I had an appointment with my endocrinologist today, and afterwards, I had to have a blood test. I am an insulin-dependent diabetic, so I have to have my blood taken often, and I must be fasting before the blood test. I started fasting yesterday after 9 pm. I had no food from then on and had nothing to drink from 11 pm on.
It used to be that you could go to the doctor and have the nursing staff in the doctor’s office take your blood. It was pure and simple. You saw the doctor, and in five minutes, your blood was taken, and you could go and eat.
Today, because of the provisions that health insurances put on my life, I have to go to a lab. I used to have a choice of two labs to go to. One was extremely disorganized and took forever to get to you; the other was better organized and took less time to get to you. My insurance company took away my choices. Now I have to go to the disorganized one. It took them 1.5 hours to get to me. I was dying.
It was not as if the waiting room was full. There were only six patients waiting when I got to the lab. I thought that I was going to be taken right away. WRONG!!!!!!!!!!!!
If you know any diabetic, then you know that when the sugar is not stable, the diabetic is irritable. I try not to let my sugar level rule my personality, but after waiting, while starving, for over 1.5 hours, I couldn’t help it. I asked them why it took so long to get to me. In fact, all the other patients who were sitting there before I came in the office were still sitting there. The line was not moving. I asked them how long it would take them to get to us. You know what the receptionist replied? He asked me why I couldn’t be as patient as the other people in the waiting room. I told him that maybe if more people would make a rumpus, the phlebotomists would get their act together and not have people wait for so long.
I can understand if the waiting room was loaded with people. Then, there would be a reason for the turnover to take so long. But there were only six of us waiting for the phlebotomist. Needless to say, as I made a rumpus, I was taken right away. The phlebotomist took 5 huge vials from me. By the time, I got back to the waiting room, there were only two people waiting. One of them was a new patient. I made a rumpus and I accomplished something.
I could hardly wait to eat. My sugar level was down to 50 (70 to 90 readings are normal). At 50, some people start being incoherent. Luckily, I was OK. I drank the juice I brought with me, and drove home to eat.
As I write this entry, I am well fed and happy. But I still hate health insurance companies.