Jan 28, 2019 6:25 pm what’s so bad about a surgery centre? this is a real question. i live in canada and these centres follow the exact same safety and sterilization procedures as a hospital does. and our hospitals are so crammed 24/7, people can barely get in for emergencies, let alone cosmetic procedures.
i thought surgery centres were pretty common...
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Not to even mention being sent home or to a hotel following major surg.
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Re: JesssFam: A House Of Grime and Amazon Prime (Part 123)
Plus she probably has to go back tomorrow to be checked and again in few days. I wouldn’t want to be sitting in a car for two hours every few days if it could be avoided. They’ll prob stay in the hotel for 3-4 days. I’ve also seen hotels attached to or recommended by the surgery center so the doctor is still very close. Don’t know if that’s the situation here but it could be if she spent the extra $$.cats-or-die wrote:That isn’t true at all?? Outpatient surgery centers are VERY common for an elective plastic surgery. They’re basically just small hospitals, fully equipped to handle a life or death situation during surgery.sondraK wrote:Apparently the standards are not the same in the US.They don't have the ability or equipment to resusitate if someone stops breathing.All they can do is call 911.It can take several minutes for help to get there.Time that is crucial.Which is what happened to Joan Rivers.She went without oxygen for too long.honeybear wrote: ↑Mon Jan 28, 2019 6:25 pm what’s so bad about a surgery centre? this is a real question. i live in canada and these centres follow the exact same safety and sterilization procedures as a hospital does. and our hospitals are so crammed 24/7, people can barely get in for emergencies, let alone cosmetic procedures.
i thought surgery centres were pretty common...
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Not to even mention being sent home or to a hotel following major surg.
Joan Rivers was probably at a medical spa, which isn’t safe at all and isn’t anything like an outpatient surgery center.
For plastic surgery, you wake up and recover for a while in a room (like a hospital) and when you’re fully awake and alert, the nurse helps you get dressed, pushes you to your car in a wheelchair, and that’s that. The surgeon will talk to whoever you brought with you and explain what to do once you’re home (or in a hotel). Hotels are common if you live far from the center. Being in the car after plastic surgery is brutal! You leave the surgery center still heavily medicated, and once home is when you begin taking pain meds, antibiotics and anti nausea meds.
So TL;DR: surgery centers are just miniature hospitals. Surgeons who work at hospitals, work at surgery centers as well.
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Re: JesssFam: A House Of Grime and Amazon Prime (Part 123)
I was expecting Jess to be in a hospital (didn't realise it was a day centre thing- I wouldn't call a tummy tuck/boob job/ muscle repair a 'day surgery') on IV pain relief and a clear fluid diet for at least a day or so and make sure she's healing properly etc before she's being released.
She's in for a rough recovery. It all feels incredibly rushed and like somethings a little 'off' about how fast this surgery has come around- considering her original plan was for summer time.
'She looks so little in that bed' said Jess about Addie in the bottom bunk- surely all the other kids had a bed of their own by that age! We know the twins were in their own cribs in a separate room by the time they were Brattys age.
Also- were they genuine proper spring mattresses for the girls bunks or squab type mattresses- cause they looked like squab mattresses
She's in for a rough recovery. It all feels incredibly rushed and like somethings a little 'off' about how fast this surgery has come around- considering her original plan was for summer time.
'She looks so little in that bed' said Jess about Addie in the bottom bunk- surely all the other kids had a bed of their own by that age! We know the twins were in their own cribs in a separate room by the time they were Brattys age.
Also- were they genuine proper spring mattresses for the girls bunks or squab type mattresses- cause they looked like squab mattresses
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Re: JesssFam: A House Of Grime and Amazon Prime (Part 123)
I have had 3 surgeries, and in pre-op, they let me have my glasses, because without them I can't see a thing. When they wheeled me out to go to the OR, they took my glasses from me and handed them and my bags to my family.sianny_threepac wrote: ↑Mon Jan 28, 2019 4:15 pm She's wearing glasses while getting the anaesthetic, and then still wearing them while in the hotel.
Sorry, but hospitals don't let you wear (glasses / jewellery / anything that will interfere) for a mouth swab let alone a major surgery.
