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Post by waterslide on Apr 28, 2022 1:27:38 GMT
So the x ray...if you look, you can see a break in the very first bone of the finger nearest the tip. Is this an xray after tip reattachment (or the beginning of reattaching it, I don't know the process) and the thing on it is some sort of bandage? That's what it looks like to me, that it was severed where the broken bone part appears to be, stuck back on, bandaged and x rayed. Still with his stupid rings on, of course. Well, that's the thing. He wasn't wearing his rings in the bloody photo (which I was trying not to post in case people don't want to see the gore). I don't know if that was taken before he left the house, though. I thought maybe they couldn't get the rings off because his hands and fingers were swollen, but they're missing in the rest of the hospital pics. I think. I think the part that appears broken is the distal phalanx (don't ask me how I know/it was google). However, if you look really closely, you can see his fingernails slightly past the tip of that bone. Above that is a sort of halo/shadow effect with another inexplicable part. The middle finger is an inch or two longer than it should be and extends way too far past the healthy fingers. Also...I didn't know I was going to fall down a rabbit hole and rededicate my life to figuring out what happened to Johnny's finger (yet here we are), but I did see an article that states that he didn't seek medical attention for a day so he couldn't have the tip reattached. I thought that audio recording was from right after the incident, but it was allegedly the next day that the doctor and nurse came in, hence the search for the finger tip. He since had surgeries to reconstruct the finger as well as MRSA a number of times, according to him. Nobody in this situation is dealing with a full deck. Who waits a day to get help when they have access to it?
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Post by eatsleepbeer on Apr 28, 2022 1:49:56 GMT
So the x ray...if you look, you can see a break in the very first bone of the finger nearest the tip. Is this an xray after tip reattachment (or the beginning of reattaching it, I don't know the process) and the thing on it is some sort of bandage? That's what it looks like to me, that it was severed where the broken bone part appears to be, stuck back on, bandaged and x rayed. Still with his stupid rings on, of course. Well, that's the thing. He wasn't wearing his rings in the bloody photo (which I was trying not to post in case people don't want to see the gore). I don't know if that was taken before he left the house, though. I thought maybe they couldn't get the rings off because his hands and fingers were swollen, but they're missing in the rest of the hospital pics. I think. I think the part that appears broken is the distal phalanx (don't ask me how I know/it was google). However, if you look really closely, you can see his fingernails slightly past the tip of that bone. Above that is a sort of halo/shadow effect with another inexplicable part. The middle finger is an inch or two longer than it should be and extends way too far past the healthy fingers. Also...I didn't know I was going to fall down a rabbit hole and rededicate my life to figuring out what happened to Johnny's finger (yet here we are), but I did see an article that states that he didn't seek medical attention for a day so he couldn't have the tip reattached. I thought that audio recording was from right after the incident, but it was allegedly the next day that the doctor and nurse came in, hence the search for the finger tip. He since had surgeries to reconstruct the finger as well as MRSA a number of times, according to him. Nobody in this situation is dealing with a full deck. Who waits a day to get help when they have access to it? Huh. You're right, I took a look at the hospital photo🤮 , no rings! that blows my theory. Unless someone decided first to try to slap it together with a bandage while he still had his rings on, and then the hospital folks were eventually like yeah...that ain't gonna work, take that shit off and the stupid rings too while you're at it 🤣😂 I just can't come up with any other explanation for the weird halo and finger length besides a bandage. I never thought I'd think so much about Johnny depp's finger, but here we are.
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Post by charmedhour on Apr 28, 2022 2:01:28 GMT
Board certification isn’t really a “big deal”, around only 4% of clinical psychologists in the US are. It also just means you have taken written comprehensives in your speciality area. MDs aren’t necessarily board certified in their realms, either. She can work privately, as she did in this case or work for the courts at their ask.
Dr. Curry is a clinical and forensic psychologist. That means that she works within the legal system- providing assessments and evaluations for legal proceedings for either side.
Sp, Dr. Curry did 12 hours of face time with Amber and had access to other medical and therapeutic information along with administering the MMPI. That’s a pretty solid clinical picture presented to her as far as not being Amber’s psychologist.
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Post by czb on Apr 28, 2022 2:09:05 GMT
i don't know about psychs. MDs can still treat patients if they aren't boarded, but i personally would not want to be treated by one. lack of board certification can be a real red flag.
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Post by charmedhour on Apr 28, 2022 2:25:46 GMT
i don't know about psychs. MDs can still treat patients if they aren't boarded, but i personally would not want to be treated by one. lack of board certification can be a real red flag. I like board certified MDs, as it’s the norm for them and I side eyes those that aren’t. But the field of psychology is different. It’s not common to be board certified. Board Certification requires a PhD or Psyd, and in many states psychologists can be licensed to practice at the masters level. So there’s that. Personally, I have a psych masters and no interest in pursuing a PhD/psyd because I don’t intend to practice and my state limits licensure to the doctoral level.
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Post by czb on Apr 28, 2022 2:31:45 GMT
again, not commenting on psychs, i don't have enough info to judge. but i stand by what i said for MDs who are treating patients. not talking the 70 year old retired internist who is now doing screening exams for patients before surgery, different story with those types.
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Post by charmedhour on Apr 28, 2022 2:44:42 GMT
again, not commenting on psychs, i don't have enough info to judge. but i stand by what i said for MDs who are treating patients. not talking the 70 year old retired internist who is now doing screening exams for patients before surgery, different story with those types. I agree, board certified MDs are my thing as well. Working in medical education- medicine truly is a daily life long learner field. My one boss, an internist, does about 100 continuing medical education credits per year, well above the required 40 for board certification. Is a lot of work on her end but she is on the ball with the ever changing treatments, meds, etc.
