A similar thing happened when I tried to schedule my echo this time. I walked out of the doctor's office this time with the paperwork but handed it off to scheduling who was supposed to fax the request to Evergreen Cardiology. I gave a few minutes and called them to set up the appointment. Nope, don't have paperwork yet but she said she'd call me as soon as she got it. This was on a Friday. By the following Wednesday, I still hadn't heard from anyone. After a phone call to Cardiology, I was told they still haven't receive the necessary paperwork. So I called my doctor's nurse. She transferred me to scheduling. I spoke with someone there and gave an additional fax number she could use. Thursday....no phone call to schedule an appointment. Still nothing on Friday. Keep in mind that the two offices are just on the other side of the hospital...not across town. I called again on Monday to the Cardiology office. "Nope, no paperwork." Back in touch with scheduling... "We faxed it to both numbers." Fortunately at this point, the lady in scheduling said she would call cardiology directly and see what is going on. I willing gave up my middle-man-status. Waited for the rest of the afternoon, but still no appointment. Finally, on Tuesday, the scheduler for Cardiology called and asked if this was a good time to schedule an appointment. I told her of course it was (I didn't dare let her off the phone!) We scheduled an appointment for the next day and it should be plenty of time for the cardiologist to look before my scheduled Herceptin infusion next Thursday. For something that should have been so simple, technology certainly complicated it.
Despite my mini-rant on the "joy" of technology, I am very thankful today. Because I deserve to die for my sins. Jesus didn't have to, but He stepped in and took my place. He died a cruel death. Wretched. Good Friday. A day for thankfulness. A day of grace and mercy. A good day to pause and reflect...

2 comments:
Hi Linda,
You've been on my mind lately, so I dug out your Christmas letter (which I still haven't properly put away in a scrapbook, even though it's April now!) and finally visited your blog. I've got a lot of catching up to do! :)
I agree that technological options should make things easier, but it's an imperfect method. We just recently realized that Olivia was not properly immunized, all because when we moved here the nurse put her information into their computer system incorrectly, and there was no paper documentation to compare it with! I'm not ready to abandon paper trails yet!
Anyway, I'm glad to read about spring sports and book discussions, and I take that as encouragement that you are doing relatively well. Very good to hear!
I'll continue to hope (and expect) that your journey, despite all the switchbacks along the trail, will continue on an upward slope to full recovery.
Sending our love from Utah!
Rebecca & Doug & The Girls
Thanks for your kind words, Rebecca. As Becca and I were flying over Utah from Colorado a couple days ago, I thought of you. We sure enjoyed having you as a neighbor...can't believe how long it has been. I love your Christmas letters. I can't believe how big your kids are. I'm feeling well and very thankful for God's faithfulness.
Linda
Post a Comment