Dear Dr. Miranda Bailey, Chief of Surgery,
My name is Carrie Rogers and I was a patient at Grey Sloan Memorial Hospital. Last month, I was in a horrible car accident that gave me severe internal injuries. I was transported from the scene of the accident to your hospital's ER. What I experienced in your hospital disappointed me.
Upon entering your hospital, I was greeted by a group of interns and two of your doctors on staff. Dr. Altman was the doctor on my case and she and the other doctor were arguing about some man named Ciurasic and how that doctor didn't want this Courasic fellow to date Dr. Altman while she was carrying his baby. Their personal life was taking priority over my medical care. During my first examination, the intern admitted to me that he had dropped his glasses into an open body but since he had been seeing this doctor, his confidence improved. Since when is it okay for a superior to date an intern and then have the intern tell the patient about it? Why would I want a guy who had dropped their glasses into a body work on me?
My experience did not stop there. Before I went under for my operation to fix my internal injuries, I overheard my heart surgeon having a romantic moment with the plastic surgeon inside the hallway. This is a place of employment, not a real-life dating website. One of the residents was even complaining about her lovelife and how she used to live in a car. She must have mentioned it every two minutes.
Overall, Dr. Bailey, I am not impressed with my visit to your hospital. I felt that the doctors were unprofessional and seemed occupied with things other than my health. This was my last choice hospital considering you had mass shooting, a bomb, a large fire and a plane crash surrounding this very hospital. As the news depicted, this is the last place I would want to be if I were hurt and sick and my unexpected visit confirmed my apprehensions. I question how people walk out of here alive.
Thank you,
A concerned patient.
