MRI line-ups are real. But don't use 1 experience with the health care system to avoid using it for other problems. I used to think like you, but have learned. Why?Don't get me started on the medical system here. haha. I've had nothing but problems. Lets just put it this way, when I tore my meniscus, if I hadn't had a personal friend who performed MRI's, I would have had to wait 1.5 years for a surgery that should have happened the very day it occurred (it was a bucket handle tear so it was flipped and wedged so that I couldn't unbend my leg) and I would had have lost all of my cartilage as well as much of the mobility in that leg. I still had to wait 4 months and was unable to walk that entire time! Just one of several horror stories I've experienced here. So I do sort of avoid the doctor now and try to figure it out on my own. That way I can go in and basically tell them what's wrong. Otherwise they send me home with antibiotics and no answers.
*My siser is a emergency services and family doctor in Ontario. I can plumb and do hear (informally) her response afterwards to another doctor's diagnosis:
*For all medical problems, be sharp and alert while being diagnosed and interviewed by the doctor. Alot of patients don't think of the right type of questions,....because it requires fast thinking right there in the doctor's office to think of and ask those questions. Patients allow themselves to be intimidated by the doctor's credentials.
*Be very specific on description of medical symptoms and timing of when it occurs.
If you can imagine someone with a low literacy level, they may not be able to navigate those waters fast enough and express themselves clearly to the doctor. At the same time, some doctors are better listeners and communicators than others.
Bathedinshadow:
Just to give you the opposite experiences for me and some family members:
*I had a strange severe case of vertigo for 1 whole day where I couldn't sit up because the room spun. I couldn't bike, walk or leave home or even go to the bathroom. Next day I was fine.
After seen by family doctor, I was referred to a an ear-throat specialist before shifted immediately to a audio testing clinic at Vancouver General Hospital. They tested me for 1.5 hrs. While no explanation could be given to avoid this problem, I was given some simple tips. All this testing was within 1 month of my incident. Did I pay additional fees for this specialized testing? No.
*My partner's mother: she was low income senior citizen. Who collapsed in her apartment... she was moved to a long term care wing at Vancouver General Hospital where she was there until her death. She was there for 2 years. There was a geriatrician and cardiologist who looked after patients when needed since they were part of hospital staff. We were impressed by the number of nurses and other assistants per bed at that facility. That is the most ideal nursing home care that an end of life person could even hope for. She was wheelchair bound in her final 2 years.
Did she pay extra for this...I think it was over $900.00 per month from her funds. (This was 7 yrs.ago.) It included all meals, common shared rooms, some planned activities, nursing care, etc. Of course, the health care part, was subsidized. (But she was a Canadian taxpayer most her life, right?) This was also part of a research/teaching hospital...which is a huge bonus for any type of on-site facility care. As you know, this would meet a public hospital/care faciltiy accreditation standard.
*My father is dying of cancer. He has injections and is seen every 2-3 months now. Last 2 years. The cancer hospital in Toronto (Princess Margaret) have NEVER put him on any waiting list at all. They explain the options at each stage. The difficulty now is not the health care system, but what my father wishes for himself. It does help my sister-doctor is present to advocate for Dad while the oncologist gives his latest diagnosis.
Judge not too harshly, bathing if you haven't dealt with the full range of doctors in your lifetime.




But yes, I could see how ingrown hairs could definitely cause some pain.
I'm still impressed.
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