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CLPS:
Crumpsall Lane Primary School
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CRPS:
NOT a primary school in Manchester, Great Britain |
Some people think I'm mad for retaining the services of a "concierge" physician when I've successfully run the marathon of applying for coverage through the HealthCare.gov Marketplace, set up by that wonderful bit of legislation known as the Affordable Care Act.
Okay, "Obamacare." Jeez. A girl tries to deflate the negative connotations of a term by providing and modeling alternative linguistic monikers and is shouted down by her imaginary millions of Dear Readers.
Yes, I've adequate and affordable coverage now, and desperately needed it. But nothing has changed, really. Even when I had wonderful but not so affordable coverage under the ACA's early version of Obamacare -- the
PCIP (Pre-Existing Conditions Insurance Program) -- that began back in 2010 and saved my miserable self, I was considered mad for retaining the services of my Go-To-Guy and his flat fee service, then under the aegis of
MDVIP. He's no longer with them, he and his partner. They're Wild Medicos. They've gone rogue. They're MDVIP without the corporation around their neck.
Go-To-Guy saw me through several valleys of death, always opining, in his crisp dark suits, understated cologne, funky eyewear, and with all of the surety of a hardheaded grandmother: "This, too, shall pass." When I had no insurance, he kept me on, and kept me OUT of the hospital. Why was I uninsured, being a bona fide State Employee 'n all? Because my Bizarro World version of BCBS decided it was fair to charge me $1513 a month as a premium, with a deductible over $5,000. So while it wasn't a game, it might have been a sporting challenge for myself and Go-To-Guy, as he kept dozens of balls in the air, and never let one fall to the ground, not even once. I became dirt poor, got sicker, but did not die, mostly out of a desire to see my staid and superb doctor kick major butt. Undoubtedly a conservative sort, he hooted and hollered and did backflips when Obamacare was passed, because then I could finally get the surgeries I needed, and the medications that he preferred, instead of the ones that Walmart sold for $4.
It was fun introducing him to the real world. "Really? You've got to be kidding!" became the standard iterative upon which all of our problem-solving conversations were built. I doubt he's ever been in a Walmart.
The real Go-To-Guy is a compassionate, insightful, incredibly well-informed physician who decided that he wanted to return to the art of medicine as well as perfecting his scientific approaches to care. He was tired of dealing with insurance companies and rushing through patient visits -- though, having been with him a good decade before he changed his practice model, I can attest to never once having felt that he was timing the visit or needed to be anywhere but where he was. That's not to say he hasn't had his moments of rapidly rising color from chin to brow, complete with beads of sweat, and a cramping hand grip -- moments when I'd touched some nerve or other.
Go-To-Guy believes in the best of people. He's shocked by any anecdote that relays an example of less than outstanding human behavior. He's cute that way and I figure that attribute to be an excellent counterweight to my inbred pessimism.
And yes, there's that business of him saving my life a few times, and there's that aspect of acute intuition bolstered by being up-to-date and actually listening to this whiny, bitchy patient with the weird cluster of diseases. Truth be told, however, the next time he is going over labs or a radiology report, muttering to himself, and I hear... "That doesn't make any sense... but this is Retired Educator, so who knows?" -- I'm going to bop him on his pate. Well, as my reach is shortening and my strength waning, I probably could only whack one of his bony knees.
But... with the improvements being made in the field of assistive devices, add a flowery cane or a rubber-tipped grabber, and I could infict serious damage almost anywhere on his lanky body.
Right.
So.
I see Go-To-Guy this week for the first time since January. We maintain an email correspondence, mostly consisting of Q-and-A sessions and my need to vent. This meeting will be our first when, technically, I have another physician serving as "primary care provider." And so, I imagine we will still do a soft shoe rendition of quizzing and catch-up, medication reviews, but now he won't be able to order labs or imaging, or write for meds.
What shall I call my new Primary Care Provider, a young, inexperienced, very pregnant, well-intentioned and woefully-unprepared physician in her second year of practice? Go-To-Guy and I had gleefully thought to outsmart my new ACA Market Place HMO by slipping the list of available providers to his partner's wife, who works as a hospitalist for the same HMO. We giggled and called her our "mole." The mole eliminated my new Primary Care Provider straightaway, first thing, with nary a hint of hesitation. Next to my new Primary Care Provider's name, she wrote, in caps, "NO." Then Our Mole underlined her capped "NO."
