You are nice to write a helpful response to a really stupid question. |
You missed the point entirely. You don't need to go to a doctor for this. You can easily take care of it yourself. It would be like going to the doctor to have them cut your nails. |
Of course they want the business, but it is wasting $200. |
| We do hydrogen peroxide at home which is basically what debrox is made of. |
$200? Maybe on your insurance. Not on mine. |
It's $200 on other people's insurance because insurance providers pay big money to urgent cares to do things that people can do at home. Not saying any particular person shouldn't go. It's just that pushing low skill corrective actions onto an expensive, professionally outfitted clinic is creating a more expensive health care industry. I just went to an urgent care today. With something that many people would say to go to the ER for. The urgent care thinks I'm okay. I'm glad to have their advice but also not to generate 4x the cost by visiting the ER. And not to wait hours since I'm relatively well compared to ER patients. |
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You won't need to ask for anything, the doctor will look and decide what to do.
I have tiny ear canals and had a buildup of wax bad enough to cause hearing issues. I used a home ear wax removal kit for a couple of weeks and when I still couldn't hear, went to urgent care. They got it out with what was basically a big water gun. It almost didn't work -- the doctor said "One more try, then I'm sending you to ENT," but then it did work. He said it probably wouldn't have if I hadn't softened it up by doing the home ear wax removal kit. At any rate, no need to go straight to ent. Minute clinic or urgent care will probably do the trick. |
Nope. |
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Go to the urgent care clinic to see how it’s done. Then go to Amazon and buy a kit like “waxBgone” (there are lots of brands). This looks exactly like what the nurse used at urgent care on my kid. I also bought liquid Colace which is what she and the pediatrician recommended to soften it.
It’s not difficult to do at home but I appreciated getting to see someone else do it first. Do use a dedicated kit that will prevent you from sticking anything too far into your ear. I bought the electric one so I can’t speak to the manual. FSA covers it. |
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Here’s a reference on the Colace. I didn’t try Debrox because this is what was recommended to me.
https://www.clinicaladvisor.com/advisorforums/liquid-stool-softener-as-an-earwax-removal-agent/ |
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I bought what my ENT and PCP use so my family and I can do it at home: Debrox drops, followed by this water irrigation kit -- Elephant Ear Washer Bottle System by Doctor Easy.
https://a.co/d/gFmyNxM |
This is the way to go. Use warm water. |
That's maybe true for you, but not true for a lot of people. I have to go to a doctor (ENT or PCP) to get it out after the Debrox. |
This is important. Warm water and be sitting down when you do it. Flushing cold water makes you dizzy. I almost fell over the first time because I wasn't expecting the rush. |
It probably is around $200. Maybe more, since this will get billed as a procedure. This is one of the reasons why insurance premiums are so high. Stop wasting money and medical resources! |