Entitled woman sends hospital a bill for making her wait for cortisone injection

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
39,778
454
83
Poor baby.

After an hour and a half wait, woman sends Ontario hospital $122.50 bill for wasted time
National Post | Canadian News, Financial News and Opinion

Time is money, and Leslie Ellins wants a refund for hers…literally.

The financial planner recently wrote a letter to a central Ontario hospital demanding to be reimbursed after waiting an hour and a half for a one-minute cortisone injection.

Ellins says she finds fault with the scheduling practices at the Peterborough Regional Health Centre, adding at least four patients were scheduled to see the same doctor at the same time.

But she says the final straw was being told that the doctor and his staff had taken a lunch break while patients languished in the waiting room.

She says her anger simmered for weeks, but finally boiled over when she received a $25 invoice for a procedure that had previously been offered free of charge.

The Buckhorn, Ont., woman wrote the hospital back with a bill of her own, saying it owed her $122.50 for her wasted time.

Ellins calculated the fee based on her professional hourly rate of $75 minus the charge for the injection, but said the money was only a secondary issue.

“It’s the total lack of courtesy on the part of everybody at the hospital that really angered me,” Ellins said in a telephone interview. “It’s totally disrespectful.”

Ellins said her ordeal took place on April 14 when she showed up for an 11:15 a.m. appointment.

As she sat in the waiting room, she said she observed at least three other people check in for the same time-slot that she thought had been reserved for her.

As time crept by, Ellins said one patient approached the receptionist to ask if he could step out for a quick bite to eat in order to keep his diabetes under control.

She said she was shocked when the receptionist refused his request on the grounds that he might miss his appointment time.

Ellins said she became furious when she then learned that lunch breaks were allowed for some people — namely the doctor and his staff, who had all stepped out for a meal some time around noon.

“When I have clients waiting, I don’t take lunch or I don’t take breaks,” she said. “That just shocked me. That’s sort of what pushed me over the edge.”

When Ellins finally got to see her doctor at 12:45 p.m. and confronted him about the wait time, he told her such issues were all the responsibility of the hospital.

With that in mind, Ellins penned her letter of complaint on May 1 and put it in the mail earlier this week.

The Peterborough Regional Health Centre said it has been in contact with Ellins to discuss her concerns.

“We welcome constructive feedback that will help us to improve our performance and provide our patients with the care they deserve,” the centre said in a statement Thursday.

Ellins said the experience has left her feeling disillusioned with the Canadian health-care system, arguing care providers have lost sight of basic customer service practices and could use a reminder as to who pays their salary.

She also said she’s considering a different approach next time she needs to get a routine injection.

“Give me the needle,” she said. “I’ll ram it in there.”
 

DaSleeper

Trolling Hypocrites
May 27, 2007
33,676
1,665
113
Northern Ontario,
Every spring a CNIB sponsored portable clinic comes through all the northern communities to as follow-up to those who have had eye surgery in the big centers down south..(It's cheaper than all the travel grants that the province would have to pay)
Since I've had cataracts and detached retina in both eyes....I have a yearly appointment...
It was for 4:20PM......5 min. away from my house.....I had my dinner at 6:45
I didn't b itch.....the last patient of the day, right after me didn't b itch either, and the guy is a local M.D.
Some of us understand that those who schedule appointments might estimate 10 minutes per patient, but we understand that some can take longer and at the end of the day, it translates into longer waiting time.
 

Sal

Hall of Fame Member
Sep 29, 2007
17,135
33
48
So, you approve of overbooking and poor management practices that lead to wasting people's time in vast amounts?
*shrug* sometimes they can blow through people, sometimes they can't. If people need more time I'm good with that. Someday I might be the one that needs more time.
 

Tecumsehsbones

Hall of Fame Member
Mar 18, 2013
55,644
7,102
113
Washington DC
*shrug* sometimes they can blow through people, sometimes they can't. If people need more time I'm good with that. Someday I might be the one that needs more time.
So am I. If you re-read the post you quoted, you'll see that at no point did mention "need more time."
 

Sal

Hall of Fame Member
Sep 29, 2007
17,135
33
48
So am I. If you re-read the post you quoted, you'll see that at no point did mention "need more time."
okay, put it this way then, my eye specialist over books ALL the time, he is one of the best in Canada...I NEED a retina specialist, there are a lot of people that need this guy, his time, his specialty, his skills, his ability with a knife, his diagnostic ability... yes they overbook, way overbook...a ten minute appointment can take as long as four hours or more or ten minutes...his time and skills are precious. I am good with it. I plan accordingly. In fact I feel blessed that I am able to have him as my doctor.

But then as he said to me on my last visit...you are a "the glass is half full type of person". And I am.
 

Nuggler

kind and gentle
Feb 27, 2006
11,596
140
63
Backwater, Ontario.
okay, put it this way then, my eye specialist over books ALL the time, he is one of the best in Canada...I NEED a retina specialist, there are a lot of people that need this guy, his time, his specialty, his skills, his ability with a knife, his diagnostic ability... yes they overbook, way overbook...a ten minute appointment can take as long as four hours or more or ten minutes...his time and skills are precious. I am good with it. I plan accordingly. In fact I feel blessed that I am able to have him as my doctor.

But then as he said to me on my last visit...you are a "the glass is half full type of person". And I am.

Me too, Sal, although my current
opthamologist.............good ol google speller. seems to move us right along come injection day. Waiting for retina pictures can
sometimes be a wait, but not always.

I never got the damned half full comment though. Gonna start a petition.:roll: Maybe he's sweet on ya. ;-)

So, you approve of overbooking and poor management practices that lead to wasting people's time in vast amounts?

Ah Bones, you trolly little shyte ya.
 

Sal

Hall of Fame Member
Sep 29, 2007
17,135
33
48
Me too, Sal, although my current
opthamologist.............good ol google speller. seems to move us right along come injection day. Waiting for retina pictures can
sometimes be a wait, but not always.

I never got the damned half full comment though. Gonna start a petition.:roll: Maybe he's sweet on ya. ;-)
actually I should have said cornea specialist due to where the blood was sitting in my eye...8O :lol:

I'm more special than you...I'm more special than you...probably my eyes are worse though...:lol:

I doubt he's sweet on me, he talks to my guy more about marathoning than me after we're done analyzing everything...lol, he is damn good looking though and has a solid gold personality. Kinda a bit young for me, but not by much, we'd have to stretch it a bit.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
109,404
11,454
113
Low Earth Orbit
A "one minute cortisone shot". “Give me the needle,” she said. “I’ll ram it in there.”
She's high. Was she getting a shot or was she douching?
 
Last edited: