Our go to urgent care medical walk-in doctor closed his office during the pandemic and moved back to Iran with no notice. He was a wonderful doctor and I'd been taking my mom to him for about 12 years. My mom a couple weeks ago needed to see a doctor so I took her over the Hacksensack Meridian Health Urgent Care medical walk-in here in town. Hackensack Meridian Health is the largest provider in NJ now as they own over a dozen hospitals and hundreds of other facilities like Urgent Care offices. So I took my mom over there because she had a big red circle 3 inch diameter on her arm and it felt hot. Probably reaction to the 2nd covid booster shot she got. They refused to see her saying "we did not cause the medical issue so we do not have to see you". The receptionist said go to the ER. That to me is the stupidest reason I ever heard of. It wasn't serious enough to go to the ER. It wasn't innocent enough to wait 3 weeks to get an appointment with a primary care practice doctor. It fit the basic definition of why an 84 year old woman would go to an Urgent Care medical walk-in on a Saturday morning. To get a few kind words from a doctor, tell her she's not dying, and look at the circle and tell her to take benadryl or something. 90 percent of medical care for the elderly is psychological I think. I am livid still that they refused to see my mom. Gave her severe symptoms of stress and anxiety for 3 days because they refused to see her. Are there rules for office designated as Urgent Care in NJ?
Or similar.
If you stick a sign on your door advertising urgent care for the general public you'd better have a flipping good reason for turning a patient away unseen. I'll be interested to hear how James gets on with his complaint.
Mind you, there are some very odd goings-on in primary care all over. There always *have* been, of course, but these times we're living in do seem to be particularly "interesting" in the Chinese curse sense of the word. In our little backwater city, five or six general practices have amalgamated into one brave new corporate group with a grand shiny tower block of a building supposed to house one-stop access to every conceivable healthcare service short of acute care. Exciting! Except I'd heard rumours from clients about how difficult it was to speak to a GP now - about prescriptions, new side effects, problems with taking medication, all the little ills you're supposed to ask your doctor about - and then last Monday I needed to ask one simple admin question that anyone there could have dealt with. From 08:00 to 17:00 I called their number at regular intervals. Normally you join the waiting system - "you. are. caller number. thirty NINE. in the queue" - and you sit there with a nice cup of coffee and the crossword and leave your phone on speaker and it's not really a problem. But on Mondays you can't even join the wait. The outgoing message says something like "all our reception team are working at capacity to help our patients. If your requirements are urgent go to your nearest Emergency Department, or call back later." There is also an online form you can fill in, and then when you submit it you get a message saying they aim to respond within 48 hours. And where does that leave my little old lady client who's been sick an hour after she took her new medication and doesn't know if it matters or not, eh?
My advice is that on the occasions when you come across a doctor or allied healthcare professional who is both helpful and effective, write the name down, get their number or email address and then don't let them out of your sight.
You’ve already taken this to the providers employer. You got a written communication back saying they are looking into it. Work with them.
The anger you’ve displayed here won’t be conducive to further talks, and you suspicions about illegal discrimination could well be unwarranted because you can’t know the whole situation.
I know someone who had a large cyst lanced at an urgent care. It exploded, sending bloody smelly pus all over the room. Other medical maladies could involve Explosive and messy vomit, poo or pee, and that wouldn’t be something a clinic would typically share especially amidst handling the situation. Or the doctor may have himself been feeling under the weather or managing an emergent situation.
Not saying any of those are true, but they could be equally or more plausible than your immediate assumption this is age discrimination.
They did not refuse care to her, they felt that her problem could be beyond the level of care that they provide, and that it would be wrong to go through the whole urgent care workup and THEN be told to go to the ER.
At 84, she is medically frail (no matter how she seems to a lay person). Good care would be to have a PCP, and once she has scheduled an initial appt with one, she may wait 3 weeks. However, once she is on that wait list, that practice can advise you what to do. It might have saved a trip to urgent care.
A pharmacist can give information about an over the counter product for you to choose to you. That is not a substitute for medical advice.
Her sx could be reaction at COVID injection site, some sort of tick or insect bite that could cause both infection in the soft tissue of her arm and systemic infection, or some unusual skin cancer manifestation. And plenty of other things.
No provider can make decisions about diagnosis and treatment without both examining the patient and getting relevant lab work, checking previous medical records, etc. No provider will risk their own hard earned license to practice their skill and earn a living by failing to meet the basic standard of care.
It is risking his license to refuse to see a person based on age, that because a person is elderly, they would have medicare, and thus not the kind of money they want per visit. That is against the law. And also, the doctor in this setting is not the provider. Hackensack Meridian Health is the provider, and the doctor is employed to work there.
