One friend suggested one has to have good "project management skills' to be able to deal with any complex medical condition. I was intrigued by that and still don't quite understand how this may look like. But whatever it is, it sounds like a good way to keep track of the myriad of details, tests & other health care workers that look after different things. I do find dealing with my health problems rather confounding and fragmented.
This is so unreal it's almost worth writing a book about. I'm sitting in a parking outside a pharmacy. My neph sent a prescription for a nasal spray to try to bring down my calcium level. She had me run labs yesterday afternoon and it's over 12 again. The first pharmacy doesn't carry it so they sent me here. This pharmacist refuses to fill it until someone from my neph's office cas back to tell them if I should alternate nostrils.
Quote from: Deanne on May 14, 2015, 01:07:49 PMThis is so unreal it's almost worth writing a book about. I'm sitting in a parking outside a pharmacy. My neph sent a prescription for a nasal spray to try to bring down my calcium level. She had me run labs yesterday afternoon and it's over 12 again. The first pharmacy doesn't carry it so they sent me here. This pharmacist refuses to fill it until someone from my neph's office cas back to tell them if I should alternate nostrils.Write a book and then sell the movie rights. You'd make a gazillion bucks. Make it a comedy! It's sounding more and more like a French farce.
I take it this is the tertiary parathyroidism condition that my Neph told me once about? So even with a successful kidney transplant, there can still be problems with the PTH, calcium & phosphorous trio?