←back to thread

47 points bookofjoe | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
Show context
f6v ◴[] No.42172363[source]
Tried getting an appointment in Denmark. “We don’t take any new patients”. A familiar story when trying to reach many specialists in European countries (Germany, Belgium). Except I doubt they’re getting 500k.
replies(6): >>42172380 #>>42172475 #>>42172494 #>>42172541 #>>42181989 #>>42182843 #
jjice ◴[] No.42172541[source]
Anecdotal, but I'm in the North East US and I called, and I'm not joking, nine primary care offices. Eight of them said they couldn't take anymore patients, and one said I could get an appointment six months later.

I hadn't needed to go to a primary care doctor in my adult life, but it was mind blowing that this was the case. Many friends of mine have had the same experience.

replies(7): >>42172635 #>>42172724 #>>42172758 #>>42172871 #>>42172880 #>>42172885 #>>42177110 #
cg5280 ◴[] No.42172635[source]
Had the same thing in the Midwest about 8 months ago. Had to call a half dozen offices before one would take me and appointments had to be scheduled long in advance. I had not been to the doctor as an adult either and was quickly surprised by how frustrating healthcare is.
replies(3): >>42172726 #>>42172899 #>>42175459 #
nerdponx ◴[] No.42172899[source]
This is new since Covid era. You used to be able to get an appointment for a physical just a few weeks out, and it was easy to find a new doctor if you needed to.
replies(1): >>42177441 #
1. HeyLaughingBoy ◴[] No.42177441[source]
It regionally-dependent though. On average, if we need to see a doctor, we can get an appointment in a day or two. For a routine physical, it might be two weeks, three at most.