Still waiting in ER, 15 hours, hungry and tired. Going home soon without having seen a doctor.
Keep that in mind, all those thinking "free" health care is a good thing. Thanks Trudeau and Jagmeat
Does your community have something called Urgent care clinic? I used that earlier this year when I was very sick. The wait there was much shorter and people there were all in a non-life threatening situration so all cases likely have similar piority. They had in house lab to do blood and urine tests. I was sent for X ray in a near by lab.Still waiting in ER, 15 hours, hungry and tired. Going home soon without having seen a doctor.
Keep that in mind, all those thinking "free" health care is a good thing. Thanks Trudeau and Jagmeat
Still waiting in ER, 15 hours, hungry and tired. Going home soon without having seen a doctor.
Keep that in mind, all those thinking "free" health care is a good thing. Thanks Trudeau and Jagmeat
I had a bad experience visiting a hospital as well. I have a personal opinion:
I came to Canada two years ago escaping the low quality of life experienced in third world countries. I came to a safer place, where I can have a better life balance and a better paid job. I can walk freely at night, I make enough money to keep a decent life and save money for future projects. Still a family of two, no kids yet but planning to.
A couple of months ago, I hurt my knee and I was having trouble walking without pain. One day I simply couldn't walk, so I decided to take the day off from work and visit a hospital. After 6 hours waiting, I finally saw a doctor who said "go home and take some Advil", and then left. I wasn't even provided a wheelchair or anything, just a kind of "get out of here". I had to limp all my way back to my car, go home and buy some Advil.
Two weeks later I wasn't getting better. Went back to a different hospital to try some luck. My only luck is that I waited 4 hours instead of 6, but the message was the same. So I basically spent 6 weeks taking Advil and resting until I finally recovered. I had to ask my boss to temporarily relocate my office to a first floor because I couldn't walk the stairs.
Then again two weeks ago I hurt my lower back. I decided to try a walk-in clinic this time as I don't have a family doctor. Shorter waiting time (roughly an hour) with the same result. Go home, get some rest, and take some Advil. None of these were life-threatening injuries but they are affecting my quality of life.
I read others' experiences and I've kind of started accepting it. I changed my old life for a newer better life in Canada, but you always gotta give something. But it really concerns me when I have kids. I've read several experiences from people that don't get the proper attention for their kids until it becomes a threatening situation. This is the only thing that's making me have second thoughts on whether I made the right decision. Not the housing, not weather, not the high cost of living. It's my future kids' health what concerns me.
I had a bad experience visiting a hospital as well. I have a personal opinion:
I came to Canada two years ago escaping the low quality of life experienced in third world countries. I came to a safer place, where I can have a better life balance and a better paid job. I can walk freely at night, I make enough money to keep a decent life and save money for future projects. Still a family of two, no kids yet but planning to.
A couple of months ago, I hurt my knee and I was having trouble walking without pain. One day I simply couldn't walk, so I decided to take the day off from work and visit a hospital. After 6 hours waiting, I finally saw a doctor who said "go home and take some Advil", and then left. I wasn't even provided a wheelchair or anything, just a kind of "get out of here". I had to limp all my way back to my car, go home and buy some Advil.
Two weeks later I wasn't getting better. Went back to a different hospital to try some luck. My only luck is that I waited 4 hours instead of 6, but the message was the same. So I basically spent 6 weeks taking Advil and resting until I finally recovered. I had to ask my boss to temporarily relocate my office to a first floor because I couldn't walk the stairs.
Then again two weeks ago I hurt my lower back. I decided to try a walk-in clinic this time as I don't have a family doctor. Shorter waiting time (roughly an hour) with the same result. Go home, get some rest, and take some Advil. None of these were life-threatening injuries but they are affecting my quality of life.
I read others' experiences and I've kind of started accepting it. I changed my old life for a newer better life in Canada, but you always gotta give something. But it really concerns me when I have kids. I've read several experiences from people that don't get the proper attention for their kids until it becomes a threatening situation. This is the only thing that's making me have second thoughts on whether I made the right decision. Not the housing, not weather, not the high cost of living. It's my future kids' health what concerns me.
Healthcare is managed by province. What is logic behind not thanking Ford and instead thanking T & J? Is it just fashionable to blame T for everything?
Also, did you try walk-in clinic option before going to ER?