That said, and partly because it is such transparent tosh, it also sounds to me like the third or fourth argument a stressed-out receptionist might put up in defence against a frustrated and annoyed relative trying to get his mother seen when for other reasons it wasn't possible to offer her a slot. How busy was the clinic that day?
I suppose even private providers who describe their services as Urgent Care are regulated and have to have some sort of approved triage system. I have to go to bed in a minute because I have a week's work to fit in to tomorrow, but if you have more time at your disposal you could have a trawl through
https://nj.gov/health/healthfacilities/
and see if there are any pointers there.
Another issue is that doctors schedules are so full that they often don't accept new patients, no matter what (this is how it is in my state, MN).
Your statement that healthcare is a "right" in NJ is not accurrate. This is from your governor's website:
“New Jersey has advanced strong policies to protect access to health care for our residents, access which I **believe** is a human right. With this law, we take another step in securing the access families need to gaining more affordable health coverage."
Someone believing something is a "right" is not the same as it actually being a legal right. Your state protects *access* to healthcare, but it's not codified into law as a right that I'm aware of. FYI if it was a right and the government provided the "free" healthcare to all, it would basically be Medicaid. Many of us on this forum who have to deal with Medicaid have a few choice words about it's quality and bureaucracy.
One more fact to ponder: the US is short 30,000 doctors because of the increase in the boomer and somewhat large millenial population, and due to med school being so outrageously expensive, and also the US having a very strict policy about what it takes to permit non-citizen doctors to practice medicine here.
You bringing your LO so that a very busy doctor can meerly "reassure" her when her issue was clearly not urgent was not a productive decision for anyone. Does your state have a nurse's hotline where in the future you can first call to get guidance from a licensed nurse who can tell you whether you can do home care remedies, need to go to Urgent Care or go straight to the ER? My state has this. Please see if this is a resource for your mom for future medical issues. It's not a doctor or medical staff's job to talk your mom off the edge — it's your responsibility. Our elderly LOs need us to do this a lot and we all need to learn how to do it so we don't exhaust ourselves and others.
I will be honest here: if I was the person waiting after you in that clinic office knowing your mom's case was not truly urgent when I or my child had an actual medical issue, I'd be pretty pissed and rightfully so. FYI I've sat in an empty ER *for hours* when my mom broke her arm and another time when she needed stitches in her head. We have no idea what's really going on behind the scenes.
When people perceive things as a "right" or get something for free, they tend to overuse the resource. That's been proven over and over. Finally, "free" healthcare is not really free, it is paid for by taxpaying citizens.
And I never said it was free. I AM SAYING IT IS A RIGHT UNDER THE CIVIL RIGHTS ACT OF 1975 IN THE HEALTHCARE SECTION. WALK-IN OFF THE STREET STORE FRONT DOCTORS OFFICES OPEN TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC AT WILL, NO APPOINTMENT, DO NOT HAVE THE RIGHT TO SEE A PATIENT IS ELDERLY AND START MAKING UP EXCUSES TO NOT SEE HER. IT IS A CIVIL RIGHTS VIOLATION TO DENY A PERSON A DOCTOR BASED ON AGE IN THIS SETTING.
I remember when our insurance provider, Kaiser, shut DOWN their building entirely during the pandemic. When they finally FINALLY reopened, I told my doctor I thought it was horrifying that in the middle of a pandemic, my INSURANCE PROVIDER decided to SHUT THEIR DOORS leaving me totally stranded in the event I needed medical care! Know what she said? "Oh the CDC told us we had to shut down." Okaaaay, then let me rephrase: I think it was horrifying that in the middle of a pandemic, my INSURANCE PROVIDER took orders from the CDC and decided to SHUT THEIR DOORS leaving me totally stranded in the event I needed medical care. Truth is, the medical industry these days uses the CYA principle instead of doing the right thing oftentimes, which is giving US the medical care we are seeking! Ain't that the truth?
Sorry this happened to you and your mom, James. Seeking justice often leaves us depleted, doesn't it?
Your comments could be construed as libel.
I can only think of one time I didn't wait at least an hour in an urgent care clinic, and that was when my husband darned near cut off one of his fingers with a power saw. Still, they did take us in and look at it before sending us to the ER. It was clearly out of their league.
"I do apologize for the delay in our response, I was working on an email to your original when the second came into our mailbox. We appreciate you taking the time to write us this detailed message. We take these very seriously since we want to ensure all our patients are given the best treatment possible. That said, it's disappointing to learn about your mother's treatment at our Freehold Urgent Care location. The behavior you experienced is not representative of our standards. Please accept our apology and contact the Office of Patient Experience if you wish to discuss this matter further."
Thank you,
Nicole
The Office of Patient Experience
Jersey Shore University Medical Center
1945 Route 33, Neptune, NJ 07753
Email: