Monday, January 10, 2022
Monday, January 3, 2022
December 31, 2021
Dr. Grumpy: "This is Dr. Grumpy, returning a call."
Mr. Scan: "Hi, doc, I need to talk to Annie, or whoever schedules tests for your practice."
Dr. Grumpy: "She's off this week, sir. My office message says we're closed until after New Years."
Mr. Scan: "Yeah, I heard that. Um, okay, maybe you can help me... Back in, uh, July, you sent me an order for an MRI. I have to get one every few years to follow up on my meningothingioma whatever, to make sure it isn't growing?"
Dr. Grumpy: "Yes."
Mr. Scan: "Anyway, I've been busy, and I need to get the scan done today, otherwise my deductible starts over tomorrow. So I've been calling MRI places, and none of them can get me in today, and I guess I need an insurance authorization for it, too, so I need you or Annie to get an authorization ASAP, and call one of these places and tell them I'm in a life threatening situation or something to get it done. Let me give you the numbers of the places I've called..."
Dr. Grumpy: "No, sir. Look, this isn't going to happen. Your MRI is not medically urgent, for one thing, and..."
Mr. Scan: "You don't know that! If the tumor is growing I could die from it tonight!!!"
Dr. Grumpy: "Well, it was ordered back in July, as you pointed out. You're the one who didn't call to set it up until the last day of the year. My staff is on vacation now."
Mr. Scan: "It's not like your note said 'please call before Christmas or we'll be closed,' did it?"
Dr. Grumpy: "I'm not going to argue with you sir. The bottom line is that the last day of the year is not the time to call to get a test done that you should have had 5 months ago. Just because you didn't think about this until today doesn't make it an emergency. Call back next week and we'll get it set up for you."
Mr. Scan: "You medical people are all such inconsiderate assholes."
Click
Saturday, December 18, 2021
Monday, December 13, 2021
Bad Reputation
Dr. Grumpy: "How's your floral business doing?"
Mrs. Dixon: "I had to close down... The pandemic just wiped it out."
Dr. Grumpy: "I'm so sorry."
Mrs. Dixon: "Yeah, I mean, nobody saw that coming, but still... Anyway, in some ways it's been a blessing because it let me open a business that's closer to what I really wanted."
Dr. Grumpy: "What are you doing now?"
Mrs. Dixon: "I'm a psychic."
Monday, December 6, 2021
Reruns
Mr. Fatherly: "It was really stressful 3 months ago, because my son and his fiancée moved in with me."
Dr. Grumpy: "How are things now?"
Mr. Fatherly: "Better, my son finally moved out last week."
Dr. Grumpy: "What about his fiancée?"
Mr. Fatherly: "I married her. That's why he moved out."
Monday, November 29, 2021
Round and round we go
Dr. Grumpy: "Has the medication helped?"
Mr. Son: "I think mom is doing okay with it, and the staff at the Alzheimer's home tell me..."
Mrs. Mother: "Wait... the place I'm living at is for Alzheimer's disease?"
Mr. Son: "Yes, mom."
Mrs. Mother: "Why do I live there, anyway?"
Monday, November 22, 2021
Modern life
Guy comes into office, Mary slides open her window.
Mary: "Hi, you have a 1:00 appointment? Okay. Can I make a copy of your insurance card? Thank you... Do you have a mask?"
Mr. Beijerinck: "No. I don't need one."
Mary: "Dr. Grumpy asks that all patients wear them. Let me give you one."
Mr. Beijerinck: "Little lady, the pandemic is over, if there ever was one. I ain't wearing a mask."
Mary: "Sir, because of the nature of his field, Dr. Grumpy sees a lot of patients on medications that suppress their immune systems, so for their protection we ask that everyone wear a mask when they go back to see him. Here's one you can wear during your visit."
Mr Beijerinck: "You want me to wear this?"
Mary: "Yes, just while you're here, please."
Mr. Beijerinck: "Okay, here."
He tears the mask into little pieces, tosses them through the window onto Mary's desk.
Mr. Beijerinck: "That's what I think of your bullshit rules. Now, honey, just go tell the doctor that I'm here for my appointment."
Mary: "Thank you for letting me know. Here's your insurance card back, I haven't copied it. I'll let the doctor know that I cancelled your appointment. Have a nice day."
Mary closes her window, pretends to answer her phone, and ignores him until he leaves.
Monday, November 15, 2021
1:47 a.m.
Dr. Grumpy: "This is Dr. Grumpy, returning a page."
Mr. Lacune: "Hi, thish ish Dave Lacune, you shaw me at the hoshpital a few days ago, when I had a shtroke."
Dr. Grumpy: "Yes sir, are you okay? Your speech is pretty slurred, and I don't remember it having been affected by the stroke."
