Medical Adventures Part III

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Not all medical experiences are life or death options, but of course those are the ones that you hear about and they get your attention.  When the medical event occurs outside your home area or perhaps outside your home country, it makes you stop and think about how much we take for granted.  If it is a real emergency such as an auto accident or a heart attack, the local system, however structured, will usually kick in, and hopefully resolve the situation effectively.

When you don’t have a known Doctor to call and your medical degree is a bit lacking, what alternative do you have.  We frequently hear about how “illegals” or those without insurance are driving up the cost of care, because their resource is always the emergency room of the local hospital.  Perhaps this matter will be resolved as the Supreme Court works through the arguments regarding the Patient Protection & Affordability Care Act (PPACA). However, if you have insurance but you don’t want to go to emergency or you are in a location where the emergency room is not close, what do you do?


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Don’t forget this Option

If you have been following this blog, you know I’m in Costa Rica, so I, like many Americans these days, am getting exposed to a new set of rules when they leave the country.  However, I’m also learning that maybe I can apply some of these lessons back home. 

There is a link in the medical chain that I think many of us, often overlook. It is the pharmacy.  For many of us the pharmacy is a place we go to pick up the pills or salves that our doctor or their nurse calls in.  We don’t give full consideration to their training and never think of them as someone who can share their knowledge.  In the US the rules for prescribing drugs are pretty strong and often prevent simpler and less costly solutions. However, on three different occasions, the local pharmacist came to the rescue.

One case involved curing a rather strong infection from stepping on an unforeseen insect. After working through a vague description of the insect, a salve, that immediately went to work, was prescribed by the pharmacist.  In the second instance a guest became quite sick with a throat infection. The pharmacist again had the solution. Over-the-counter solutions are more available here and seem to be more effective, since they are frequently those that require a doctor’s prescription in the US. The last situation involved a guest that was a diabetic who used an insulin pump. The pump quit working during the visit. A replacement was shipped the same day, but overnight has a different meaning here. The backup solution was again the local pharmacy. The technical discussion was more demanding, but language was not a problem. The pharmacist had the proper sized needles and appropriate medicine.


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Think About It

 Not sure if this is how we picture medicine to be in a “third world” country.  We should know the practice of medicine comes in many forms. The important thing is the outcome, not the system. So my adventure has taught me that one part of the system, the pharmacist, should not be overlooked.  You may not always know where to find the emergency room or an MD, but I’ll bet just about any where you are, you can find a pharmacist.





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    Ardon Schambers has 39 years of professional HR experience and is a Principal of P3HR Consulting & Services, LLC

    Mike Blake has over 15 years of safety and leadership experience in industry with extensive transportation expertise.

    Jim Kohmescher worked in both the private and public sectors in human resource management positions. He has a Master's degree and served as an adjunct college instructor.

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