yoopermom
Come join Bravo by the fire...
- Joined
- Sep 27, 2000
- Messages
- 4,409
Backstory:we are lucky enough to have, in our tiny town, a clinic with one dr(owner), one p.a., two nurses, and receptionists. It's one of those places where you can get "squeezed in" last minute, and everyone's very nice. Otherwise, it's 30 miles+ to drs, hospital, etc.
So, today I call at 8am right when they open and say, "DS is leaving for MT tomorrow and has a bad wet cough. Could you get him in or should we take him to the same day clinic (in X town)?" They tell me to bring him in at 9:30, at which time there are NO cars in the lot, no patients in the waiting room. DS and I are put in a room and are discussing the math quiz he just took before that, when, after 5-10 min, the p.a. comes in. I said, to her, "Sorry to bother you but with with his leaving I thought I should bring him in", she sits at the little desk and starts to read/write, so I finish my interrupted sentence quickly with DS. (I swear it was like 8-10 words only, and we whispered, thinking she was busy.) She suddenly says, "I'll be back" and rushes out the door!
I told DS, "Either she heard an emergency, or she's mad, we better apologize when she comes back in." She let us sit about another 5 minutes, then POUNDED on our door, came in and said, gruffly, "Well, now let's try this AGAIN". I said, "I'm sorry if we offended you, we thought you were busy reviewing something". She just shook her head, gave DS his exam, and at the end said something to the effect that she was "sorry". I apologized again, because by now I could tell that she was pretty upset.
So now I'm thoroughly confused! I know the dr. has had some medical issues of her own, so the p.a. has a lot of responsibilty right now. When a p.a. enters the room, were we supposed to be absolutely silent until spoken to? And, if she was upset, shouldn't she have talked to us about it instead of storming out and then pounding in? DS doesn't want to go back there, now, but I'm just hoping she was having a bad day (we've all had those). I just wish she wouldn't have done it in front of a child.
I'm torn between sending her a note, blowing it off as a "bad day" for her, or switching clinics. What do you think?
Terri
So, today I call at 8am right when they open and say, "DS is leaving for MT tomorrow and has a bad wet cough. Could you get him in or should we take him to the same day clinic (in X town)?" They tell me to bring him in at 9:30, at which time there are NO cars in the lot, no patients in the waiting room. DS and I are put in a room and are discussing the math quiz he just took before that, when, after 5-10 min, the p.a. comes in. I said, to her, "Sorry to bother you but with with his leaving I thought I should bring him in", she sits at the little desk and starts to read/write, so I finish my interrupted sentence quickly with DS. (I swear it was like 8-10 words only, and we whispered, thinking she was busy.) She suddenly says, "I'll be back" and rushes out the door!
I told DS, "Either she heard an emergency, or she's mad, we better apologize when she comes back in." She let us sit about another 5 minutes, then POUNDED on our door, came in and said, gruffly, "Well, now let's try this AGAIN". I said, "I'm sorry if we offended you, we thought you were busy reviewing something". She just shook her head, gave DS his exam, and at the end said something to the effect that she was "sorry". I apologized again, because by now I could tell that she was pretty upset.
So now I'm thoroughly confused! I know the dr. has had some medical issues of her own, so the p.a. has a lot of responsibilty right now. When a p.a. enters the room, were we supposed to be absolutely silent until spoken to? And, if she was upset, shouldn't she have talked to us about it instead of storming out and then pounding in? DS doesn't want to go back there, now, but I'm just hoping she was having a bad day (we've all had those). I just wish she wouldn't have done it in front of a child.
I'm torn between sending her a note, blowing it off as a "bad day" for her, or switching clinics. What do you think?
Terri