I had a patient today, who admittedly has some serious but old spinal problems, tell me he is almost out of his pain meds that were prescribed by another provider a week ago. " I maybe have 2 days of meds left" he tells me. This fella had seen me for his initial visit and subsequent visit but then his claim was denied. So he had to go to the ER for his pain meds. I had to dig but he fessed up to going to the ED on several occasions while his worker's comp claim was adjudicated to get pain meds for his train wreck of a neck. So, since he told about all the visits I had dug up and investigated so I gave him an Rx for #60 oxycodone and put him on a narc contract. He new what it was before I even mentioned it. He signs it and went off to fill the Rx. I get a call from the pharmacist telling me that this fine gentleman just had an Rx filled 2 days ago for #120 oxycodone. I told the pharmacist to rip up my Rx and to tell the patient I asked to do so. The patient just called as I type this telling me he went back and counted all of his pills and he 68 left and that the pharmacist is wrong and that he got the Rx filled 4 days ago. These are the kind of patients that make me question what I am doing. I am sure it isn't as bad as I feel it is, but it seems so many of patients don't want to get better. It seems so many of them lie. Shit, I wish I didn't care but I do.
This is my experience of attending physician assistant school, graduating and working as a PA-C. Mostly. I'll talk about the daily grind too - hopefully some of it will be interesting. Post a comment, please. Even if it is just to say hi or to ask a question. I am a busy PA-C, so I may not respond promptly, but I will eventually. This blog is as much for me as it is for you. Or is that the other way around?
Wednesday, December 14, 2011
Wednesday, December 7, 2011
Love my co-workers
The doc I work with just moved a new injury to my schedule from her's so she could purchase holiday decorations for her office.
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