Either she's faking having surgery or she had it done over the time Hawaii vlogs were uploaded
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Re: JesssFam: A House Of Grime and Amazon Prime (Part 123)
Nope,Joan was in a clinic,according to Wiki.I've never heard of a medical spa that does throat surg
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joan_Rivers
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joan_Rivers
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Re: JesssFam: A House Of Grime and Amazon Prime (Part 123)
Nope,Joan was in a clinic,according to Wiki.I've never heard of a medical spa that does throat surg
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joan_Rivers
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joan_Rivers
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Re: JesssFam: A House Of Grime and Amazon Prime (Part 123)
Even if they are fully equipped, why did they send her home on the SAME DAY? I had a laparoscopy a couple years ago, which was wayyyyy less invasive than what Jess had, and I spent 2 days at the hospital afterwards! They have to monitor you, and make sure the drainage is going well. It seems super dangerous letting her leave...cats-or-die wrote:That isn’t true at all?? Outpatient surgery centers are VERY common for an elective plastic surgery. They’re basically just small hospitals, fully equipped to handle a life or death situation during surgery.sondraK wrote:Apparently the standards are not the same in the US.They don't have the ability or equipment to resusitate if someone stops breathing.All they can do is call 911.It can take several minutes for help to get there.Time that is crucial.Which is what happened to Joan Rivers.She went without oxygen for too long.honeybear wrote: ↑Mon Jan 28, 2019 6:25 pm what’s so bad about a surgery centre? this is a real question. i live in canada and these centres follow the exact same safety and sterilization procedures as a hospital does. and our hospitals are so crammed 24/7, people can barely get in for emergencies, let alone cosmetic procedures.
i thought surgery centres were pretty common...
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Not to even mention being sent home or to a hotel following major surg.
Joan Rivers was probably at a medical spa, which isn’t safe at all and isn’t anything like an outpatient surgery center.
For plastic surgery, you wake up and recover for a while in a room (like a hospital) and when you’re fully awake and alert, the nurse helps you get dressed, pushes you to your car in a wheelchair, and that’s that. The surgeon will talk to whoever you brought with you and explain what to do once you’re home (or in a hotel). Hotels are common if you live far from the center. Being in the car after plastic surgery is brutal! You leave the surgery center still heavily medicated, and once home is when you begin taking pain meds, antibiotics and anti nausea meds.
So TL;DR: surgery centers are just miniature hospitals. Surgeons who work at hospitals, work at surgery centers as well.
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Re: JesssFam: A House Of Grime and Amazon Prime (Part 123)
Also, they gave me an oral pain killer after my surgery, and I threw that one up right away. So I don’t understand how Jess had actual food!
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Re: JesssFam: A House Of Grime and Amazon Prime (Part 123)
I’ve never heard of a laparoscopy that required two days at the hospital for monitoring. It’s typically an outpatient surgery.....sometimes performed at surgery centers. So maybe there were other risks involved with yours? A laparoscopy is used to detect things that could be wrong in your abdomen, so....they could have kept you for numerous reasons.countrygirl wrote:Even if they are fully equipped, why did they send her home on the SAME DAY? I had a laparoscopy a couple years ago, which was wayyyyy less invasive than what Jess had, and I spent 2 days at the hospital afterwards! They have to monitor you, and make sure the drainage is going well. It seems super dangerous letting her leave...cats-or-die wrote:That isn’t true at all?? Outpatient surgery centers are VERY common for an elective plastic surgery. They’re basically just small hospitals, fully equipped to handle a life or death situation during surgery.sondraK wrote:Apparently the standards are not the same in the US.They don't have the ability or equipment to resusitate if someone stops breathing.All they can do is call 911.It can take several minutes for help to get there.Time that is crucial.Which is what happened to Joan Rivers.She went without oxygen for too long.
Not to even mention being sent home or to a hotel following major surg.
Joan Rivers was probably at a medical spa, which isn’t safe at all and isn’t anything like an outpatient surgery center.
For plastic surgery, you wake up and recover for a while in a room (like a hospital) and when you’re fully awake and alert, the nurse helps you get dressed, pushes you to your car in a wheelchair, and that’s that. The surgeon will talk to whoever you brought with you and explain what to do once you’re home (or in a hotel). Hotels are common if you live far from the center. Being in the car after plastic surgery is brutal! You leave the surgery center still heavily medicated, and once home is when you begin taking pain meds, antibiotics and anti nausea meds.
So TL;DR: surgery centers are just miniature hospitals. Surgeons who work at hospitals, work at surgery centers as well.
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A tummy tuck and boob job doesn’t really require monitoring. Just go home and follow directions. Easy.
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Re: JesssFam: A House Of Grime and Amazon Prime (Part 123)
Maybe it’s an American thing. I’m in Germany, and the only outpatient surgeries I’ve heard of are wisdom teeth pulling (without anesthesia). All other surgeries are in a hospital with a minimum of a one night stay.cats-or-die wrote:I’ve never heard of a laparoscopy that required two days at the hospital for monitoring. It’s typically an outpatient surgery.....sometimes performed at surgery centers. So maybe there were other risks involved with yours? A laparoscopy is used to detect things that could be wrong in your abdomen, so....they could have kept you for numerous reasons.countrygirl wrote:Even if they are fully equipped, why did they send her home on the SAME DAY? I had a laparoscopy a couple years ago, which was wayyyyy less invasive than what Jess had, and I spent 2 days at the hospital afterwards! They have to monitor you, and make sure the drainage is going well. It seems super dangerous letting her leave...cats-or-die wrote: That isn’t true at all?? Outpatient surgery centers are VERY common for an elective plastic surgery. They’re basically just small hospitals, fully equipped to handle a life or death situation during surgery.