Mr. Lacune: "I'm fine. Look, you preshcribed Nomocva to me, to keep me from having another a shtroke, but I read about all itsh shide effectsh, and sho now I shtopped it and I'm afraid to take it."
Dr. Grumpy: "I'm kind of concerned you've had another stroke, sir. Your speech is pretty slurred."
Mr. Lacune: "Nah, my shpeech ish like thish because I've been doing tequila shotsh and shmoking weed all night because I'm anxioush."
Pause
Dr. Grumpy: "What are you so anxious about?"
Mr. Lacune: "Becaushe I shtopped Nomocva, sho now I'm worried I might have another shtroke."
Monday, November 8, 2021
Monday, November 1, 2021
Second opinion
Dr. Grumpy: "Let's see... At your last visit I prescribed Flipazol. Did that help?"
Ms. Webb: "No, it didn't do anything."
Dr. Grumpy: "Were there any side effects?"
Ms. Webb: "There were a lot of them. It was terrible! I can't believe you prescribed it for me!"
Dr. Grumpy: "What happened?"
Ms. Webb: "Actually, I never even had it filled. I didn't like all the side effects I read about."
Dr. Grumpy: "Then why did you say it didn't help you?"
Ms. Webb: "A lady I met online told me it wouldn't."
Monday, October 25, 2021
Memories
Anyway, she had a right mastectomy. At the time they waited about a year before they'd put in a breast implant, so during that time she used a prosthetic boob. She'd put it in her bra before leaving for work, and take it out when she got home.
Anyway, there was one day where she had a lot of errands to run, and when she got back was telling my dad how, everywhere she went, she got some strange looks. Nothing horrible, just people seemed surprised. She figured it was something she was wearing, or a large food stain on her blouse, or whatever.
My dad took her down the hall to their bathroom, where she'd left the fake breast lying on the counter.
Monday, October 18, 2021
Random pictures
Okay, time to put up some stuff you guys have sent in.
First is this pizza place. I can only assume the owner isn't familiar with idioms. Either that or he's trying to keep the place empty.
Next, from the "nudge nudge, wink wink" department:
"Only $32? Is that at the same time?" |
One reader wants to know why the Slurpee looks like the poop emoji.
Another says this beauty salon couldn't look more disreputable if it tried:
And lastly, a reader says he ordered a brisket sandwich with onions, and wished they'd abbreviated it differently.
Monday, October 11, 2021
Beep. Beep. Beep.
Dr. Grumpy: "Do you drive?"
Mr. Safety: "Oh, hell no. My seizures have been so unpredictable that I've given it up."
Dr. Grumpy: "Were they ever well-controlled?"
Mr. Safety: "They were good, but not great. It always seemed like one would occur when I'd just started to think they were controlled, and I'd have to stop driving again. I finally gave it up. It just wasn't safe for me, and I don't want to hurt anyone else. My friends and I all work at the same warehouse, so I just carpool with them and chip in gas money each week."
Dr. Grumpy: "That works out. What do you do over there?"
Mr. Safety: "I'm a forklift operator."
Monday, October 4, 2021
Blink
She was 19, here for migraines. She was nervous, had never been to a neurologist before, and her mother was along for emotional support.
We talked a bit, went over some treatment options. Nothing too costly. She worked full-time as a waitress, trying to save money so she could start college soon. We settled on nortriptyline and naproxen, and I began writing out scripts.
As I scribbled, I blinked.
Suddenly the scripts were gone. Instead of paper, I was typing in an online refill for generic sumatriptan… which a minute ago was brand-name, and she couldn’t afford it.
She was still there, across my desk, but she’d changed, too. She wasn’t a waitress anymore. She was working full time as a nurse, was married, and had two daughters. I remembered her having moved away to go to college, then nursing school, then coming back here. I recalled her telling me she'd gotten engaged. I’d treated her migraines through both pregnancies.
The nortriptyline hadn’t helped, and now she was on Aimovig, a drug I hadn’t imagined when she first came to me. In the time between then and now, besides the times she lived out-of-state, I recalled trying a handful of different medications over the years.
During my blink she’d developed a few gray hairs, wrinkles, and pounds from the stresses of daily life, jobs, raising a family, and making ends meet. I’m sure mine are worse.
This is also part of medicine, just as it is in everyday life. Over our careers we see college students mature into adults with jobs and families. We see parents become grandparents. The middle-aged become elderly.
We see people we’ve grown to care about die of things we can’t fix.
Being a doctor reflects the changes we see in our own lives as we travel around the sun. Our patients become a sort of extended family. We aren’t directly involved with their daily events, but we catch up on them here and there, and they see the same changes in us.
The drawings my kids did are still on my office walls, but haven’t been updated in a long time. Picking them up from the after-school program has been replaced by picking them up from the airport.
My hair has gradually thinned over time and become grayer.
The glasses I’ve worn since I was 8 have become bifocals.
All in a blink.