No, I thought that it was tonight! I did a lot of skimming yesterday.
Natter 68: Bork Bork Bork
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
I had a good two hours before I finally had to admit I was out of spoons. Glad I went.
And I couldn't even post that where I meant to.
Oooh, Vortex, you have to go back and read it tommyrot "Natter 68: Bork Bork Bork" Oct 2, 2011 8:23:30 pm PDT !
Definitely one of the best first date stories ever. Every time I think about tommyrot's weekend I grin with total happiness for his happiness.
(Er, btw, tommy, I'm so happy for you!)
Super aggravating, Kat. I want to shake the admins of the hospitals you and ita have to use. Help shouldn't be so difficult, dammit!
Glad your spoons lasted, sarameg.
Connie, that's such good news.
Kat, what's happened with the other surgeries? Do you usually know before this?
If I had no idea when a surgery was scheduled for on the following day, I would be spitting nails.
So I called admissions but no one answered. So then I called the surgery waiting room and they transferred me to the PTU and then again to another PTU employee. Grace's surgery is at 7:30. She needs to be there at 5:30. Yay?
Beverly, we usually have good experiences and the docs we deal with are good. They have a huge throughput in terms of patients so sometimes, with surgeries, it's hard to get the schedule info. It causes queasiness each time I don't hear back. But I've learned the workaround now.
Amy, yeah. Usually I call and leave a message at 2:00 and I hear back around or before 5:00. So they are especially late today.
I will also say I would HATE the job of scheduler for the OR. It would be horrible and terrifying and just generally no good. How you balance the scheduled surgeries with the emergencies must be a goddamned nightmare. So good on the people who do it, because I couldn't even imagine.
Did anyone hear the NPR story about hospitals having to ration meds due to the large number of med shortages?
Did anyone hear the NPR story about hospitals having to ration meds due to the large number of med shortages?
My mom had a hard time getting her pain meds for months, because the manufacturer was making less, due to ... some federal regulation or something? The pharmacist, who's known her forever, was setting some aside every month to make sure she had them for Mom's refills.
This is not surprising. It's just sort of depressing. Our health care system is so fucking broken. Rationing happens all the time already but fucking, cripplingly expensive; give me socialized medicine!