I
Idkwhattopick
Member
- Aug 29, 2024
- 87
I'm trying to find out how reliable my plan b is. I have plan a for my ctb which is more imminent, but if for whatever reason it doesn't happen, I have plan b which is I guess in progress but slowly.
I don't really feel comfortable going into detail on the thread (maybe pm idk) but I consistently lose a lot of blood. Like 70-150ml a day.
Just over a month ago I was admitted to hospital against my will where I was tested and told my hemoglobin was 63, and I was forced to have 2 bags of blood as a transfusion (I think it was about 600ml total) and an iron transfusion. They said it could have killed me.
I kinda don't believe them when they said how bad it was cos I felt like they were trying to pressure me into consenting to treatment. So I'm asking anyone with medical knowledge please, when does hemoglobin levels become so low you can die, and what would that process look like?
The blood loss has continued since then, I've lost about 2.2l since, but I haven't had any further testing to know what my levels are and I don't take the prescribed iron tablets
Thank youu:)
I don't really feel comfortable going into detail on the thread (maybe pm idk) but I consistently lose a lot of blood. Like 70-150ml a day.
Just over a month ago I was admitted to hospital against my will where I was tested and told my hemoglobin was 63, and I was forced to have 2 bags of blood as a transfusion (I think it was about 600ml total) and an iron transfusion. They said it could have killed me.
I kinda don't believe them when they said how bad it was cos I felt like they were trying to pressure me into consenting to treatment. So I'm asking anyone with medical knowledge please, when does hemoglobin levels become so low you can die, and what would that process look like?
The blood loss has continued since then, I've lost about 2.2l since, but I haven't had any further testing to know what my levels are and I don't take the prescribed iron tablets
Thank youu:)