chrishansenhome: (Default)
[personal profile] chrishansenhome
It all started yesterday afternoon. A phone call came as I was about to tuck into my lunch. I answered the phone and the Indian voice at the other end of the line said that he was from "XXX Accident". Ambulance chasers interrupting my lunch to find out whether I'd had an accident lately. I told him, "You ought to be ashamed of yourself, you piece of shit!" and hung up. I was so annoyed that I forgot to take my insulin and metformin.

I then did some surfing on the web when the phone rang again. The voice identified itself as "Leslie from the Diabetic Foot Clinic" and proceeded to ask me whether I could come in on Friday, as the nurse needed to give me an antibiotic. I asked her what the difficulty was, but she said that she "wasn't medically trained" so couldn't say anything. I told her I'd come in Friday afternoon, and proceeded to worry my way through dinner and a very restless night.

The only good parts of the day were a meeting with the Archdeacon this morning which helped us both get the Deanery Synod meeting and the minutes of the Archdeaconry Pastoral and Mission Committee (which should have been taken by the former Area Dean but weren't) settled. In the middle of the meeting HWMBO called me and told me that he had lost his wallet on the bus—he was going to try to track it down. Bad news.

Then I went downstairs in the diocesan office building and attended a very fruitful focus group session with other tenants of housing associations in this area of London, talking about scrutiny of our housing associations and how we can be involved with it. Lunch followed. The session was a bit rambunctious because people came with specific complaints rather than thinking about the general procedures for getting complaints looked into. However, the leader was good and kept the bitching-and-moaning to an absolute minimum. Good session, especially since it was only 2 hours long.

Then I went home to find HWMBO's wallet on the kitchen table with a note: he has gone home after he drew a blank with the bus people. So that was good news.

Then on to the Diabetic Foot Clinic, still in my suit and tie. I sat in the waiting room as usual, read my Grauniad, and waited for 1-1/2 hours for the nurse to see me. When he finally "noticed" I was there, he came over and said, "We need to give you some antibiotics—can you take erythromycin?" I told him that I could and he went away to scare up a doctor to write a prescription. It's odd that in a hospital doctors are so difficult to find.

He returned without the prescription and I asked him which bug I had. It's a kind of streptococcus, but I told him, "That's what they found when I was here last week. I'm taking amoxicillin for it." He looked at me, and looked at the bug they'd found, and said, "Oh, this one is sensitive to amoxicillin."

I looked at him and said, "I see. So this entire visit was unnecessary." He grinned sheepishly. I wasn't grinning. "Well, while I'm here get the Professor to prescribe another 2 weeks of amoxicillin as what I have will run out in a week." He got that and I left.

I have said before that the greatest problem with the NHS is not funding, it's communication. The denizens of the Health Service do not communicate effectively. Obviously the podiatrist hadn't put the fact that he'd prescribed amoxicillin last week into my file. When the nurse saw that this bug was still present, he thought I wasn't taking any antibiotic and called me in.

So I went home and had a bourbon and Diet Coke. Some situations call for extreme action. I thought of calling London Stabbie in on this case, but he just can't be arsed to deal with cold-call ambulance chasers and incompetent nurses and podiatrists. They are beneath his dignity.

Date: 2011-09-09 09:43 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] burkesworks.livejournal.com
Good heavens, I had the self-same gang of ambulance-chasing clowns calling me on my mobile phone on Wednesday, assuming you're referring to an outfit using a Manchester phone number and also using an inaccurate database as the Indian in question (implausibly calling himself "Floyd") kept addressing me as "Mr Teal". Utter ratbags; have reported them to the relevant authorities, for all the good that will do.

Date: 2011-09-09 10:13 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chrishansenhome.livejournal.com
There are a multitude of these ambulance chasers. The one that called me yesterday showed "INTERNATIONAL" on the caller ID, so I think it's probably a different bunch of scumbags.

The other kind of calls I get are those where the caller (either Indian or Filipino/a) says they're from Microsoft and they've detected something wrong with my computer. I told the last one (a Filipina) that she should be ashamed of herself, trying to fleece ignorant widows and orphans, and she was a lying c*nt. She hung up at that point but I hope I ruined her day.

I used to let them get a couple of sentences in edgewise before I cut them off but I have less and less patience with them now and I just make sure I've identified them correctly before I start calling them rude names.

Date: 2011-09-10 05:49 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] baisuzhen.livejournal.com
What's ambulance chaser?? Chasing after ambulances?

I heard of storm chasers... CHUB chasers... this is certainly a first!

Date: 2011-09-10 09:05 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chrishansenhome.livejournal.com
An ambulance chaser is (normally) a lawyer who seeks out people who have been injured in accidents and tries to get them to sign up as clients so that he can sue the other party. Years ago they used (in the United States anyway) to listen to the police radio and rush out to the scene of the accident to try to sign the person up who was actually in the ambulance. Thus, ambulance chaser.

From the Urban Dictionary:

1. A lawyer specialising in personal injury claims usually representing people against local authorities or large companies.

2. Derogative description for a personal injury lawyer who specifically seeks out clients for tripping and slipping cases against big companies. Certainly in the US, this is because the lawyer's fee will be a percentage of the client's damages award - therefore making it profitable to find injured former employees of big companies.
1. Q: What sort of practice is it?
A: Oh, he's an ambulance chaser.

2. A: "That guy who got his arm
mangled up in our machine is suing"
B: "Who's he got?"
A: "Some ambulance chaser."

October 2019

S M T W T F S
  123 45
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Feb. 9th, 2026 08:02 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios