So I have failed you friends and
family. I promised to update on Sudays come hell or high water. Neither came
and I didn’t update. So I'm updating with a cautionary tale against the follies of socialist medicine.
Yesterday, I foolishly posted a facebook
status outlining the nature of socialist medicine in this country, and
concerned my friends and family with the content therein. If you’re wondering,
I may have broken my foot a few weeks ago jumping over a fence. Actually I was peeing in
the bushes behind the fence when a full family came walking toward me. I was
finished, but didn’t want anyone to know where I had been, so I made a break
for the fence. Hesitating at the last moment, I plummeted over onto the other
side, catching my foot on the top rung on the way down, landing on my knees.
Said family witnessed the whole scene, so I picked myself up and started
sprinting away in, dare I say it, shame. But because I can’t take myself
seriously, this episode will probably make me laugh until I die. Today I went
to the A&E clinic to get the foot in question checked out. I didn’t want
to. My mother just talked some sense into me over Skype. Because that’s what
mothers are good at. The staff didn’t believe that it was broken. I probably
wouldn’t either, given how little pain I’m in as of now. And given the fact
that I’ve been walking on it several miles a day for three weeks. But that’s
just how we roll in my family. Maybe if socialist medicine functioned as an
industrial model, I would have seen a doctor soon enough to diagnose the break
that I am so certain I had. But they have better things to do with their time
then tend to mostly mended feet, so I am crazy. Here’s how my conversations
went with the professionals at the clinic:
Man: “What do you think is wrong
with you?”
Me: “I think I may have broken my
foot.”
Man: “And how did you do that?”
Me: “I was jumping over a fence.
But I caught my foot on the top rung on the way down and landed on my knees. I
happened about two to three weeks ago.”
Man: “And why do you think it’s
broken?”
Me: “BECAUSE IT HURT MAN. AND THEN
IT SWELLED MAN. AND IT ALSO BRUISED MAN. AND I COULD FEEL IT RUBBING AGAINST
ITSELF MAN!” (Disclaimer: Not my actual words)
Man: “Well, let me have a look at
it *pokes and prods* Yeah, I don’t think it’s broken. It’s probably very
unlikely that it is, but I’ll send you to the X-ray clinic, just take this
form, go out of the A&E clinic, turn yourself left and continue until you
run into the Urgent Care clinic.”
Me: *follows directions, waits
fifteen minutes to get x-rays taken, waits a good long while to be seen by
anyone*
Female Nurse: “What’s wrong with
you? *looks at my form* You think your
foot’s broken?”
Me: “Yes, I think maybe it is.”
Female Nurse: “Which foot? Oh,
left.”
Me: “Yes, left foot.”
Female Nurse: “Why are you in the
UK?”
Me: “(Do you think maybe we should
get back to the fact that one of my appendages has been potentially broken for
three weeks?) I’m studying at the university.”
Female Nurse: “What are you
studying?”
Me: “Piano Performance”
Female Nurse: “Oh, really? Do you
have any allergies, prescription medications, have you had any operations, or
been diagnosed with any illnesses?”
Me: *answers questions*
Female Nurse: “Well I haven’t
actually looked at your x-ray, but I’m going to go ahead and check your feet
and compare them side by side, so if you could remove your wellies and socks
again…”
Me: *thinks quietly to self about
hour long wait for x-ray results in reception, removes socks and rain boots
again.”
Female Nurse: “What are your symptoms?”
Me: “Well, it bruised, and swelled,
and when I touched one place, I could feel the sensation in another place, and
it felt like a creaking door when I moved it, and it has a dull ache along the
second phalange, and it really really hurt, but it’s been three weeks and it
doesn’t hurt anymore.”
Female Nurse: “So it doesn’t hurt
anymore? *pokes and prods, feels around, takes other foot , pokes, prods,
requests I walk back and forth in front of her* It’s probably just soft tissue
damage, but I’ll take a look at the x-ray to make sure it’s not broken. I don’t
expect I’ll find anything. If it was broken, you would be reacting very
differently. There would be sharp pains and you would probably jump. I’ll have
a look.”
Me: *thinks to self* Yeah, kind of
like the pains I had a week and a half ago that I was trying to tell you about?
Maybe kind of like those ones.” *waits another 15 minutes in urgent care
hospital room while security guards and nurses peek in to see if more room can
be procured for other patients*
Female Nurse: “ So I can’t find
anything on your x-rays. They look clear to me. Your foot isn’t broken. It
could be soft tissue damage, but we can’t help you with that here. Normally
soft-tissue damage is diagnosed six weeks after the incident, so I would wait
another week before you call your doctor and then see about whether you should
get that checked out with an ultrasound.
Me: “Thank you.” *walks out*
This whole interaction front to
back aside from the lovely x-ray technician left me wondering if that diagnosis
was preemptive. And whether they were even listening at all. What I do know is
that between the symptoms the professionals thought I should be exhibiting and
the symptoms I told them I had exhibited, it’s pretty safe to say that my foot
was indeed broken. Whether it was a hairline fracture that healed itself, or
whether I’m going to find out that actually I need medical attention when I go
home, I’m plenty happy to take this somewhat controversial diagnosis and live
with my injuries if it means I never have to set foot in a socialist medical
practice again. I refuse. If it’s the death of me, I will die outside of a
socialist medical practice rather than wait three hours for them to diagnose me
with hypochondria.
I feel you man!!
ReplyDeleteIsntthis the limit! InJanuary it will be similar here for many. Thank dad for good insurance.
ReplyDelete