Navalny is given injections in the colony, without reporting the diagnosis

Alexei Navalny, who is experiencing severe back pain, cannot find out his diagnosis: the doctor does not answer his questions, and the data in the medical record, the printout of which he was given, cannot be parsed. As a result, Navalny said that he would have to sue for the right to "read something in his own medical record."

According to Navalny, the back problem worsened due to the constant stay in the ShIZO cell, where for 16 hours a day you either have to sit on an iron stool or stand. Only a month and a half after he complained of health problems, a doctor came to him, who did not give his last name, did not say the diagnosis and did not say what treatment he prescribed. After her visit, Navalny began to receive injections:

“After a while, some injections begin to prick. “What are you pricking?” I ask. “What the doctor ordered. B vitamins, for example. Vitamins are great, but injections do not help, and in general you feel a little uncomfortable when you are injected with an unknown drug.

Navalny tried to get him informed of the diagnosis and treatment regimen, but the administration left all these questions unanswered. Having found out that he has the right to receive a copy of the medical record, Navalny wrote a corresponding application. As a result, the politician received a copy, but it is almost impossible to make out anything on it:

“And you also laughed at the fact that I get winter boots through the court. Now I will sue for the right to read something in my own medical record. I am waiting for the moment when they will start bringing gruel to the cell only after a complaint to the court. That is OK. I am a lawyer and love the courts, only the lawyers are a little tired,” Navalny writes.

Exit mobile version