It is on my notes that carers and nominated family members can order and pick up my repeats. This had nothing to do my drugs and everything to do with ticking boxes. I do not want a review and I refuse to be bullied into having one especially, most especially, when the review has been booked with a HCA!
As you can prpbably tell I am still incandescent with rage.
So what are you going to do? I would also be incandescent with rage.
Tsk! Tsk! This will push your bloods up you know.It is on my notes that carers and nominated family members can order and pick up my repeats. This had nothing to do my drugs and everything to do with ticking boxes. I do not want a review and I refuse to be bullied into having one especially, most especially, when the review has been booked with a HCA!
As you can prpbably tell I am still incandescent with rage.
Tsk! Tsk! This will push your bloods up you know.
Seriously, this has nothing to do with the GP who has no time or inclination to bother checking review dates.
This is an intransigent administrator (but I bet you can think of a better name).
Been there myself and totally sympathize.
I'm not sure, I can't think straight. If it wasn't for my pain meds I would sack the whole shabang, Diabetes included. I just keep thinking why the condition that troubles me the least (in real terms of day to day wrt QoL) is getting all the attention and that if they had concentrated this hard on my primary condition my QoL would perhaps approach somewhere near normal.
The blood draw is tomorrow noon but the review isn't scheduled for two weeks. I could cancel both appts but the same thing would happen next time I need a rep script (if they don't decide to throw me off the Practice list in the meantime). I don't know what to do.
Just bite your tongue and go. Have the bloods taken, see the HCA for the review, nod and smile, say nowt of any importance, go home, and that will be that until the next time. If your pain meds are about to run out before this review, then you need to get on the phone and do some foot stamping.
It is on my notes that carers and nominated family members can order and pick up my repeats. This had nothing to do my drugs and everything to do with ticking boxes. I do not want a review and I refuse to be bullied into having one especially, most especially, when the review has been booked with a HCA!
As you can prpbably tell I am still incandescent with rage.
I'm not sure, I can't think straight. If it wasn't for my pain meds I would sack the whole shabang, Diabetes included. I just keep thinking why the condition that troubles me the least (in real terms of day to day wrt QoL) is getting all the attention and that if they had concentrated this hard on my primary condition my QoL would perhaps approach somewhere near normal.
The blood draw is tomorrow noon but the review isn't scheduled for two weeks. I could cancel both appts but the same thing would happen next time I need a rep script (if they don't decide to throw me off the Practice list in the meantime). I don't know what to do.
I would be absolutely furious and also really stressed and frustrated and scared. Does it help to talk to your pharmacist? Sometimes mine will fax in the refill request to my doctor since we all know each other by now.
I think I may have said it all wrong. There is no problem with my medications, the problem stems from being overdue for a Diabetes review. To force me to make appointments for the review they withheld the prescription. Once made, I was given the script no problem.
A HCA is a Health Care Assistant which (over here) is someone 'qualified' to weigh, measure and mop up.
Before I qualified for Medicare I went to one doctor who would only refill blood pressure prescriptions for three months at a time. He would not refill after that unless I went to see him, and each time I went to see him he would just check my blood pressure and charge me $50. One time I had to borrow the $50 from a friend of mine, whose church funded it. I hated being charged for an office visit when I could have checked my BP free at the pharmacy. But, to do him justice, I think that was how he made his living, he did serve a lot of low-income people like me, so he had to have an income from somewhere. Another doctor didn't want to refill prescriptions after a certain time without doing blood work, and that cost over $100, plus the price of the office visit just to see him.
I'd never thought I'd look forward to turning 65, but doing so meant I could start seeing a doctor regularly and not having to pay out of pocket for it.
It's officially cold today. Woke up and had to warm up my meter before it would work. It advertises as working at 4 degrees Celsius and above, the main reason why I chose this meter, as my last one gave up below 8 or so, which meant I had to warm it up most of the winter in my bedroom.
Not sure if it was below 4 in my bed this morning, but the kitchen felt positively balmy while the thermostat there said it was 5.5 degrees. I guess it's almost time to keep my insulin in the fridge to keep warm at night
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