Guest guest Posted May 7, 2011 Report Share Posted May 7, 2011 I'm glad you're finally getting reasonable care, and am sorry you had to go through such ludicrous hell to get it. I hope it was timely enough and that you recover quickly. I really appreciate your questions: " Don't patients with SMA over the age of childhood deserve medical care beyond being a 'poster child' of convenience?. Why is there no real SMA clinic for adults with childhood onset? Where's our SMA support so our drs aren't having to play guess work while genuinely trying to care for us while SMA clinics doctors don't return calls, dissappear during illness crisis, and just dump us on systems with no experience. " It's a horrible feeling to know that our needs are not taken into consideration because we're still mostly expected to have already died. It makes me think of Harriet McBryde 's book title, " Too Late to Die Young " . I wonder how many of us Type I's & II's will have to survive into our 30s, 40s, and 50s before SMA specialists will get organized about our care? Until then we must continue to cobble together our own and hopefully find those exceptional health care practitioners willing to do what it takes. Alana Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 7, 2011 Report Share Posted May 7, 2011 Wow, that's certainly some story! This week I have also been sick and completely understand your frustration. In the middle of an infection is the worst time to become a " case manager " . I echo Alana's sentiment and am glad things are looking better. Although I have a trach, for the most part, I have been remarkably stable for the better part of 15 years. As I approach 46 next month, I am beginning to feel the ravages of time. Last week I was able to contact a well-connected friend and get a Cough Assist and ventilator delivered for nighttime usage. Neither has worked out particularly well. My nose leans to the left which renders both machines challenging. As for connecting the ventilator to my trach, it is a pediatric model from the mid-70s and there is not an adapter. In the past my father would've been great at fabricating/improvising something, but he is 88 now and as much as he would like to, I do not think it is in the cards. T.K. Small > > This week has been another learning experience of the good the indifferent and the down right helpfully good that medical proffessionals can be. > > The latest news from me is- there's pneumonia in my left lung lower lobe again [aggravated grrrrr]. > > I'm currently on Clarithromycin 250mg/5ml BID suspension- the point is- I'm finally getting treated for something that's been making me feel like worsening sh*t for weeks, [that's the good for the momment news, so picture a sort of smile from me here]. > > I've had over three weeks of worsening symptoms (fevers, night sweats, weird lung sounds, cloudy phlegm, mounting fatigue). > > Right before these symptoms, my soon to be replaced primary dr, put her hours from five days a week down to only one morning a week without any real notice to her patients. > > 'Promises' from my primary dr were made, that her 'associates would be available'. I went to well visits with her associates to establish familiarity in hopes that I'd still be getting primary care. Etc. I made sure communications were done (as I religiously always do) from my pulmonary, SMA Clinic, and other specialists. I kept my own carrying copies file folder up to date, tests, reports, etc., I HIPPA-released every clinical steps, test, radiology copies, reports, you name it, appointments, humanly possible at every visit from each and every dr to all of my drs. > > In the last three weeks I was told by my Childrens and Beth Israel specialists to " go to my primary dr first " , and tried to do just that. > > I delivered urine clean catch specimens, delivered bladder stones I'd passed (in the appropriate containers) into my primary dr's 'new on site lab', etc., during all times between the appointments that the primary dr's office would grant me as a once a week 'squeezed in' appointment. > > This week my primary refused to communicate with my pulmonary specialists at all, because " her secretaries are busy " . She told me no antibiotic could be prescribed because there's no chest xray and a chest xray could not be ordered, " because I can't stand up for it " . [Now we know that's serious bullsh*t from the dr, standing up requirement x rays ended decades ago]. > > My primary dr's staff needed practically an act of congress just to fill out a simple lab slip for the sputum and urine specimins that I provided to their insisted upon on site lab. While in the waiting room, staff was bitching for all to hear, " what! there's more than one specimin jar! " , " Just check end stage renal failure on the computer! " .. > > While waiting for prescriptions, etc in the waiting room after my exam room part of the appointment, I hear my dr yelled for by staff, " The AMA is on line three for you and wants to speak to you now! " . [Not a good sign?] > > By this point I am given a bums rush to leave the place. I go home and start making calls to my Children's Hospital SMA critical care drs who've been saying for the past year, " we're here for you " .... " call us when you have pulmonary