My best wishes for your recovery.
And a very loud “This!” to the notion of following up on delays and failures in care even if they won’t benefit you directly.
I’m in a similar situation and am raising an issue arising from a “mixup” (for want of a better term) that had me checked-in for chemotherapy and waiting for things to start only to have the session abruptly cancelled. This is being taken very seriously by my oncology team, tho’ I don’t think the ensuing 3-week delay is going to be material, but it shouldn’t have happened and hopefully won’t happen in the sme way again. My part in this is simply following up on the fact that the app the hospital uses is very good about informing patients about new appointments, changes to to existing appointments, queries about whether you’ve arrived yet, but completely fails to send a notification on cancellation. Cancelled appointments just vanish.
None of this will erase the annoyance, actual distress, that I experienced, but I can get a modicum of satisfaction in trying to make things work better.
This is in the UK, in our brilliant, but completely overstretched NHS, which, despite a single unfortunate episode, I cannot praise highly enough.
2 Likes