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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Entertainment

Mood music that hits the wrong note in hospital

Retro radio tuning. Woman using old vintage music equipment. Adjusting volume or frequency tuner knob. Turning on or off stereo receiver or speaker.2ERTMGM Retro radio tuning. Woman using old vintage music equipment. Adjusting volume or frequency tuner knob. Turning on or off stereo receiver or speaker.
‘The default position for patients should be silence,’ writes Roger Davis. Photograph: Tero Vesalainen/Alamy

If you think listening to Carly Rae Jepsen in a hospital waiting room is bad (Sweating with fear, I waited to hear the doctor’s verdict. Then the radio started playing Call Me Maybe …, 13 March), try being wheeled in for an abortion to the sound of – I kid you not – Barry White. A moment so surreal that I often think I must have imagined it. But I know it happened because it was before they gave me the drugs. Everything went smoothly, as you can imagine.
Name and address supplied

• Eight years ago in Fairbanks, Alaska, I was about to go under to have a cataract removed. I was asked what music I’d like. The Buena Vista Social Club, I replied. Less than 60 seconds later, I drifted off to those warm notes before I had time to be surprised that first, the specialist knew of it, and second, that they had it to hand. I like to think my improved eyesight owes a little to that relaxing music.
Flora Grabowska
Crovie, Aberdeenshire

• My husband had a similar experience while waiting to pick up a prescription at a hospital about five years ago. The canned music was playing I Wanna Be Sedated by the Ramones.
Katie McKenna
Sacramento, California, US

• My husband once attended an appointment where the waiting room radio was playing The Drugs Don’t Work.
Margaret Coupe
Longnor, Staffordshire

• My vasectomy was performed during a run-up to Christmas to the strains of Ding Dong Merrily on High, God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen and Hallelujah Chorus.
John Gray
York

• I agree: the default position for patients should be silence. Indeed, our surgery plays local radio stations, complete with advertising and DJ drivel. But not as bad as a pub we visited where the background was also local radio: a phone-in about sexually transmitted disease.
Roger Davis
Dilton Marsh, Wiltshire

• When our surgery began to play a pop music station I was told it was to ensure privacy – it doesn’t. For this patient at least, loud music is neither soothing nor reassuring.
Marie Paterson
Nuneaton, Warwickshire

• Do you have a photograph you’d like to share with Guardian readers? If so, please click here to upload it. A selection will be published in our Readers’ best photographs galleries and in the print edition on Saturdays.

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