I work in a medical clinic, and the term "Emergent" is something that most people understand, they just choose to ignore |
yes, I know!
I wish they could all know the pain of what 2hrs with gall bladder attacks because every Tom, Dick and Harry in town was there because they "didn't feel well". I honestly wanted to die when I was having gall bladder attacks (ended up getting emergency surgery). |
I had mine removed too, so I know all too well that that feels like. It sucks....I had mine emergently removed too because it almost ruptured.
Oh the stories and memories you conjure up in my mind Dharma!! |
Oh, I can imagine!
For people with no medical insurance, the ER is sometimes the only doctor they can see |
Not in this case. This is a military medical facility. You have to have an ID card to be seen, meaning you have free medical care available to you on a routine basis. I'm sorry if you think I'm being unfair...but I think it's unfair that people like me, who have a genuine medical problem, have our treatment and care delayed by people who should have been seen in the family practice clinic.
People really need to try to educate themselves as to basic principles of their own health. If they would only do that (with the host of free resources available to anyone with or without insurance), the load on the ER would be dramatically reduced. |
I was talking to the med tech about that this morning. The wait time in the ER was over 2 hrs today...I got triaged and seen almost immediately, much to the chagrin of the lady who checked in before me with her child who had a sore throat....but not to sore that she coulnd't eat an egg McMuffin and sing along to Dora The Explorer at the top of her voice.
And those places probably have even less of a wait time than the ER |
The family practice clinc will see people on a walk-in basis. Yes, you're going to have to wait, but it's a damn sight quicker than the ER.
Bravo for this post. Though we have free health care here, we also have long llllloooonnnnngggg waits at the ER. They do it on a priority basis. |
As does my homeland, England. There you can wait for over 12 hours to be seen, and people regularly die waiting for treatment.
Ah yes, everyone has medicaid and medicare. I had forgotten. I forgot we had universal health care in this country. |
No, we don't. However, there are facilities that cannot refuse people treatment, and they're not all emergency rooms.
If the clinic accepts Medicare and Medicaid patients they cannot turn anyone away who legitimately needs to be seen. No one. |
Exactly.
You are a great example of why teachers should be required periodic retesting. |
Ted...you know I love you, so know that I say this with love: no name calling or insinuating on my thread, please. No-one gets to do that, not even the people I detest.