Sykk wrote: » My latest experience with a new doctor I wanted to try out was Thursday. I went to get my ear syringed as apparently I have a natural buildup of ear-wax that I can't clean myself. I had to get this done before. The doctor insisted "Take these drops, have a shower and sher it'll come out itself".
snubbleste wrote: » Did you tell the doctor that you needed your ear syringed or was it a meek suggestion on your behalf?
Sykk wrote: » My latest experience with a new doctor I wanted to try out was Thursday. I went to get my ear syringed as apparently I have a natural buildup of ear-wax that I can't clean myself. I had to get this done before. The doctor insisted "Take these drops, have a shower and sher it'll come out itself". Here I sit, four days later with a massive ear ache, headache and deaf in my right ear. My sister got her bloods taken by another GP closer to home, he bagged the blood, handed it to her and told her to drop it into Mullingar hospital whenever she was driving by :pac: I have so many stories of neglect from these money making scammers it's just unreal. I've never been seriously ill, thank God. But I hope hospital doctors are better than these other people. I'm sure there are some that actually care about their patients but I'm yet to meet one. My experiences so far have been that they're too busy making €60 a pop that they want you out as soon as you've walked in so they can move onto the next person.
Sykk wrote: » I have so many stories of neglect from these money making scammers it's just unreal. I've never been seriously ill, thank God. But I hope hospital doctors are better than these other people.
hooradiation wrote: » This is because nobody ever starts a story with the phrase "I went to the GP and let me tell you, I had an unremarkable and effective experience" It happens all the damn time, but it doesn't make for a good whinge...
humbert wrote: » Even if all the other experiences are "unremarkable and effective" it doesn't excuse the instances of neglect and incompetence.
smash wrote: » usual answer: "It's a viral infection, can't do anything for it. That's €60 please..."
Sauve wrote: » It's like any profession, there are good and bad, and it's up to everybody as a fee-paying consumer to pick the best one you can find. You wouldn't tolerate a half-assed plumber working on your home, yet you continue to pay good money to a doctor who's doing a half-assed job. Shop around until you find one that's thorough and does what you're paying him/her for.
humbert wrote: » Oddly, my sister (who doesn't have a medical card) who's had no end of medical problems tried to change her GP in our home town after some pretty appalling treatment and other GPs flatly refused to take another doctors patient/client. I'm sure she could have gotten around this if she'd tried more GPs or perhaps been more insistent but it's still an infuriating situation.
Sauve wrote: » That is annoying, but understandably, surgeries have a maximum amount of clients they can take on. It could well be a case that this doctor was so bad that all of his patients were trying to move to another practice.
humbert wrote: » People with medical cards should have to pay some nominal fee for a visit (maybe they do but seeing how frequently they go it's hard to imagine).
St. Jimmy wrote: » Doctor lady i go to is kinda hot. One day she was examining my willy and I got a boner, while it was in her hand. Needless to say I was mortified but giggled like a child.
Chucken wrote: » Where did you get the piece of information from? How could you possibly know who has or hasn't a medical card?