Hello, rfranzi,you have my sympathy and I understand where you are coming from.I am under a different health-system (NHS in England) but I had similar experiences like you.Over many years I tried so hard to get proper health-care, I never had any luck.I suffered cerebral haemorrhages, chron. osteomyelitis, a massive stroke and now end-stage-kidney-failure,(10-12% kidney function for over two years now)because I never received any medical health care when I needed it most.Of course, I went through all the obvious complaints-procedures up to the medical Ombudsman, including MP’s, authorities etc. But no luck.Looking back, I feel, I was a in a distorted health-care-venturelike the mice and rats in a laboratory, whose well fare is not being considered,they are only used for their contribution to the medical research being conducted upon them.My opinion was of no value, my feelings or my fragile health were hardly a consideration,I was meant to be obedient and made to feel uncooperative if I did not comply with doctors’ wishes.The whole process traumatized me enormously.I now have finally found my own way forward:I avoid this unhealthy health-system. I pay cash for each of my blood-testsand with the help of the Internet and my diet I keep as healthy as possibleand try to stay pre-Dialysis for as long a possible.This way I avoid the many, many hours I was made to wait sitting under bright fluorescent lights in unpleasant, unhygienic hospital- and Surgery environments,which had no benefit to me, it only gave me severe flare-ups of my Lupus/MCTD due to the photosensitivity from which I also suffer, which in itself is a danger to my health.This was never ever considered by the doctors, in fact many denied its existence.I know it seems that I am more at risk not going to any doctorsbut having followed this path for over five years I do not look at it that way;I feel it is my only choice at the moment and I feel comfortable with it.Good luck from Kristina.
My suggestions are based on your being a pre-dialysis/transplant patient and not on Medicare.You can start by lodging a complaint against your former nephrologist with the Washington State Department of Health:http://www.doh.wa.gov/hsqa/MQAC/ComplaintFAQ.htmHowever, they will not get involved with billing issues.Secondly, I suggest you contact Bill Peckham (bill.peckham@yahoo.com), a kidney patient advocate who lives in Washington and should be knowledgeable about patient recourse in the state. Check out Bill's web site - "Dialysis from the Sharp End of the Needle" - at www.billpeckham.com for excellent information on patient advocacy and esrd treatment issues. Lastly, you always have the option of contacting an attorney who specializes in medical malpractice. Most will give you an initial consultation at no charge to see if your complaint has merit for a successful lawsuit.My personal advice? Send a letter (with a cc to the WSDOH) to your former nephrologist explaining exactly what you stated in your post above, file a formal complaint with the WSDOH and then let it go. You are under a ton of stress right now with all that is going on in your life and don't need to be wasting energy on the former nephrologist. You have found a new one who is meeting your needs so consider this a new start and move on. Put all your efforts into doing as well as possible with CKD and in learning about your options for ESRD treatment.
report to state medical board, hit the reply button on the search engine for consumer reviews, and my personal favorite: ask them if they've ever heard of youtube!seriously, we have the same thing where hubbys first doc is concerned. still getting bills. i wrote a letter but no response. i throw em in the burn pile. not the best response but you can't take something we don't have.*i should add that the 3rd time was a charm when switched docs. the ones we have now are excellent.they know i am a strong advocate for my husband and question everything and school myself. at the transplant eval they asked me how i learned all i had, i said the internet. there was and is no support group for this and we were stumbling in the dark alot. i've caught alot of mistakes, like drug overdoses, slapping a BP cuff over the IV, continuing to prescribe a certain med with a bad side effect he has after i ask for different. the doc is great though, he will look up a new med to make sure its on the walmart 4$ list, and i know he has a ton of other patients. his bedside manner is perfect. his nurse PA i've had issues with. after 4 days in ICU i told her i can do this at home. she threatened AMA if we left, says "you can't just leave", i said "what you'll arrest us?"..then i just said i'll call the insurance co and tell them there is no reason for us to be there. she then called his doc, who said what the heck are you people doing, they need to go home, discharge them.
I always admired your system:You know where you are, you pay and if you are not able to pay.at least you know where you stand, and that knowledge might give you at least a chance to find other ways.