symptoms " ... " our SMA clinic critical care drs will see you at home " , " we want to advoid you getting so sick you end up in the hospital " , [yada yada] all ditched me with their reasoning, " well your primary dr needs to call us " , when I informed them of my primary's behavior, Children's pulmonary told me, " Well if the primary is not calling us, I guess you're not that sick " ... My SMA critical care speacilists never called me back at all. > > Beth Israel pulmonary calls me back by 9:30 that night and sounded horrified by all of this and put an xray order in for me to do at whatever time I can get to out ptient x ray the next day. > > I already had an appointment with the Beth Israel neurology dept social worker the next day, did my x ray first and this pulmonary dr and social worker were so horrified by both Children's and my primary dr's actions that a new primary dr (who officially wasn't taking new patients) is going to see me next week. > > About an hour after I got home my Beth Israel calls me, says pneumonia has been spotted on my film, works out getting antibiotics confirmed in stock at my nearest pharmacy, and finally- I've stumbled upon some medical care that seems to give an actual sh*t about my health. > > It should not take this much work to get a lung infection treated before it becomes deadly. > > As far as Children's hospital SMA clinic goes, they seem to only want to see me when I'm well, can be studied as their oldest patient, but are unavailable for providing actual health care to me in a timely manner or any communication with other drs. > > MDA and SMA orgs with any funding towards this clinic need to really rethink where they place the only Regional SMA clinic in New England. Don't patients with SMA over the age of childhood deserve medical care beyond being a 'poster child' of convenience?. Why is there no real SMA clinic for adults with childhood onset? Where's our SMA support so our drs aren't having to play guess work while genuinely trying to care for us while SMA clinics doctors don't return calls, dissappear during illness crisis, and just dump us on systems with no experience. > > The Childrens SMA clinic has started a craptastic idea of " The SMA Passport " . In practice this 'passport' is useless. The SMA Passport is suppossed to be filled in, sent back to the SMA clinic and from there any drs you listed with releases before a crisis happens are suppossed to be contacted by the SMA clinic of your needs. On call drs, emergency responders, etc are never going to be able to be predeclared in a HIPPA release. It seems more like a way to mine information from patients and this 'passport' provides no HIPPA accountability, or even contacts or timeline info of where your filled out information goes or how it will be stored or used after they get your medical details. In the event your medical allergies, conditions, needs change, there's no info with the 'passport' of how to update it either. > > Am I the only who notices how this passport is useless between different hospital 'kingdoms' in the event of a medical emergency when communications don't happen during well momments? > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 8, 2011 Report Share Posted May 8, 2011 get well soon T.K! Re: Pneumonia again & the Craptastic SMA Passport Wow, that's certainly some story! This week I have also been sick and completely understand your frustration. In the middle of an infection is the worst time to become a " case manager " . I echo Alana's sentiment and am glad things are looking better. Although I have a trach, for the most part, I have been remarkably stable for the better part of 15 years. As I approach 46 next month, I am beginning to feel the ravages of time. Last week I was able to contact a well-connected friend and get a Cough Assist and ventilator delivered for nighttime usage. Neither has worked out particularly well. My nose leans to the left which renders both machines challenging. As for connecting the ventilator to my trach, it is a pediatric model from the mid-70s and there is not an adapter. In the past my father would've been great at fabricating/improvising something, but he is 88 now and as much as he would like to, I do not think it is in the cards. T.K. Small > > This week has been another learning experience of the good the indifferent and the down right helpfully good that medical proffessionals can be. > > The latest news from me is- there's pneumonia in my left lung lower lobe again [aggravated grrrrr]. > > I'm currently on Clarithromycin 250mg/5ml BID suspension- the point is- I'm finally getting treated for something that's been making me feel like worsening sh*t for weeks, [that's the good for the momment news, so picture a sort of smile from me here]. > > I've had over three weeks of worsening symptoms (fevers, night sweats, weird lung sounds, cloudy phlegm, mounting fatigue). > > Right before these symptoms, my soon to be replaced primary dr, put her hours from five days a week down to only one morning a week without any real notice to her patients. > > 'Promises' from my primary dr were made, that her 'associates would be available'. I went to well visits with her associates to establish familiarity in hopes that I'd still be getting primary