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Joined 3 years ago
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Cake day: June 20th, 2023

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  • I’m fairly certain there’s a consent specifically for use of AI at patient checkin, but I doubt the front desk staff are trained on people refusing that consent and will likely tell you that you have to sign it to be treated which I’m almost positive is not true, and may even be illegal.

    An online medical service I used a while back had a consent for AI charting mixed in with the various other consent to treat paperwork, and I did have the option to decline it (and did so). During the visit, the provider once again pestered me about using AI, and I declined. They were irritated by this, because they used it to document the visit automatically, and didn’t want to have to do it themselves, but I wasn’t denied care because of it.





  • The Serpent and the Rainbow (1988): takes place mainly in Haiti, where an american anthropologist is attempting to study rumors of zombie resurrection only to find himself caught between the combination of the Tonton Macoute and Voodoo occultism

    Salem’s Lot (1979): The original miniseries (2 parts iirc) This one has one of my all time favorite Nosferatu style vampires, along with Richard Straker, a very proper and suspicious antiques dealer played by James Mason

    Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 (1986): Silly as it may seem to recommend a sequel like this, Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 is pretty wild and introduces Chop-Top played by Bill Moseley who is simultaneously disturbing and hilarious, always in a horror-y way.

    These are probably like a 5-7 out of 10 for scariness, but are some of my personal favorite horror movies, one more recommendation which I’d give a somewhat higher scare value, but isn’t in that era is

    Frankenstein’s Army (2013): Neat storyline, and some really cool practical effects. (Not army of frankensteins which is another film entirely from 2014)




  • Because everyone thinks they’re just going to either explain what happened and it’ll all be fine (it won’t), or they think they can just weave a great big lie and the cops will buy it (they won’t). Don’t talk to the police without an attourney. If you’re in that chair, it’s because they want to implicate you in some way, regardless of right or wrong. While they might throw a fit about it, refusing to speak without an attourney present is your right and is in no way an admission of guilt.