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.
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.
Reality_Check1 wrote: » Thats the nature of a broken colarbone unfortunately. I'd say your real gripe lies with the people who set it the first time and not the GP or specialist
BraziliaNZ wrote: » On the other hand they are free here, even for fordiners.
smash wrote: » usual answer: "It's a viral infection, can't do anything for it. That's €60 please..."
NovabooM wrote: » Unfortunately my doctor is stuck in a rut, too many patients, too long as a GP to give a damn anymore. He's been at it so long other GP's in the area won't take any of his patients. He comes out with some beauts ; Dr: What can I do for you? Me: I believe I may be preggers(fingers crossed) Dr: what?? Me: I've done few tests and they're positive (yipppppeee) Dr: I bet it's for a married man Me: ????? Wtf I must mention that this dr has been my GP since birth, knows all of the family including my partner!!! Needless to say I'm looking for new GP once I escape the clutches of Hospital
pickarooney wrote: » I had a GP prescribe homeopathy for my son once. The useless сunt should be struck off for that. Not even Firefox's spell-check recognises homeopathy.
Teyla Emmagan wrote: » NovabooM wrote: » Unfortunately my doctor is stuck in a rut, too many patients, too long as a GP to give a damn anymore. He's been at it so long other GP's in the area won't take any of his patients. He comes out with some beauts ; Dr: What can I do for you? Me: I believe I may be preggers(fingers crossed) Dr: what?? Me: I've done few tests and they're positive (yipppppeee) Dr: I bet it's for a married man Me: ????? Wtf I must mention that this dr has been my GP since birth, knows all of the family including my partner!!! Needless to say I'm looking for new GP once I escape the clutches of Hospital That's gas. He sounds great!
Reality_Check1 wrote: » 3. A medical card holder can visit as often as they want free of charge but the doc only gets paid for 3 visits as far as Im aware. I'm sure you can see how this is problematic if you have a surgery that is mainly attended by medical card holders
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).
looking_around wrote: » ...... Psychiatrists are downright useless though. Total waste of time. (if on med card. you see a psych once every 3-4months, while your GP is the one who adjusts/changes meds etc. Psych just nods and says "continue working with your gp..".waste of time, and waste of tax payers money too.)
FanadMan wrote: » I see my current psychiatrist every 6-8 weeks and I'm on a medical card and she is the only one that changes my meds. She is great - really nice, very empathetic and caring. So is my GP - guess I'm lucky
westcoast66 wrote: » Anyone know any unemployed doctors?
cade wrote: » I All in all he's a mad Doctor. He looks more like a hollywood film producer than a Doctor, think Steve martin in Bowfinger, i.e. grey hair tied back in a pony tail, designer glasses and wearing a fancy white shirt under a fashionable navy suit with brown sandals. Instead of asking me what's wrong the first fifteen minutes of conversation related to whether I liked computers, what Linux Distro I use and whether I'd be willing to install a Linux server for him. Ultimately we swapped distro cd's and then sorted out my sickness