Friday
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Cha. I almost bit it last weekend, from a dinky little UTI. :banghead:And people who would ordinarily survive the treatable illnesses and injuries we acquire in the ordinary course of living, also have worst-case outcomes, because medical treatment is no longer available.
((Turned into a bladder infection within hours, with 103-105F 39.5-41C Fever (even on fever reducers), and started hitting my kidneys -come to find, I thought I got to it in time, but no visible blood in the urine isn’t no blood. Testing 3 days later still found blood in my urine & a few other things spelling unhappy kidney infection.))
It’s the kind of thing that I’d usually have just gone to Urgent Care for... but urgent care won’t see anyone with a fever and cough (I also have pneumonia, no big deal, I get it every year), they redirect or transfer directly to the ER; and the ER sticks everyone with a fever and cough in their Covid wing, straight from your car. Which all but guarantees catching Cov19, if you didn’t have it, before. With asthma & pneumonia? I’d most likely just be one more bad outcome. So my pulmonologist has ordered me to not even THINK about going to the ER, unless I’ve cut my leg off, or something.
Death by dinky little UTI :rolleyes: How ignoble.
If I hadn’t had a handful of mixed antibiotics left over from other things? (I usually have whole bottles in my med kit, for various infections, but it’s been a strange couple years. My med kit is as bare as old Mrs. Hubbard’s cupboards.) I’d have had to go to the ER. As it was, the antibiotics had me peeing within the hour, and fever broken in a couple hours.
My doctor was a little pissed off at me, for not calling the on-call physician... to zap the RIGHT treatment (instead of pleeeeeease work! Crossed fingers, it’s the closest thing I’ve got) to an all night pharmacy for me.
What he didn’t know? The deluge of calls they’ve had, have fried their phone systems. It was glitched / stuck on the automated message WITHOUT the on call transfer option at the end of it. They’re working on fixing that, now, but the system keeps reverting, because it’s overloaded & reboots itself. The best workaround they’ve found is to have the on call physician call in once an hour, to see if it’s working, and when it isn’t, to call IT. Fortunately my doc is with one of the five biggest hospitals in the area, so their IT dept. is staffed 24/7. I can’t imagine how hard it is for practices who aren’t aligned with Big Money to stay on top of their tech problems.
It’s the kind of thing that I’d usually have just gone to Urgent Care for... but urgent care won’t see anyone with a fever and cough (I also have pneumonia, no big deal, I get it every year), they redirect or transfer directly to the ER; and the ER sticks everyone with a fever and cough in their Covid wing, straight from your car. Which all but guarantees catching Cov19, if you didn’t have it, before. With asthma & pneumonia? I’d most likely just be one more bad outcome. So my pulmonologist has ordered me to not even THINK about going to the ER, unless I’ve cut my leg off, or something.
Death by dinky little UTI :rolleyes: How ignoble.
If I hadn’t had a handful of mixed antibiotics left over from other things? (I usually have whole bottles in my med kit, for various infections, but it’s been a strange couple years. My med kit is as bare as old Mrs. Hubbard’s cupboards.) I’d have had to go to the ER. As it was, the antibiotics had me peeing within the hour, and fever broken in a couple hours.
My doctor was a little pissed off at me, for not calling the on-call physician... to zap the RIGHT treatment (instead of pleeeeeease work! Crossed fingers, it’s the closest thing I’ve got) to an all night pharmacy for me.
What he didn’t know? The deluge of calls they’ve had, have fried their phone systems. It was glitched / stuck on the automated message WITHOUT the on call transfer option at the end of it. They’re working on fixing that, now, but the system keeps reverting, because it’s overloaded & reboots itself. The best workaround they’ve found is to have the on call physician call in once an hour, to see if it’s working, and when it isn’t, to call IT. Fortunately my doc is with one of the five biggest hospitals in the area, so their IT dept. is staffed 24/7. I can’t imagine how hard it is for practices who aren’t aligned with Big Money to stay on top of their tech problems.