Showing posts with label Health Providers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Health Providers. Show all posts

8/11/2013

Clinipath Pathology North Perth (Perth WA)


435 Fitzgerald Street
North Perth Western Australia 6006
(08) 9227 6529

Website
Hours:
    Mon-Fri 8 am - 12:30 pm
    Mon-Fri 1:30 pm - 4:30 pm

Part of the recently opened Fitzgerald Medical Centre, this tiny collection office offers the usual services provided by Clinipath: collection of blood, urine and other biological samples.

The office is attended by a lovely charming chatty lady, who works on her own the whole day, and makes your visit very enjoyable. If I had to rate her services would be five stars.

I cannot give this place more stars because, this lady being alone, the place can run slow in the mornings. The practice was "full" in the early hours of the morning, when fasting samples are collected, and it took me more than 30 minutes to have a simple blood test done despite the waiting room having just 5 people. I came to this collection centre because I thought it would be faster than the one in the city, which is always crowded in the mornings, but it wasn't the case. The place might be empty and things flow later on during the day.

Central City Medical Centre (Perth WA)


Shop 14, City Station Concourse
378 Wellington St
Perth 6000
(Corner Wellington & Barrack Streets)
(08) 9221 4747
(08) 9225 1188
Hours:
 8am-6pm 

(Weekends/Holidays 9am-6pm)
 Website

I cannot speak more highly of the doctors that I usually visit there, Dr Jenny Ho and Dr Wolman, and of any other I have visited in case of emergency when these two were not available. They give you the time you need, are professional and welcoming, and treat you like a person, not like a case. That is always great.

The facilities are very pleasant, clean and in the heart of the city, and the practice is open every day of the week.

The place suffers from too-late-itis often. I think the problem is how the front desk organises the schedule of the doctors. In my last visit, my doctor was 45 minutes late. No apologies from anybody when I asked if I was visiting at the right time slot or how much would I have to wait. The girl at the desk was unapologetic, her treatment bordering rudeness.

The ladies at the front desk are matter of fact, fast and professional, but rarely welcoming, and some of them abrupt.  

They will send you an email or sms with the results of your blood and imaging tests,  so you don't have to visit the practice unless necessary. That is great for your pocket, and to keep the practice empty of results collectors, and things flowing.

Hicaps payments available.


Same day Appointments

Prices are a bit high, but this is a private practice in the heart of the city.

InSight Clinical Imaging (Mount Lawley, Perth WA)

1/687 Beaufort Street
Mt Lawley Western Australia 6050
08 9272 7718
Website

Small facilities but well organised, semi-hidden at the bottom of the Mt Lawley Medical Centre.

The place works well, fast and fluidly every time I have visited.

The staff doing the imaging are very friendly and professional.

The staff at reception are matter of fact, but they do what they are supposed to do, and do it fast and well.

Results are fast passed on to Doctor, but customers have to collect the images personally. This is a bit backwards, as most radiological and imaging clinics post images directly via computer and the Internet nowadays.

Toilets need to be revamped and those horrible paintings on the wall removed.

7/10/2012

Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital (Nedlands, Perth WA)

Ground Floor, G Block
Hospital Avenue
Nedlands, WA 6009
(08) 9346 3333
Emergencies's Website
Hospital's Website


I was taken by a 000 ambulance to the hospital last year, and I expended most of the day there. This review if just for my experience at the Emergencies Department, not about the hospital in general.

Although, as many hospitals, CGH would need a bit of spatial revamping and modernisation, they did a great job. I was taken care of properly, all the tests needed at the moment were done, different medications were tried, and, most importantly, the staff treated me as an individual who was suffering, and did their job with empathy, care, and even affection, if that can be said. I was there on my own, so this was even more important and appreciated. Still, they were treating everybody at the Emergencies with the same medical and human care. I was very impressed. 

There were a few interns there, and they were not only cute but extremely caring, and the same can be said of the permanent staff, especially Dr Peter who was there when I visited. There was a steady flow of people entering the hospital that day, but the area did not seem crowded or chaotic, and I felt that my case was handled properly, and that the area was clean, tidy, spacious and well taken care of.

There were two persons who stood out because of their jerkily behaviour towards me, a male nurse and a clerk. It escapes my understanding why uncaring people would want to work in a hospital unless they have some sort of sociopathy. Still, they were the exception to a wonderful experience, if that can be said or any day-long stay at the Emergencies. 

7/06/2012

Royal Perth Hospital (Perth WA)

Wellington St
GPO Box X2213
Perth Western Australia 6000
(08) 9224 2244
http://www.rph.wa.gov.au/


I was taken by an ambulance to the Emergency Department area of Royal Perth Hospital last year, and I spend most of the day there. So this review is about this department, not about  other parts of the hospital.

My impression and experience of the hospital cannot be good, because I suffered in my flesh the deficiencies of the Western Australian Healthcare System, and that is never a good experience if you are sick.

The Emergencies Department is not only run down and needed of a refurbishment and general overhaul, but it is unable to attend  properly the constant flood of people arriving at their doors
. Since the volume of patients entering is constant and they are understaffed, they have to prioritise your case. Therefore, if you haven't had an accident, aren't bleeding or your life is not in danger, you will be the last person to be treated, examined and attended to, beyond basic painkillers, and electrocardiogram or x-rays if strictly necessary. That is terrible, as in, in my case, it took an hour an a half for a doctor (a student, actually) to come to me, out of human empathy, excused the abandonment and made an initial evaluation. He was eager to help, but he was just an intern - a student. The medication did not work.  Finally, being busier with more urgent cases, they decided to take me out of the way and parked me, literally, in the Observation Room. By then, I was crying out of pain, feeling of abandonment, and completely pissed off.

In the short minute that took them to move me from one area to another, my files were lost. I found that shocking, so the initial evaluation made by the intern was unavailable. By the end of the day I was thinking that I would be better taken care off at home than in this hospital.


When a proper doctor arrived he told me about the missing file, was truly  apologetic, did a very good examination, and treated me like a human being - finally! I was released that evening, without knowing the cause of my extreme pain (which turned to be a severe root nerve irritation that had left my nerve sort of "raw" and took me about six months to recover off), and bound to a private 400-dollar MRI because they would not do it there, even if needed. I sworn to the Universe that I wouldn't visit that hospital's emergencies if I can avoid it.

I am not blaming the doctors or nurses. They suffer from the lack of means, they are overworked, overstressed and, despite everything, do their job well and go beyond their limit to attend to as many people as they can, the best they can. Despite my state I was able to see them wanting to help even if they were not able to, running non stop all over the place. Still, this is not enough. Meanwhile our taxes (my taxes!) are dilapidated in who knows what, and public services of vital importance are neglected. What a shame. Whom your vote goes to and ends in the local government is to blame, Western Australians.

I advise everybody to avoid the PRH's ER as much as you can, unless you are so bad that cannot decide on your own. Otherwise, insist on being taken elsewhere. You will thank me. If you are taken there, take your mp3 player, really, as music was the only thing that kept me sane in an insane place. I turned the volume up when the space next to mine was occupied by a bleeding  woman
screaming, while an insane person was shouting and abusing somebody on that floor. You really need music, so you only deal with your own suffering. You don't want to have a heart attack in a hospital because of the hospital, right?