Healthcare is managed by province. What is logic behind not thanking Ford and instead thanking T & J? Is it just fashionable to blame T for everything?
Also, did you try walk-in clinic option before going to ER?
I had a bad experience visiting a hospital as well. I have a personal opinion:
I came to Canada two years ago escaping the low quality of life experienced in third world countries. I came to a safer place, where I can have a better life balance and a better paid job. I can walk freely at night, I make enough money to keep a decent life and save money for future projects. Still a family of two, no kids yet but planning to.
A couple of months ago, I hurt my knee and I was having trouble walking without pain. One day I simply couldn't walk, so I decided to take the day off from work and visit a hospital. After 6 hours waiting, I finally saw a doctor who said "go home and take some Advil", and then left. I wasn't even provided a wheelchair or anything, just a kind of "get out of here". I had to limp all my way back to my car, go home and buy some Advil.
Two weeks later I wasn't getting better. Went back to a different hospital to try some luck. My only luck is that I waited 4 hours instead of 6, but the message was the same. So I basically spent 6 weeks taking Advil and resting until I finally recovered. I had to ask my boss to temporarily relocate my office to a first floor because I couldn't walk the stairs.
Then again two weeks ago I hurt my lower back. I decided to try a walk-in clinic this time as I don't have a family doctor. Shorter waiting time (roughly an hour) with the same result. Go home, get some rest, and take some Advil. None of these were life-threatening injuries but they are affecting my quality of life.
I read others' experiences and I've kind of started accepting it. I changed my old life for a newer better life in Canada, but you always gotta give something. But it really concerns me when I have kids. I've read several experiences from people that don't get the proper attention for their kids until it becomes a threatening situation. This is the only thing that's making me have second thoughts on whether I made the right decision. Not the housing, not weather, not the high cost of living. It's my future kids' health what concerns me.
Yes. agrees with you. We need to just wait for our body to heal some time.“Then again two weeks ago I hurt my lower back. I decided to try a walk-in clinic this time as I don't have a family doctor. Shorter waiting time (roughly an hour) with the same result. Go home, get some rest, and take some Advil. None of these were life-threatening injuries but they are affecting my quality of life.”
What EXACTLY did you want them to do ?
Seriously ?
I have sinus issues . It affects my quality of life . So be it .
Least I know now , when my nose is running nonstop , head over to an ER
I had a bad experience visiting a hospital as well. I have a personal opinion:
I came to Canada two years ago escaping the low quality of life experienced in third world countries. I came to a safer place, where I can have a better life balance and a better paid job. I can walk freely at night, I make enough money to keep a decent life and save money for future projects. Still a family of two, no kids yet but planning to.
A couple of months ago, I hurt my knee and I was having trouble walking without pain. One day I simply couldn't walk, so I decided to take the day off from work and visit a hospital. After 6 hours waiting, I finally saw a doctor who said "go home and take some Advil", and then left. I wasn't even provided a wheelchair or anything, just a kind of "get out of here". I had to limp all my way back to my car, go home and buy some Advil.
Two weeks later I wasn't getting better. Went back to a different hospital to try some luck. My only luck is that I waited 4 hours instead of 6, but the message was the same. So I basically spent 6 weeks taking Advil and resting until I finally recovered. I had to ask my boss to temporarily relocate my office to a first floor because I couldn't walk the stairs.
Then again two weeks ago I hurt my lower back. I decided to try a walk-in clinic this time as I don't have a family doctor. Shorter waiting time (roughly an hour) with the same result. Go home, get some rest, and take some Advil. None of these were life-threatening injuries but they are affecting my quality of life.
I read others' experiences and I've kind of started accepting it. I changed my old life for a newer better life in Canada, but you always gotta give something. But it really concerns me when I have kids. I've read several experiences from people that don't get the proper attention for their kids until it becomes a threatening situation. This is the only thing that's making me have second thoughts on whether I made the right decision. Not the housing, not weather, not the high cost of living. It's my future kids' health what concerns me.
1. What makes you think I am in Ontario? Nowhere near, by the way.. and second, no, we have no walk in clinics nearby. 3rd, no lecture needed, I am pretty well versed with my provincial health system.
okay, got it, all of that is fine. What is the point in blaming Tradeau when healthcare is managed by province? If you could explain that, probably I might learn a thing or two today.