beowabbit: (Me: brain MRI)
[personal profile] beowabbit
Just wanted to let folks know I’m doing much, much better today. I think the sciatica is gone and all the (considerable) aches I have left are muscular side-effects of that. I felt groggy and crummy all day yesterday and am pretty sure I had a fever and slept about 18 out of 24 hours, but that unpleasantness (except for the sleeping; sleeping was very pleasant!) seems to be behind me too. And [livejournal.com profile] plumtreeblossom’s coming over to remind me other humans exist tonight, and [livejournal.com profile] cathijosephine’s going to meet us for The Best Pastrami Sandwiches East of the International Date Line and West of Kiribati, and I'm alert and functional and awake enough to be working usefully from home today, so life is pretty good.

By the way, “You need to see a doctor immediately” is not a very helpful comment unless it’s accompanied by contact information for a doctor I can get to who is free or whom my insurance will reimburse me for even without them being my PCP or me having a referral, or instructions on how to get an immediate appointment from my highly overbooked doctor or nurse practitioner or the other doctors in his group without pointing a gun at the receptionists. I love my doctor and he’s responsible for my sleep apnea and hormonal problems being diagnosed and treated, but he’s very hard to schedule with and the place he works is kind of disorganized and claims not to have emergency appointments (I’ve tried in the past). And this was clearly (in retrospect) not an ER thing (although maybe if I’d gone to the ER they would have given me some nice muscle relaxants and analgesics that would have made Monday less unpleasant). I do appreciate everybody’s care and concern, though!

Date: 2007-09-26 19:23 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hahathor.livejournal.com
If your PCP' office is so overbooked that you can't get 15 minutes on the phone with a nurse-practitioner within 24 hours of calling to say "I'm in a great deal of pain and need care," I would recommend looking for a new PCP. I've had three different PCP's since I've been in the area (about 12 years), and every single one had an office that was capable of responding to a call within one business day. In addition, each had a relationship with a local hospital that was available 24/7 (admittedly with ER type waiting times).

It's great that your doctor has been able to help you with specific problems, but it sounds he's not able to help you when you are in extreme physical distress. Maybe you need someone who is more available for general purposes, and you should be able to get referrals for your current doctor for the specific areas in which he is able to help you.

Date: 2007-09-26 19:39 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hahathor.livejournal.com
Oh - and I probably should have said first and foremost, I'm delighted to hear you're feeling better, and glad you'll be having a wonderful night tonight. It's just that "You need to see a doctor immediately" seems like such a straightforward comment to somebody who has insurance and a regular doctor, that hearing "that's not a helpful comment" was a bit disconcerting. I don't know you very well, but you certainly seem like someone who deserves to have your doctor pay attention to you when you're in extreme pain.

Date: 2007-09-26 20:34 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chienne-folle.livejournal.com
It's just that "You need to see a doctor immediately" seems like such a straightforward comment to somebody who has insurance and a regular doctor, that hearing "that's not a helpful comment" was a bit disconcerting. I don't know you very well, but you certainly seem like someone who deserves to have your doctor pay attention to you when you're in extreme pain.

What she said! If your doc can't see you for emergencies, it's their responsibility to refer you to someone who can. "Sorry, we don't do emergencies" is neither helpful nor professional!

And in a pinch, didn't you use to own a house with a doctor? Maybe he could recommend a good doc in a box or something.

Date: 2007-09-27 11:56 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chienne-folle.livejournal.com
No, but seriously, you need to find a way to get seen for non-ER-level emergencies before the next one crops up.

As a therapist, part of my responsibility is to either be available to my clients during an emergency or have a procedure in place that directs them to an alternate way of getting their emergencies taken care of. I can't imagine that I have a greater ethical responsibility for care during an emergency than a physician does!

So maybe you could press your doc for what s/he wants you to do during an emergency or find a more accessible doc that your insurance covers or find a free-standing clinic that you can afford or something.

'Cause the zillion people who love you do NOT want you to have an emergency next month and find that you simply can't get medical care. If you won't do it because it's important for your health, do it because otherwise we'll beat you up. :-)

Date: 2007-09-28 03:20 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] keyne.livejournal.com
Seconded, thirded, etc.!

(Although, as others have said, there are urgent-care clinics to serve as backups -- I've visited a few during insurance lapses myself.)

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