NO. Okay. I bolded it and turned it red.
Mole-guided, I picked the guy with sterling credentials, 15 years experience, row upon row of accolades, and the highest approval of the hospitalists with whom he worked. I made the appointment and the acid levels in my stomach decreased.
And so, of course, at my first "Meet and Greet" appointment with this fine doctor we chose, talented physician dude announced that, unfortunately, his patient load was already too large, and so, like a snake, he transferred me to the medico who had been branded with the capitalized, underlined negatory. I must have looked like a large-mouthed bass hungry for oxygen as my lips flapped in the overheated exam room. He did slip in, the sly devil, that she was scheduled to go on maternity leave in May, and that he would probably pick up my care during that time.
Why insist on choosing that facility? Why there? I dunno, really. It's brand new and everyone is super nice, super efficient, super interested in customer service evaluations. There are onsite lab, radiology and pharmacy services. The truth? I had visions of needing to flee, and hoofing it over to the safety of Go-To-Guy's office, one street over, and the adjacent two hospitals, in case I needed urgent care. Perhaps, too, a compulsion to talk politics might come over me and there's no one better than Go-To-Guy's gatekeeper nurse, Justine, for potty-mouthed dissing of right wing extremist asshats.
Having now had my second "Meet and Greet," I think I will call my new PCP "The 17-Minute
Uh-Huh." This commemorates our first encounter, spent ordering most of my medications, during which "uh-huh, uh-huh" was the response to each medication I pronounced aloud. Well, actually, the "uh-huh, uh-huh" began to arrive mid-drug name after the first three prescriptions. I was getting peeved, but then a strobing pink light induced seizure activity as she interrupted a response with:
"Our 17 minutes are up!"
The 17-Minute
Uh-Huh has many redeeming qualities. She's cautious. She can explain the parts of the ear in great detail (I am having that benign kind of vertigo that comes on whenever I turn my head to the right! "So don't turn your head to the right!"). This was at our second meeting, brought on by a high temp, a high white count, the aforementioned benign vertigo, and a messed up thyroid assessment that kept stomping its little computerized feet and claiming I had both Hashimoto's hypothyroid AND Grave's disease. Since everything else defied logic (she's new), The 17-Minute
Uh-Huh glommed onto ear physiology.
But I will have a hard time getting over her blank look upon hearing "CRPS," and the aha-moment when I offered up the acronym "RSD," instead. The trigger of a vague memory brought on the explicitly memorable: "Oh, yes!
Something Sympathetic
Something!"
Go-To-Guy has this annoying habit of pulling out some electronic device and looking up things he does not know, or to verify information. He's particular. And he loves learning. He has other habits I've noted through the years, like the first time he saw me after I "developed" CRPS. Actually kneeling on the floor, he was carefully examining my right foot -- at the time, the only visibly afflicted part of my body, and that was only a subtle blue hue and swelling, despite the outrageous pain there and in my left hand and forearm. Well, my left hand had a "claw" formation, but I don't like remembering it, so I'll forget it again now. He asked permission before touching the thing at the end of my leg -- compare that to Jose "The Turd" Ochoa and his reputation for suddenly grabbing at affected limbs; compare that to the countless doctors, nurses, and aides who have poked, grabbed, and stuck needles in that region without warning, much less permission. There are two nurses and one doctor who learned the lesson well when I kicked them in their respective midsections -- I was semi-conscious and on a respirator at the time, if that absolves me at all of such violence. It doesn't, of course, but all three were wonderfully forgiving.
See how I run from what needs saying?
At that time, the day Go-To-Guy first saw the purported foot, the orthopedic surgeon responsible for its pitiable condition, was Dr. Eric Ward Carson? Let's get philosophical and call him the
Thick Necked Truth Deflector. In the beginning, there was a different word, a different descriptive expression, very stylized, ladylike: Dr. Doo-Doo Head. He denied, deflected, referred, mumbled, threatened, demeaned... did everything but diagnose and treat the obvious. It was after weeks of that barrage of crap that I saw dear Go-To-Guy.
Me: "Dr. Eric Ward Carson says this will go away, it's not a problem, I'm over-reacting, and that there is no such thing as CRPS. He says that CRPS is a psychological disorder."
