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In reply to the discussion: Long Waits for Doctors’ Appointments Have Become the Norm [View all]noamnety
(20,234 posts)11. I've been really lucky with this.
Earlier this week I set out for a bike ride. Along the way, I noticed a weird sharp edge/hole on one of my teeth.
My dentist is on the route I was biking, so I stopped in to see if I could get an appointment. They called back to see if he had a minute, he said yeah, he wanted to see what was up and at least then he'd know how long of an appointment I needed. Next thing you know, I'm in the chair, bike gloves still on, helmet on the floor, and he's filling it with composite.
We finished up, and I continued on the rest of my bike ride.
Time between "I should see the dentist" and sitting in his chair - about 15 minutes, most of which was my biking the rest of the way to his office.
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Trouble is, since Arkansas didn't actually expand *Medicaid* but did the "private option" thing....
moriah
Jul 2014
#30
Hubby and I now pay for the privilege of being able to get in to the primary doc.
mnhtnbb
Jul 2014
#8
In 2007, my sister sat in a wheelchair for 6 months waiting for a knee replacement..
mountain grammy
Jul 2014
#14
You mean we can't have everything immediately ? Whatever will our "instantaneous gratification"
Trust Buster
Jul 2014
#20
So what do you do if you need an antibiotic or else the infection will get worse?
davidn3600
Jul 2014
#33
At least one component of this problem is an insufficient number of primary care providers.
Aristus
Jul 2014
#21
Does forcing people to buy private insurance help? Because we "fixed" healthcare, and no further
Romulox
Jul 2014
#22
I had to cancel my Dermatologist (been a regular patient for years) last December.
Dustlawyer
Jul 2014
#24
My father had a medical practice. I worked there in the Seventies and Eighties.
no_hypocrisy
Jul 2014
#27
I noticed the article did not include France. My friend was visiting in 2013, broke her ankle.
Thinkingabout
Jul 2014
#28