Just to get an appointment?
Now I am not one of those advocates for the wonders of the U.S. medical system, since I am well aware of the lack of service it provides to the uninsured. But when my family here in Iceland warned me that I would not be able to book a doctor's appointment, and that I just needed to show up at the emergency room between 4pm and 8pm, I really did not believe them. So today I pick up the phone, casually dial Heilbrigðisstofnun Suðurnesja, and push one for booking an appointment. After 3 rings the line disconnects. I try again. Same thing. Try a third time, same thing. So then I call back, and push 2 for the switchboard. I ask them if I can have an appointment, and they transfer me over to a woman who informs me there are no appointments through the month of March. Fine I say, can I book one for April? No, to book one in April, I have to call the first week of April. The appointments are only booked one month at a time. She tells me she has to advise me to go to the emergency room hours, which means of course I have to find someone to babysit Palmer, unless I want to bring him along. Sigh.
I am not complaining, per se, since I really do understand both what they are trying to accomplish and the limits within which they are working. Rather, I am amused by just how dramatically Icelandic it is, that I have to go through all these gyrations in order to see the doctor.
I am not complaining, per se, since I really do understand both what they are trying to accomplish and the limits within which they are working. Rather, I am amused by just how dramatically Icelandic it is, that I have to go through all these gyrations in order to see the doctor.
Comments
Also, to the best of my knowledge all of Scandinavia has a shortage of doctors. Germany has too many, therefore, our Scandinavian language classes were usually overrun by yound med students that were trying to get into Norway, Sweden and Iceland.