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Post by lalasnake on Apr 28, 2022 4:03:58 GMT
I’ve not followed along closely to this but re: the psychologist’s testimony. I don’t know what her credentials are but… The question regarding the MMPI is relatively valid imo. There are several versions and the one commonly used is the MMPI-2, especially in criminal and child custody cases. The original MMPI was found to have reliability and variability issues due to self-reporting. The original questionnaire was developed with the help of people with diagnosed disorders and the questions were pretty transparent. It was easy to “fool” the test basically. It was revised several times after its inception to the current MMPI-2 in the late 80s and while the most common testing assessment tool, it should not be the only tool for a diagnosis. Also, the psychologist/psychiatrist administering the test needs specific training in its use and interpretation of the collected data. It’s over 500 questions and hand scoring is out of fashion so to speak. It should be administered on and scored by computer. I have no knowledge of this area but the dr isn't “board certified” and I was intrigued by the “muffin” comment & (if you didn’t see it) the dr laughs off the question that she told her husband she was interviewing AH - it maybe a ridiculous suggestion given HIPPA but surely you’d take that question of impugning your reputation seriously? It just seems like JH’s side isn’t taking this seriously. I dunno, not a fan of AH but they are trying to destroy her, financially, mentally, and they are joking about shit. It’s majorly distasteful to me. Like someone upthread said, board certification isn't a big deal, & iirc most of the psychs on Heard's team aren't board certified, either. Regarding her disagreeing with Heard's personal psych, she said that forensic psychs/pro witnesses aren't supposed to treat the people they're evaluating, because the nature of therapy requires that you take the patient's side & believe what the patient tells you, suggesting that Heard's psych had a natural bias that she wouldn't have, because her job was to be objective. The doc asked her hubby to get her muffins for her client, but she didn't tell him who her client was. When heard was eating the muffin, the doc said something like, "The muffins are thanks to my husband," which Heard claimed meant that the doc had told her husband that Heard was her interviewee. The doc said that she did not tell her husband that she had a meeting with Heard. He knew that there was a high-profile client coming in, because they had to clear out the office for her privacy, & the doc asked her husband to grab some muffins. Heard's team was trying to make it seems like the doc was star struck & her hubby bringing muffins was a big deal. It was a failed "gotcha!"
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Post by chatterweb on Apr 28, 2022 7:48:11 GMT
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Post by louiswinthorpe111 on Apr 28, 2022 13:40:18 GMT
I think she adopted a baby recently. I don't pay that much attention to her until this particular trial started, but saw a blurb about it at some point. I have a million thoughts about both of them, but I think everyone's gone over them here. They're both messes. The only really new thought I had is probably irrelevant, but I read an article about the finger tip incident recently and listened to part of an audio recording (again with the recordings...have they learned nothing from Richard Nixon?) and saw the infamous picture taken of Johnny's hand. I distinctly remember us discussing at the old board how gross and nasty his hand was at the time because his fingernails were all black and gross and I remember being judgey about it myself. But when I looked at the photo again the other day, I realized that his fingernails probably had dried blood in them. I cut my pinky at work back in January with a 12" slicing knife and there was blood everywhere. I ended up with three stitches and in all that time between cutting myself and coming back to work from urgent care, I never washed the blood off my hand it looked pretty much like his hand did and I had to really scrub to get the dried blood off both my nails and skin. tl;dr...I now kinda feel bad that I automatically assumed he just hadn't washed his hands in a year. In my defense, that was the "corn teeth" Johnny Depp era, so it was sort of a logical conclusion. ETA -- Amber had a baby via surrogate -- she did not adopt. My bad! https://www.instagram.com/p/CQzFr70hoQd I can't believe you all glossed over the name....Oongah? WTF--What? I hope that poor child just calls herself Paige when she gets older....
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Post by Sarzy on Apr 28, 2022 14:31:14 GMT
^ It's an Irish name
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Post by sputnik on Apr 28, 2022 14:50:38 GMT
yeah there's nothing wrong with oonagh. it's like siobahn, or saoirse, irish names that are spelled weird but sound quite lovely.
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Post by charmedhour on Apr 28, 2022 15:14:46 GMT
Yup, said "oo nuh" (at least in my very Americanized Irish descent family)
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Post by no1novice on Apr 28, 2022 16:19:04 GMT
again, not commenting on psychs, i don't have enough info to judge. but i stand by what i said for MDs who are treating patients. not talking the 70 year old retired internist who is now doing screening exams for patients before surgery, different story with those types. I agree, board certified MDs are my thing as well. Working in medical education- medicine truly is a daily life long learner field. My one boss, an internist, does about 100 continuing medical education credits per year, well above the required 40 for board certification. Is a lot of work on her end but she is on the ball with the ever changing treatments, meds, etc. Thanks CZB & Charmed.
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Post by chatterweb on Apr 29, 2022 4:07:29 GMT
Amber Heard admitted the poop in her shared bed with Johnny Depp was 'a horrible practical joke,' a security guard testified
Amber Heard took responsibility for the poop in her shared bed with Johnny Depp the night after an explosive fight, according to one of Depp's security guards, who testified that she called it "a horrible practical joke." Starling Jenkins, a member of Depp's security team, testified about the feces in the trial between Heard and Depp on Thursday. Depp is suing Heard, alleging she defamed him when she described herself as a victim of domestic violence in a 2018 op-ed for the Washington Post, and that she in fact physically and verbally abused him. www.insider.com/amber-heard-admitted-poop-johnny-depp-bed-guard-testifies-2022-4
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