Reports of my death have been greatly exaggerated…
I’ve been sick lately so the blog (and the adventure) have suffered. I had a particularly ugly combination of pneumonia and a sinus infection. All the coughing, sneezing, nose blowing has exacerbated my hernia and completely zapped my strength. I’m coming up on the two week anniversary of all this joy and am thinking the worst is behind me? Hope so. Even still, I’ve probably slept 19 of the past 24 hours — a sign that I might have been put through the ringer even worse than I had thought. At least the days of 103+ / 39.6+ fevers are over! I’ll give it one more day and if the tiredness doesn’t ebb away I’ll get back to the Doctor for some blood work.
My brother arrives in Sydney early on Saturday — it’ll be great to see him. I’m hopeful my health and energy will be right for the visit.
Briefly, I know there is some interest in the Australian healthcare system so I’ll share my own experiences for all you heath care geeks (Michelle/Lesley) to consume. Once I decided to get to the Doctor I called and had an appointment within 10 hours. I headed to the appointment, filled out a very brief questionnaire (none of it insurance related) and the Doctor was seeing me in 5 minutes. We visited briefly, she did a quick examination, and then we discussed treatment.
The treatment discussion was interesting. It included all types of treatment — not just pills and traditional medicine. In fact, one of the things I was encouraged to take was an herbal remedy from Sweden for sinus issues. Acupuncture, massage, lifestyle choices… all of this came up in the framework of a larger discussion about wellness. In the end, I left with an Rx for an antibiotic, an Rx for an inhaler, and a note for a helpful herbal supplement. Easy, and I thought progressive.
Next stop was the drug store — here, they are called “chemists”. We walked into the chemist with two printed Rx's and we were met halfway between the front door and the pharmacy counter by the pharmacist. She took the script, grabbed the herbal medicine on the way back to the counter area, and we both went to the back of the store and had a quick seat. It took LESS THAN 3 minutes for the rest of the Rx to be filled and that was it! No waiting around (for no reason) for 30 minutes or more (Walgreen model) while they counted out little pills scraping them into a bottle with a special little knife and counting board — they simply grabbed the inhaler, grabbed the pre-packaged antibiotics, and done.
Payment for these services go something like this… Everyone in Australia is covered by Medicare — think single payor health care provided by the Aussie government. Medicare covers the lions share of treatments and the patient pays the balance at the time of treatment. As 457 Visa holders we have additional insurance paid by Julie’s employer which is standard with 457 Visas. The additional benefits we might receive we have to apply for which was really easy. You download the claim form, provide proof of payment, and mail it in. They reimburse us any additional benefit at some point. Not sure how long it takes — hasn’t been long enough to know for sure.
One of the worst parts of being sick is the television programming. I’ve alluded to the low quality of programming here before, and when you are captive on the couch with your sick station all around you, the programming is all the more important. At on point I was half delirious, too tired to even look for the remote, when the show changed to Charlie’s Angels. If that wasn’t bad enough, it was a special episode where the “angels” were solving a case on the friggin’ Love Boat. Burt Convey was the bad guy. OUCH!!!! I was so glad for that episode to come to an end until I realised the show to follow was “Mad About You”. Why couldn’t I get sick during the World Cup?
Later blog stalkers…. be good!










