The office is on the second floor and out of habit, I started up the stairs. By the landing, I was sure that had been a mistake, but it was too late to turn back and take the elevator.
Up to the office. No one in line, a couple of people in the waiting room. To the receptionist window.
"Date of birth?"
I told her.
"Do you have an appointment?"
"No, I'm a walk-in. The online nurse said it was okay?"
"What are you here for?"
"My back. I strained it a week ago Sunday and it still hurts. Pretty bad." The small of my back was, in fact, a knot of fire at that point. Taking the stairs wasn't a wise choice.
"Oh, we don't do back pain walk-ins."
"What?"
She repeated the statement.
"But the nurse-- Here, I can show you." Which I did -- called up the conversation on my phone and handed it to her.
She agreed the nurse had told me to go that office for my back pain. Unfortunately -- and she wasn't unsympathetic -- the nurse was wrong. They could maybe see me on the 18th?
That was a week away. By that point, as the Stoics put it, either the pain would come to an end or I would figure something out. I thanked her and left. Since I had the app open, I texted to the online help system that the ortho clinic didn't accept walk-ins for back problems. They expressed sympathy. You will not be surprised how very little pain relief there is in sympathy, no matter how sincerely meant.
I took the elevator downstairs.
Update: I do not, in fact, have an appointment with my doctor next Tuesday. Either I misunderstood the nurse at the clinic last weekend or she misspoke. It's for July 14, and now I can't see the ortho specialist until June 22. I went ahead and scheduled it, but I'm going to try for the regular clinic tomorrow. I'd go today (Friday as I revise this) but the muscle relaxer has me way too out of it to drive.

No comments:
Post a Comment