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@cherig92

First of all it is difficult to hear there is more anxiety created by a sufferering patient with not much knowledge of understanding of what is going on. A trusted caregiver and conversation needs to be established to address one issue at a gimme to address your complaint, treat it , know what is wrong get you to your doc , connect in confidence, get hood support, no confidenc or mistakes; you need to get better. Get the right tests , doc get results , get along make sure it does not happen ; get a nice whole pic with no problems . Glad you shouted for help and know people care and maybe you need the right connection one step and a time. None the less, you hang in there (. Docs are good people. Boundaries are tuff do the part but trust is key and initial conversation

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Replies to "First of all it is difficult to hear there is more anxiety created by a sufferering..."

Thanks. I wrote the post as I was unpacking the experience under incredible distress. I am going to edit it and replace it with a simple summary.
Betrayal of trust is traumatic. No one expects it in the medical profession. I certainly didn't.
I have a new treatment team+ am getting good recovery. I had core problems identified + treatment is going well. I have yet to address the Dr in a response to be incorporated into my medical records, but I will in the near future.
What you described is the exact process a functional provider should follow. This man was not a functional provider. Not interpersonally and not fully medically. But he was board certified and looked presentable enough. I still don't have trust rebuilt right now- but I am wiser for this. I'm planning on creating policies + perhaps getting legislation for patients rights and advocacy in my state. I've taken steps in that direction.
Thanks for responding. Hope all your medical care goes well.