care. Etc. I made sure communications were done (as I religiously always do) from my pulmonary, SMA Clinic, and other specialists. I kept my own carrying copies file folder up to date, tests, reports, etc., I HIPPA-released every clinical steps, test, radiology copies, reports, you name it, appointments, humanly possible at every visit from each and every dr to all of my drs. > > In the last three weeks I was told by my Childrens and Beth Israel specialists to " go to my primary dr first " , and tried to do just that. > > I delivered urine clean catch specimens, delivered bladder stones I'd passed (in the appropriate containers) into my primary dr's 'new on site lab', etc., during all times between the appointments that the primary dr's office would grant me as a once a week 'squeezed in' appointment. > > This week my primary refused to communicate with my pulmonary specialists at all, because " her secretaries are busy " . She told me no antibiotic could be prescribed because there's no chest xray and a chest xray could not be ordered, " because I can't stand up for it " . [Now we know that's serious bullsh*t from the dr, standing up requirement x rays ended decades ago]. > > My primary dr's staff needed practically an act of congress just to fill out a simple lab slip for the sputum and urine specimins that I provided to their insisted upon on site lab. While in the waiting room, staff was bitching for all to hear, " what! there's more than one specimin jar! " , " Just check end stage renal failure on the computer! " .. > > While waiting for prescriptions, etc in the waiting room after my exam room part of the appointment, I hear my dr yelled for by staff, " The AMA is on line three for you and wants to speak to you now! " . [Not a good sign?] > > By this point I am given a bums rush to leave the place. I go home and start making calls to my Children's Hospital SMA critical care drs who've been saying for the past year, " we're here for you " .... " call us when you have pulmonary symptoms " ... " our SMA clinic critical care drs will see you at home " , " we want to advoid you getting so sick you end up in the hospital " , [yada yada] all ditched me with their reasoning, " well your primary dr needs to call us " , when I informed them of my primary's behavior, Children's pulmonary told me, " Well if the primary is not calling us, I guess you're not that sick " ... My SMA critical care speacilists never called me back at all. > > Beth Israel pulmonary calls me back by 9:30 that night and sounded horrified by all of this and put an xray order in for me to do at whatever time I can get to out ptient x ray the next day. > > I already had an appointment with the Beth Israel neurology dept social worker the next day, did my x ray first and this pulmonary dr and social worker were so horrified by both Children's and my primary dr's actions that a new primary dr (who officially wasn't taking new patients) is going to see me next week. > > About an hour after I got home my Beth Israel calls me, says pneumonia has been spotted on my film, works out getting antibiotics confirmed in stock at my nearest pharmacy, and finally- I've stumbled upon some medical care that seems to give an actual sh*t about my health. > > It should not take this much work to get a lung infection treated before it becomes deadly. > > As far as Children's hospital SMA clinic goes, they seem to only want to see me when I'm well, can be studied as their oldest patient, but are unavailable for providing actual health care to me in a timely manner or any communication with other drs. > > MDA and SMA orgs with any funding towards this clinic need to really rethink where they place the only Regional SMA clinic in New England. Don't patients with SMA over the age of childhood deserve medical care beyond being a 'poster child' of convenience?. Why is there no real SMA clinic for adults with childhood onset? Where's our SMA support so our drs aren't having to play guess work while genuinely trying to care for us while SMA clinics doctors don't return calls, dissappear during illness crisis, and just dump us on systems with no experience. > > The Childrens SMA clinic has started a craptastic idea of " The SMA Passport " . In practice this 'passport' is useless. The SMA Passport is suppossed to be filled in, sent back to the SMA clinic and from there any drs you listed with releases before a crisis happens are suppossed to be contacted by the SMA clinic of your needs. On call drs, emergency responders, etc are never going to be able to be predeclared in a HIPPA release. It seems more like a way to mine information from patients and this 'passport' provides no HIPPA accountability, or even contacts or timeline info of where your filled out information goes or how it will be stored or used after they get your medical details. In the event your medical allergies, conditions, needs change, there's no info with the 'passport' of how to update it either. > > Am I the only who notices how this passport is useless between different hospital 'kingdoms' in the event of a medical emergency when communications don't happen during well momments? > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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