I have to be honest. Â Being at the bottom rungs of income levels can mean crossing some very odd paths.
There have been times that the Poor family has not had health insurance. Â That can be a problem for me, since I take a large handful of prescription medicines every day. Â It also means that every so often I have to go wave my bottles in front of a doctor and say, “More, please.” Â During the rough patches I have gone to a nice little place not far away. Â They only charged a flat $25 for an appointment, which put them miles ahead of the other charity medical centers near me. Â Those want to go over your finances and then base their fee on your income and expenses. I prefer a clear price so I don’t waste my time if it’s too expensive.
At the moment, I have a dicey Obamacare plan from You’ve Never Heard of Us Medical that at least pays for my pills and a doctor visit to get new prescriptions. Â But I can’t get in with the doctor for another month, and last week I was out of some of my most important pills. Â So off I went to the friendly neighborhood clinic. Â I noticed there were no cars in the parking lot. Â But once or twice before they had been closed because the doctor scheduled for that day couldn’t come in, so I didn’t worry. Â I got out to see if there was a note about when they would be open again. Â No note. Â So I looked through the window and saw… no furniture. Â Oops.
I still wasn’t panicked. Â Just before we started going there, they had moved to that building from another just down the street. Â So I whipped out my smartphone to see if they were somewhere else.
They had been closed since March. Â Sad. Â Then my eyes bugged out. Â I learned that it had shut down after one of the people who worked there and her son were arrested for running a pill mill. Â For those more innocent, that means they were selling prescriptions to drugs like oxycodone. Â My nice, shabby but comfortable, friendly doctors’ office had been the sort of place I helped raid back in my law enforcement days.
But the cherry on the top of awful is that the name of the person in the news articles sounded very familiar. Â Was she the doctor who told me that I should apply for Social Security disability, that she had patients on it that weren’t as sick as me? Â The logical part of my brain reminded me that after that I had a doctor in a very reputable practice agree that I should apply, but the other part was screaming that I had spent years struggling on the advice of a drug dealer.
I pawed through some drawers and found an old pill bottle with the doctor’s name on it. Â Not the same woman. Â Whew. Â Yvonne and Yolanda are close enough to ring bells, and it was a relief to realize she wasn’t the one involved. Â I really liked her a lot. Â Earlier today I checked into it again and found a picture of the woman involved. Â She was one of the office staff that I had seen several times. Â I admit the whole thing left me a bit rattled.
Oh, and for those who like a complete story, I discovered that my local CVS drugstore had a little mini-clinic that took my insurance. Â The nice lady there gave me a three month supply of all my medicines, more than enough to last me until I see my new doctor.
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