Joan Rivers was probably at a medical spa, which isn’t safe at all and isn’t anything like an outpatient surgery center.
For plastic surgery, you wake up and recover for a while in a room (like a hospital) and when you’re fully awake and alert, the nurse helps you get dressed, pushes you to your car in a wheelchair, and that’s that. The surgeon will talk to whoever you brought with you and explain what to do once you’re home (or in a hotel). Hotels are common if you live far from the center. Being in the car after plastic surgery is brutal! You leave the surgery center still heavily medicated, and once home is when you begin taking pain meds, antibiotics and anti nausea meds.
So TL;DR: surgery centers are just miniature hospitals. Surgeons who work at hospitals, work at surgery centers as well.
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A tummy tuck and boob job doesn’t really require monitoring. Just go home and follow directions. Easy.
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Re: JesssFam: A House Of Grime and Amazon Prime (Part 123)
It really all depends. Her surgery was 4 hours? That's considered day surgery here and as long as you're doing okay after you're wheeled to the recovery area. (Where there's like 20 other people) you get discharged to go home.Dallas_Snob wrote:I’m surprised they released her so damn soon.
I’ll admit, I know very little about outpatient procedures. I’ve also never had a surgery, but I’ve had friends and family and even with less invasive surgeries I’ve seen people not get released for at least 24 hours.
This seems like a pretty major procedure. It’s not like she got an organ transplant but with all of the potential complications, I definitely wouldn’t want to be in a hotel.
Also, how long will they be in the hotel? She’s going to have to make an hour drive back home at Some point. That won’t be fun at all!
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Re: JesssFam: A House Of Grime and Amazon Prime (Part 123)
Crazy how these small procedures some of you stayed in the hospital so long. I had a great reduction and was gone within the hour of walking up in the recovery. Lol
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Re: JesssFam: A House Of Grime and Amazon Prime (Part 123)
Crazy how these small procedures some of you stayed in the hospital so long. I had a breast reduction and was gone within the hour of walking up in the recovery. Lol
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Re: JesssFam: A House Of Grime and Amazon Prime (Part 123)
I know plenty of people that’s had cosmetic surgery & they all leave within 3 hrs after surgery.
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Re: JesssFam: A House Of Grime and Amazon Prime (Part 123)
countrygirl wrote:Even if they are fully equipped, why did they send her home on the SAME DAY? I had a laparoscopy a couple years ago, which was wayyyyy less invasive than what Jess had, and I spent 2 days at the hospital afterwards! They have to monitor you, and make sure the drainage is going well. It seems super dangerous letting her leave...cats-or-die wrote:That isn’t true at all?? Outpatient surgery centers are VERY common for an elective plastic surgery. They’re basically just small hospitals, fully equipped to handle a life or death situation during surgery.sondraK wrote:Apparently the standards are not the same in the US.They don't have the ability or equipment to resusitate if someone stops breathing.All they can do is call 911.It can take several minutes for help to get there.Time that is crucial.Which is what happened to Joan Rivers.She went without oxygen for too long.
Not to even mention being sent home or to a hotel following major surg.
Joan Rivers was probably at a medical spa, which isn’t safe at all and isn’t anything like an outpatient surgery center.
For plastic surgery, you wake up and recover for a while in a room (like a hospital) and when you’re fully awake and alert, the nurse helps you get dressed, pushes you to your car in a wheelchair, and that’s that. The surgeon will talk to whoever you brought with you and explain what to do once you’re home (or in a hotel). Hotels are common if you live far from the center. Being in the car after plastic surgery is brutal! You leave the surgery center still heavily medicated, and once home is when you begin taking pain meds, antibiotics and anti nausea meds.
So TL;DR: surgery centers are just miniature hospitals. Surgeons who work at hospitals, work at surgery centers as well.
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All of my surgeries (mainly keyhole) have all resulted in a night to three nights in hospital afterwards, no where near as invasive as what she had done. I cant fathom being sent “home” to a hotel, if she lived locally she’d have gone home to her bed, kids and chores. The hospital stay isnt only important for recovery but it helps set up expectations for pain meds, meals and actually ensuring the patient is getting enough rest. Not to mention OT and PT afterwards.
The walking frame she got is bloody ridiculous, hospitals here don’t even have them anymore, they have the high walkers instead, so your not slouched over a walker with poor posture.
Like this thing:
[IMG]//uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/201901 ... 7050d3.jpg[/IMG]