mjd
Veteran
I get irritated because it's like these people don't pay attention and don't read a patient's record.
I have three docs I see; regular doc twice a year, ophthalmologist and skin doc once a year. MrsT has probably nine docs she sees all the time (regular doc, endocrine doc, heart doc, immuno doc, etc).
Every time, every single time we go, whether it's the doc or the nurse or someone on staff, it's like it's the first time they're seeing us.
How hard is it to take three minutes, read a record, and fake it for a few minutes. It's so bad at the heart doc, my wife sees them four-six times a year, and every time she comes in, they ask her about her pacemaker.
Pssst...SHE HASN'T GOT A PACEMAKER! Every time. She'll say, "I don't have a pacemaker," and they'll treat her like she's somehow forgotten that she has one.
I wish I could tell you that I'm shocked, but I'm not. My health started to decline when my ex blindsided me. He purposely moved our family to a new state where I knew NOONE. I had two young kids, a busted knee (tore my meniscus during the move) and my husband wouldn't talk to me. I had NO clue what was going on.
I went to see my PCP about my knee and started tearing up when lead to the exam room. The nurse looks at me and asks "What is wrong with you!?" I told her what I just told you and she said "Oh, shut up! It's not like you are the first woman to get cheated on and left!" I was floored. I have no idea where it came from but I shot right back "I'm not the first woman to give birth but that hurt too!" I never went back there.
Strangely, a couple of weeks before the move my PCP said that I was pre-diabetic and put me on meds. I didn't like the way they made me feel and I wasn't convinced that I needed them. In the past ten years I have been tested repeatedly and no other doctor has ever put me on that medication. I honestly think they just prescribe stuff they own stock in. They get wined and dined by these pharmacy reps. and just spout out whatever and write scripts and clearly, as in both our cases, don't even pay attention to what is going on.
Another time I was in the ER and the nurse tells me the doctor wanted a urine sample to make sure I wasn't pregnant (it wasn't good enough that I told them that I wasn't). I couldn't go so they decided to put in a catheter. Guess what? The nurse starts to clean the area with iodine. All the way across the room I could read the GIANT red letters indicating that I'm allergic to iodine. So, they had to stop worrying about the reason I was there and tend to me going into anaphylactic shock! The nurse was upset and started crying after realizing she almost killed me, but geez. It was in her hands right in her face!
Mostly, I just want you to know that you aren't alone. I was reading an article recently that there is an estimated 100,000 (ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND) deaths attributed to medical mistakes. Given my experiences, it seems like that number is low.
Edited to add: I just looked up the most recent numbers. It's now at 251,000/year.
Your Health Care May Kill You: Medical Errors - PubMed.
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