Taxing Matters
Overtaxed Member
Could it be an insurance requirement?
Not likely. No health insurance policy I've ever had or read imposed that kind of requirement.
Could it be an insurance requirement?
Yes, this. This is, in essence, what I was going to post.It is generally best to first address all questions about a surgery to the doctor who performed the surgery. The surgeon has a vested interest in the outcome of the surgery. No surgeon, in other words, wants another doctor to second guess what he did.
Only if the surgeon cannot or will not address the concerns of the patient adequately should another doctor/surgeon be consulted.
Your wife needs to address these concerns with the nurse practitioner on Wednesday.That her foot is healed would be an acceptable outcome! That Dr. has been very noncommunicative and obviously of hiding information that he already had such as a loose hardware which he ignored for 3 months before removing it, the infection that he also ignored for 3 months etc. He has been an extremely poor communicator putting it mildly. Last visit he actually told my wife that her foot is healing and he may have to remove it!! Of course we don't even know why my wife was referred to him from the other orthopedic surgeon. This 1 have good credentials but...
At the very least we want to be told what's happening what I don't believe he's telling her, he is just hiding many of the facts!
I recommend your wife waits to see what she learns on Wednesday.At some point we are at right now, if she doesn't get satisfactory answers we are definitely going to have to pursue other courses of action! Of course that doesn't help the GP situation any.
The “it” apparently refers to the loose hardware, not the foot.I'm reading a lot of what was said but little of what you/your wife actually asked. When the doc said "That her foot is healing and they may have to remove it" did either of you ask what "it" is? Or why?
Fair enough.... Odd wording, then.The “it” apparently refers to the loose hardware, not the foot.
Msradell is using speech recognition software so what is communicated might not be as clear as it otherwise would be.Fair enough.... Odd wording, then.![]()
Certainly if the doctor is talking about removing the foot, however, another orthopedic surgeon should be consulted immediately. And a medical-malpractice attorney.