Steve,
Apparently the flash mob is inspired by the TV series and the movie Glee. I have seen neither the TV series nor the movie so I am unsure of the bases for this street dancing movement, as I am NOT American Pop Culturally literate
on this topic
yet. I will research and get back to you-all later.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/36472308/ns/health-health_care
Jan,
The person who finally listened to me and agreed with my suggestion that I should have an MRI to look for a tumor was a “nurse practioner†at my doctor’s office. He, the NP, wrote the referral and I went to see the ENT. (3 cheer of that!)
However in that same office often I was challenged to get into see the actual doctor (My PCP). With in the same month before I got the results of the MRI I went in to their clinic, as I could not sleep. One nurse practioner prescribed a muscle relaxant (BTW I later understood I could not sleep as the brain stem was so squished by the AN tumor). Being tired that week I lost my balance and put my back out. Again I could not get in to see the doctor as he was booked up. So I accepted a nurse practioner appointment as a replacement as I needed to see someone about my back -ASAP. This was a different nurse practioner, in the same clinic, who prescribed for me a different drug (apparently unaware that I was prescribed a muscle relaxant the week before which somehow was not written in my chart… or something) and I had a terrible drug interaction. All this being the same day the ENT called with my diagnose of the AN. (One bad day) After the drug interaction (which included convulsions) I went to an RX site to read these drugs should NEVER have both been prescribed to me at the same time. So I wrote a letter to the doctor first informing him I was diagnosed with an acoustic neuroma (this was news to him and the nurse practioner had not yet informed him of the MRI results) and second of all I was questioning how I was prescribed interacting drugs by two separate nurse practioners within his SAME clinic. Gee the next day he suddenly had an opening to see me in his office to “talkâ€- and of course I was billed for a “talkâ€. (BOOO!)
The clinic, I discovered with time, was a disorganized chaotic fiasco mess. (Many staff was computer illiterate- it seemed) There were huge issues with communication between nurse practioner and doctor and I feel (now) the nurse practioners should NOT have given me those prescriptions. (On all levels there were record keeping problems- the nurses, not just nurse practioner, wrote terrible reports that had grammatical and spelling errors plus incomplete information)
This past year I wrote to the doctor, who has more of his patients go to the nurse practioners than see him as he is not available, and explained my frustration and that I felt I should be looking for a new clinic for my family as there had been one to many mistakes… When they screwed up with my child I was less than patient. One of his fellow doctors (he hired his son- I won’t touch that separate topic about relatives working in the same medical clinic issues) and a nurse stood there disagreeing with each other, in front of me and my child, about whether or not my child could (or could not) have an adult dose flu vaccine. There were such obvious inconsistencies and power struggles going on in the clinic. I took my child and just walked out of the office without her getting a vaccine (never to return). I then went to a new clinic of “doctors" and got my child vaccinated.
I was happy that a good listening nurse practioner helped with the diagnoses of my
mystery symptoms and was a catalyst in finding my AN tumor by writing a referral to a specialist… however I was NOT happy with the overzealous writing up of prescription drugs on the RX pad.
There are pros and cons here. I think the doctor chose this set up of having as many nurse practioners as doctors as it was “cost effectiveâ€. After my experience from that I have decided NEVER to go to a clinic that has a structural set up like that AGAIN (Fortunate in this country I currently have a
choice to walk out and look elsewhere). I have only selected clinics that have a team of “doctors†with maybe one nurse practioner. I have experienced when you go to see a nurse practioner because your doctor is so booked up you cannot get in –
major issues come up.
I feel that the doctor is ultimately responsible for ALL the staff in the clinic. And if their nurse practioner messes up that reflects on them- the doctor(s).
Currently my opinion is that it is ok for a nurse practioner to write up referral for a patient to see a specialist however I have had such negative experience with nurse practioners writing prescriptions, in my case, that I currently do not support that. I never had a nurse practioner in Canada when I lived there. The nurse practioner experience was new for me when I moved to Oregon State- here in the US. I thought the nurse practioner at my OBGYN office was great -however she never wrote up a prescription for me.
Jan thanks for sharing that article.
DHM