Thursday, November 30, 2006

back at home

i just returned from the hospital, a day early! i thought a bit about what was going on, and realizing that there was no true reason for me to spend another night there, i made enough noise and kissed enough ass that they discharged me. there is something strangely addictive about being in the hospital that i am happy to have forced myself to escape. the bed is comfortable and adjustable, there is a table that blocks one side of the bed, the IV tree blocks the other side and is a pain to move around, nurses come to deliver anything at the touch of a button, and there is not really anywhere to go anyway, so it takes a lot of energy to motivate to get up out of the bed.

it is hard for me to describe how i am feeling. everything is so variable. i get tired all of a sudden, and then feel awake just as suddenly. i get waves of just feeling generally gross, but without any symptom specific enough to describe or treat. i have pangs of pain in strange locations, which come and go randomly. most constant, i think, is really just being in the mode of thinking of myself as a patient, and not as ME. it is very good that i was able to come back home even a little early, and regain some minimum semblance of normalcy.

the week at the hospital went better this time, everything was smoother and more organized, and i finally got set up with a competent hospital social worker, who not only comes up to my room, but whose services are included in the price of admission. side effects so far seem more mild than the first time around, but then again, it did take a few days for the cisplatin to wreak havoc, so i can't claim victory yet. they've switched me to what my night nurse linda calls the "beverly hills" anti-nausea medications, because the standard compazine+reglan had been so miserable. i can't wait to see the bill.

speaking of bills, one of the shocking things about this ordeal is the total disconnect between the delivery of services and the costs that they incur. none of the doctors or nurses have any idea nor do they care about what anything costs their patients. granted, most of us at this hospital have "good" insurance, but my "good" insurance only covers at 90%, and i can only make the roughest of estimates of how high the total will run in my case. $3-4000 a night, something like 25 nights, that's around $100k, not including any of the scans, all the medication, and office visits, which can't be cheap. i am conservatively estimating cracking $300k by the end of this, which means that $30k of that is mine to pay. outrageous. i am amoung the wealthiest and best connected people in the country, and this is a real burden! what about everyone else?! i probably saved myself and the insurance company a good chunk of money by pushing for being discharged a day early. while i guess it is nice that i don't feel pressured by the hospital to get out as quickly as possible, this seems like the other extreme.

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

Josh, thank you very much for keeping the reporting up, inspite of how badly you feel. I know it is hard, but the reading is very interesting.
All the best,
David

Anonymous said...

Hi Josh, this is Joyce M at chori. I just want you to know that we are all thinking about you and wishing that very good things happen! I think it's fabulous that you're doing the web-site; I'd been getting updates from John, but to be able to just click on your bookmark (yes, you are now a bookmark and so have definitely arrived) and get the latest is really terrific. As I am sure you know the bar project is slogging along; we were thinking we might send you a few and really make you sick --just kidding! Take care, I know it's a very hard time. Joyce

Unknown said...

Mwah, Mwah and another Mwah! (Those are huge kisses to you and your belly). I am glad that things went ok this week and you are resting well at home, surrounded by good, loving people. Thanks for keeping us informed.

Anonymous said...

Josh, I am so glad to hear that this week went fine and that the suffering is reduced. We all hope that this trend will continue. Price is no object (except for the insurers) when you are on the right pass. Keep the moral up and thanks for the interesting & informative reading.
Best to you - Jean-Paul

Erin said...

Hi! Thanks for sending me this link- what a fabulous idea! And, yes...I definitely think you should be doing interviews bedside! I need someone I can trust to help sort through the mountain of papers that one applicant creates!

Anonymous said...

Man, you got five comments already. I only got three comments today, and all were related to my T-shirt (which reads "Pluto: Never Forget" and which features an image of the downsized planet and is glow-in-the-dark), and were all from the same person. Hey, it beats the old T-shirt, which had a touristy picture of Missouri and the slogan "Missouri loves company!" That one got no comments.

abaker said...

Josh, Keep on rocking it! Your team misses you!!! Jake is doing an excellent job of watering the plants (we're hoping that your foliage will rub off on the other little ivy who is struggling along in comparison). Abrazos, amira

Anonymous said...

Hi Josh,
This is Caroline again. I check your blog as often as I can to see how you're doing. Have you tried holding your breath when attached to the beeping thing on your finger? It goes mental. I amused myself with that no end when I stupidly landed myself in hospital last year.
Top Tip for your next trip to the UK:
Step 1)Go to the doctor's in Glasgow and complain of pins and needles in your feet.
Step 2) Within 12 hours you'll be in an East End hospital full of stab vicims and football hooligans and the doctors'll be telling you you've got Guillain-Barre Syndrome!
Step 3)Spend three days in hospital whilst frantic tests are carried out.
Step 4)Disclose that you've recently bought a new pair of very high heels and that they made your feet hurt.
Step 4)Be chastised by lots of angry looking doctors and get sent home feeling a little silly.

drewski said...

oddly enough, it seems that hospitals don't always get reimbursed for every day of hospitalization. at CHO, the hospital only gets reimbursed for a each full calendar day a patient stays. so if a kid goes home at 11pm, the hospital doesn't get paid for that 23 hours of hospitalization...

medicine is f'd up.