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by dabiged 92 days ago
Australia reporting in.

We have private emergency rooms. We call them urgent care and you can go and see a qualified physician with allied health services (radiology, pathology). If they can fix you up they will. If not you get transferred via ambulance to the nearest public hospital and triaged as required.

I took my kid to one last weekend as they had been diagnosed by our family Dr as having pneumonia. The emergency physician ordered chest x-ray and full suite of pathology and we had results in less time than we would have waited in the public hospital waiting room. Yes we paid.

2 comments

Also Australia reporting in.

I've unfortunately had a number of emergency visits over the past few years. I'm a bit torn on the public vs private situation. For certain classes of issue (e.g., broken bones) my friends who work in hospitals have repeatedly said they'd go public purely because the volume of patients those surgeons have to treat daily means the teams in the public systems are typically incredibly experienced. And yet, I smashed my hand to pieces mountain biking on a holiday weekend and when I arrived at the ER the place was absolutely rammed and it was going to be a many hours wait to even get triaged. We got straight back in the car and drive to the private ER 5 minutes down the road and were seen immediately.

In the moment I was incredibly appreciative of that option. It does make me feel uncomfortable that it was only an option because I could afford to pay to jump the queue though.

Does it make sense to get an x-ray for that? I’m sympathetic to the desire, but isn’t the end result for pneumonia always antibiotics anyway?
If it's not pneumonia, antibiotics might not help.