I will miss getting to see you too, Nora. However, going down in May would mean Jon might get to come too, and y'all would love him.
He dreamt last night that I worked for Wolfram and Hart.
Spike ,'Sleeper'
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
I will miss getting to see you too, Nora. However, going down in May would mean Jon might get to come too, and y'all would love him.
He dreamt last night that I worked for Wolfram and Hart.
Scola is a Cylon. There are many copies.
I went for my blood test. No wait, and the blood-taking person got my vein on the first try and kept the needle in the vein when she changed vials. I like this Geisinger place.
Poor Bartleby and mom. I hope he is over it completely and that your day is better than anticipated.
Scola is a Cylon. There are many copies.
I like this plan.
Scola is a Cylon. There are many copies.
I, for one, welcome our new genially smiling, photographically talented overlords.
I really like the computerized records at this medical place, too. I don't have to give my history to each doctor individually, and if I'm seeing multiple doctors (which I am), then each one can see all the records from all the others. Plus, the computer gives alerts to the doctors when there's anything that I need done -- yesterday, based on my age and whatever other data it had, it came up with a list of things that I should have done, checked it against the list of things that it had records of me doing, and the computer told the doctor to tell me to go to a gynecologist for my yearly checkup, get a flu shot, and get a TDaP vaccine. I told them that I'd already gotten a flu shot, and the nurse told me to check with my insurance about the TDaP to see if it's covered, so that just left the referral to gynecology. So, when I went to the receptionist to pay after the appointment was over, the computer told the receptionist that I needed the gynecology appointment, and she asked me if I'd like to schedule it then with one of the doctors at this practice. And when I went in today for my blood test, I didn't have to bring any paperwork -- they just pulled up my records on the computer and saw which tests the doctor had ordered yesterday. I don't have to remember paper prescription forms, either -- I told them which pharmacy I use, and whatever prescriptions the doctor orders get automatically sent to the pharmacy through the computer.
Where I went in DC, it usually took several weeks and at least four phone calls before the doctor could even find my blood test results to look at.
It sounds like a great practice, Hil - I'm glad you're getting good care after all the bad experiences in the past! It also makes me profoundly sad that that kind of info management isn't the norm. Screw the flying cars, man, I want useful and important information to be as seamless as the fact that 87 People Liked This.
Even Obama says it's a good practice! [link]
That's great, Hil. This is what we got our certification on last week, that our medical records software works like it should. One of the best features that is required now is that the patient must have real time access to their own records. Time was when doctors thought patients weren't smart enough to read their own records. Most of the certification process we endured was for the proper encryption for exchange of data between labs, hospital, physician, and the patient portal. It was a lot of work, but it is awesome to see the system working the way it should.