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July 24th, 2024

The Doctor Who Dismissed Kim vs. the Doctor Who Saved Her Life

  1. The Doctor Who Dismissed Kim vs. the Doctor Who Saved Her Life Christine Meyer 41:33

11 years ago, Kim woke up with a headache that refused to go away. After five days of suffering, she went to her primary care doctor and was diagnosed with adult-onset migraines.

But four months and 23 medications later, she was admitted to the hospital for pain control. None of the treatments had worked.

That’s when the hospital neurologist accused Kim of faking her symptoms to get attention. And Kim started to wonder if she was losing her mind.

On this episode of Tell Me More, Kim joins me to discuss the physical symptoms she experienced in the four months leading up to her hospitalization and describe how the chronic pain led to suicidal ideations. 

She walks us through the long list of specialists she saw and treatments she tried before a neurosurgeon asked the right questions and discovered her displaced cervical spine.

Listen in to understand what the neurosurgeon who saved Kim did differently from the neurologist who dismissed her and learn how to confront a doctor who does you wrong in a way that makes them better.

Key Takeaways

How Kim was initially diagnosed with adult-onset migraines (yet medication didn’t help)

The symptoms of dizziness, lightheadedness and nausea Kim suffered in addition to her headache

Kim’s experience of trying 23 different medications and countless treatments with no relief

How Kim’s chronic pain and dizziness led to suicidal ideations

Kim’s reaction to the hospital neurologist who accused her of faking symptoms for attention

The neurosurgeon who discovered Kim’s displaced cervical spine and resolved her pain

Kim’s post-op confrontation with the neurologist who dismissed her

Why a good physician will not be offended if you advocate for yourself and ask for a second opinion

Kim’s advice to PCPs on creating a team of colleagues to support patients who aren’t doing well

What the neurosurgeon who saved Kim did differently than the other doctors she’d seen

Connect with Dr. Meyer

Dr. Meyer’s Website

Dr. Meyer on Facebook

Dr. Meyer on Twitter

Dr. Meyer on LinkedIn

Email christine@christinemeyermd.com

Christine Meyer Internal Medicine Doctor

I am an internal medicine doctor with 20-plus years of experience. 19 years ago, I started my practice. Since then, it has grown to 20 clinicians and is the region's largest privately owned primary care practice. I am passionate about preserving the private medical practice and improving doctor-patient communication. My podcast hosts doctors and patients alike in the hopes of bridging the gap between them.

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