Surgery went catastrophically wrong!

Started by nverbe, February 23, 2015, 02:35:26 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

Darth Fool

The medicine, presumably, is as much to preserve the organs as to protect the patient.

MrSurvivor

I dropped the liver.
*picks back up*
Hopefully no one notices *puts in person*
Person dies of infection due to lots of rocks

cultist

Quote from: JimmyAgnt007 on February 24, 2015, 10:32:06 AM
id also like the option to skip the use of medicine on a patient.  say im just harvesting organs.  just give me the organs and stop wasting painkillers, im yanking out his heart next.  maybe a full body harvest bill that removes all organs.  i did some math, you generally get more money selling people as slaves than from all the organs they have.  so it wouldnt be too much and unbalanced.  i do enjoy taking a few organs before selling as slaves tho
I'd like to see you try and remove an organ (without damaging it) from a fully conscious person.
Actually no, I probably wouldn't. :p

Mikhail Reign

#18
Quote from: cultist on February 25, 2015, 12:43:04 PM
Quote from: JimmyAgnt007 on February 24, 2015, 10:32:06 AM
id also like the option to skip the use of medicine on a patient.  say im just harvesting organs.  just give me the organs and stop wasting painkillers, im yanking out his heart next.  maybe a full body harvest bill that removes all organs.  i did some math, you generally get more money selling people as slaves than from all the organs they have.  so it wouldnt be too much and unbalanced.  i do enjoy taking a few organs before selling as slaves tho
I'd like to see you try and remove an organ (without damaging it) from a fully conscious person.
Actually no, I probably wouldn't. :p

It's called a vivisection. Look up Unit 731. They use to do it all the time.... And then try and sew it to the otherwise of your body, before trying to replace your blood with horse piss.... Given that a decent percentage of colony's are run worst then  Auzwitch already don't see why I can't have the option to try.

Also had a nice surgery  accident today. After one of my colonists had his arm burnt off I had it scheduled to have a bionic arm installed. While panning around I notixed his gun on the hospital floor. A quick inspection seen that not only had the doctor installed the arm he had removed his other hand, nicked his heart and kidney bad enough to be life threading as well as some mid level damage to his arm. That's kinda all over the shop - what did the oxygen bottles explode or something?

Ink.

I really like this feature.

Last night, I had an epic battle with some siegers. We took one casualty in the engagement itself but the real damage was done after the battle. Limited on beds I had to turn the hospital beds in my prison for colony use (we had no prisoners so it was fine). Also, some of my doctors were injured and unable to do work so we had to have less experienced doctors work.

3 people died of blood loss, including one of my founding members.

But the last guy, the 5th guy died in surgery. Apparently he got a few surgical cuts, 3 to his torso, and died when I was giving him a prosthetic arm to replace the one he lost in battle. Was a good guy too.

Low leveled doctors = the worst lmao

Coenmcj

I think that practice someone mentioned a while ago about practicing medicine on psychotic prisoners (Or one's shot by pistols/beat to an Centimetre of their life...) is a lot more needed now. To ensure your valued comrades are no longer at the hands of a magical surgeon
Moderator on discord.gg/rimworld come join us! We don't bite

Eleazar

I had one of my best guys go under the knife to replace a blow-off jaw.

Somehow the doctor mangled a kidney, and removed a liver (or the other way around).  Needless to say the patient didn't survive.  This was my second best doctor, skill around 10 IIRC.

Justin C

In the last game I played I tried to install 3 different bionic parts throughout the game, and all three times ended in catastrophic failure that killed the colonist.

GhotiFish

I had a jaw replacement that ended up with a patient with surgical cuts in his brain, torso, spine, and left femur.