Quote:
Originally Posted by seiko
So over the last few weeks I have learned that:
1. The MRI technician could have/should have responded to my distress call immediately.He should have stopped the scan right away instead he choose to finish the scan. In MRI time equals money. Each minute is about $20
I would hate the thought of someone being stuck in one of these machine unable to press the ball for help or suffering from a heart attack.
2. The technician should have checked me for contact burn afterwords. That never happened. (not even my neurologist bother to check me for contact burn, I saw her three days after this incident)
3. I talked to some people who know their MRI, and they do not think that my MRI was an open MRI even though this is what I signed up for.
Mine was tube like with openings at the sides.
So any suggestion where one would report problems  with safety and false advertising???
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I just had a thought...maybe the reason the technician did not check me for any burns was because he knew that what I was experiencing was due to too much radio frequency. That is certainly a possibility.Or... maybe finding a blister would mean the facility could not deny having problems.