[In desperation, I had seen a partner of Dr. Carson's, someone very trustworthy, who had replaced my right hip the year before, and had referred me to Dr. Carson for the left shoulder replacement gone woefully awry. This partner took one look at my leg and said, "Oh no, you've got RSD..." He then went on to deconstruct the acronym, and introduce its pal, CRPS, writing it all out on the crinkly paper covering the exam table. I still have the bit of paper. It was my first clue to what was causing so much pain and... well, you know my tiresome litany. He urged me to see Dr. Carson as soon as possible and start treatment. But, as I said above, Dr. Carson's reaction was to deny the evidence before him.]
Go-To-Guy: "It is very real, it is not in your head, and yes, you have it. I'm so sorry."
Why am I ruminating on this bad stuff today? The mail. In one large envelope, I received a copy of the labs and my "current problem list" from The 17-Minute
Uh-Huh. In another large envelope, I received a copy of my records from the neurologist I can no longer see -- the Hawaiian-shirt sporting genius, in shorts and Birkenstocks mid-winter, who made the "official" CRPS diagnosis in 2003, who ranted and raved about the cover-up operation put into play by Saint Joseph's Hospital of Atlanta, Dr. Doo-Doo Head, with the ample and able assistance of Doctors Leslie Kelman and Steven Sween.
This Stylish Neuro-Guy, seeing my confusion (at that point, pure fatigue), had grabbed a big book, what we love to call a
tome, dedicated in its entirety to CRPS / RSD, and flipped to the big, bright, colored photographic section... and there I was. "See! This could be you!" He even loped out to the waiting room to drag a sleepy Fred into the exam room. "See! This could be her!"
No, that's not how it reads in the medical records. There, I am an "unfortunate woman." There, I am diagnosed clearly with causalgia, not RSD -- or in the modern parlance, with CRPS Type II. Why does it matter? Ultimately, it only changes a bad attitude. Doctors who still resist the diagnosis of "RSD" will sing a different tune if you change the name to "causalgia." And there are those who do the same if you say, "I've CRPS Type 2, not Type 1." The difference relies on the identification through EMG, or nerve testing, of nerve "lesions" as the cause of the neuropathic pain in the path of that nerve. Stylish Neuro-Guy identified three separate nerve lesions, two in my right leg, and one in my left forearm -- the original sites of injury.
It's not a cause for rejoicing, this shift in designation. In any event, now I have both Type 1 and Type 2, as the disease spread from left arm to right, and right leg to left. The facial involvement was God's private joke. But there were times I might have been able to shut up some Talking Irritant by producing the EMG results. It never occurred to me to get copies, as the "treatments," or lack thereof, are the same, no matter the type. Causalgia / Type II is taken more seriously because it has demonstrable proof, and, I guess, because its "outlook" is more dire.
So that's why this is all spinning in my head.
Because here I am again... reinventing the wheel with "Oh, yes!
Something Sympathetic
Something!" and referrals to the same orthopedic surgeons who have already tried their damnedest to save my bones, likely infected at the time I "acquired" CRPS.
Oh, to take that moment back.
Here I am, still fighting bill collectors who are calling to grab illegal "balance billing," stuck in a wheelchair and a freaking hospital bed, reliving the diagnosis with each newbie doctor, repeating tests that do not need repeating and that has done nothing but grind, grind, grind in the reality I'd be best served to forget.
My new Primary Care Physician, The 17-Minute
Uh-Huh, still has CLPS listed as Number One on my Problem List. I wonder what that stands for? A
quick search turns up:
CLPS
Colipase Pancreatic
CLPS
Closest Lattice Point Search
CLPS
Criminal Law Policy Section (Canada and Australia)
CLPS
Calibration Lamp Power Supply
CLPS
Common Logic with Power Supplies
CLPS
Center for Logic and Philosophy of Science
CLPS
Crumpsall Lane Primary School (UK)
I'm going to go with... "Common Logic with Power Supplies." I definitely have huge problems with common logic, and power supplies? Don't get me started!
So, heck yes, my mocking detractors, I will forego my one Diet Ginger Ale a day, consider halving my coffee intake, eat canned tuna in lieu of fresh tilapia, cut off television service, sell whatever I have left to sell (a food processor, meat grinder, and a snazzy fondue set), to pay for access to Go-To-Guy, my concierge practitioner, who knows to ask permission before touching the thing attached to the purported limb adjacent to my rotting right hip. He's my back-up, my reassurance.
He's Go-To-Guy.
2013 L. Ryan
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