Anonymous wrote:You have to extend your circle of "people you are comfortable asking". This is why social people are more likely to have a better quality of life. What about a neighbor? Coworker?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they won't let you take an uber than they must arrange for medical transport. It's typically an ambulance without lights on. They required it for my adult son, and coded it as a medical necessity.
Lol, no. Not for a scheduled outpatient colonoscopy. It's not their responsibility, it's the patient's. If your unwilling to expand into your social circle, and unwilling to reschedule, then maybe you can hire an aide from a private duty nursing agency.
Just walk out of the hospital with your cell phone and call an Uber or Lyft from a block away. It’s a hospital not a prison. They can’t hold you hostage.
If you know when you are going to be released, you can prearrange an Uber or Lyft. I do this often for airport rides, too.
OP, I am seen as the Strong One in my circle of friends and family. They call me to ask for favors but if I ask them for a similar one, they are too busy. You can’t force people to give a damn but Lyft drivers are some of the kindest people I know. I’ve taken them out of Hopkins Bayview before easily.
I don't know how it will work in OP's case, but the last time I did this for a relative, I'm pretty sure they checked that I was there before they started the procedure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have to extend your circle of "people you are comfortable asking". This is why social people are more likely to have a better quality of life. What about a neighbor? Coworker?
I would never do this for anyone but family or an etremely close friend. Far too many liability issues involved. OP needs to look into at home medical care.
Anonymous wrote:Lyft or Uber is fine. Even a cab.
I drove myself home once after a non-anesthesia procedure in office after resting in the waiting room until I felt I could drive. I pulled over and took a few breaks on the way but I was fine to drive.
I didn’t have medication in my system that compromised driving. If I had, I would have taken a Lyft.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, I was told I needed someone to take me home from an outpatient procedure too and I managed to arrange it but having done that, I absolutely could have walked the mile and a half home. I 100% could have been with it enough to take an Uber. Just tell them your ride is outside and go get in an Uber.
They don’t let you walk out.
Anonymous wrote:Honestly, I was told I needed someone to take me home from an outpatient procedure too and I managed to arrange it but having done that, I absolutely could have walked the mile and a half home. I 100% could have been with it enough to take an Uber. Just tell them your ride is outside and go get in an Uber.
Anonymous wrote:For my colonoscopy, the office said an uber wouldn't work because the person needed to come inside to check me out-- that they wanted to make sure there was someone who would look out for me.
I went to a lot of trouble to have my daughter leave work early to come get me. She called me from the car. I told the checkout as much. And they let me go without her coming upstairs.
That said, if I'd had a different person checking me out perhaps it would have been an issue. (I think the result would have been them keeping me a couple of more hours til they concluded I was fine.).
The problem with Ubers is that they're kind of anonymous. If you called an old fashioned taxi company on the phone, you could probably offer to pay extra for them to come upstairs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have to extend your circle of "people you are comfortable asking". This is why social people are more likely to have a better quality of life. What about a neighbor? Coworker?
I would never do this for anyone but family or an etremely close friend. Far too many liability issues involved. OP needs to look into at home medical care.
Anonymous wrote:I have a very small network of people I feel comfortable asking for a personal favor. I need to have an outpatient procedure done at Johns Hopkins in a few weeks (like a colonoscopy) and they say I need someone to take me home bc of the anesthesia (which I find ridiculous because the doctor will review results with me afterwards- so I am considered “with it” enough to intake important health info, but not with it enough to take an uber??).
I asked the 2 people I feel comfortable asking and neither is free that day. If I don’t do the procedure then, I will have to wait several extra months as the doctor is fitting me into an already booked day.
There must be people like me who don’t have many people to ask for such a favor. What do they do in this situation? The scheduler wasn’t helpful when I asked her.