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Thank you CW & CM. I think I will take your advice about sending a letter to her dr.

Can I just thank you for your thoughts and support.

I told my mother that I called her dr because my BF & I were worry about her overall health and that we love her. She said, ok.
But she is passive aggressive and I am sure she will get back at me. She has been that way since I was a teenager. Time to lock my suff up. Sigh

God bless you all.
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Crafty789 Nov 2018
Please report that receptionist. That pisses me off, excuse my French. No reason for any of that. She could have left a note for the doctor or at least the nurse. That doesn’t go against HIPAA or anything like that. I’ve been through this as well. I tried calling one of mom’s doctors offices before an appointment she had and they left a note. Mom couldn’t find her car when she was leaving and had to go get them to help her and no one even called me or anything. I couldn’t otherwise get her to get checked for dementia because she insisted she was fine. One day, though, she passed out and crashed to the floor, so I took her to the ER and caught the doctor in the hallway. He said he couldn’t do anything but to follow up with her PCP, so I talked to her PCP who was great and referred her to a neurologist to “make sure her cancer hadn’t come back and gone to her brain”. This whole situation just sucks and I feel for you. You are not alone.
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If your mom gets violent with you call 911 - she will be Baker Acted and possibly then at the hospital get the treatment and assessment she needs.
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Shell38314 Nov 2018
That is my plan. Thank you!
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The "gatekeepers" to the doctor seem to be so common they are almost a stereotype and often the doctors seem to be oblivious to how difficult they make their patient's lives. I agree with CM, a "personal and confidential" letter to the MD if you can't get him/her on the phone, or perhaps you can book an appt to talk face to face..
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Countrymouse Nov 2018
My mother always called them "dragons" - like it was a job title!
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Shell I was once so enraged by the persistent appalling attitude and behaviour of a GP's receptionist I wrote a book about her. Literally! My little revenge fantasy, I've still got it somewhere...

If I were you, I should write a bare-bones summary of what you tried in vain to get across to Mrs Hitler there and send it, marked Confidential, to your mother's GP. You can do it by post, or electronically. Head it "Report, for information only." There is nothing in any law, code of conduct or indeed on God's green earth to prevent a doctor from receiving and noting information about a patient.

Now, to Mrs H's insistence that she is obliged to inform your mother that you called. I really doubt that, and I suspect her supervisor will put her right. Nevertheless, since in practice these *blasted* types are a bit of a law unto themselves, let us prepare for the worst.

So your mother toddles along for her next appointment, where Mrs H, no doubt bristling with her own self-importance, is delighted to inform her that you rang to speak to her doctor. She had *better not* phrase it as "rang your doctor about you" because that would be a gross misrepresentation of what you did, but this is a worst case scenario, so say she does. She's not the sharpest knife in the box, we know that, and she's not one for constructive discretion either. Ugh.

So your mother comes back with steam coming out of her ears and demands to know what you thought you were doing.

There is... plausible deniability. They say I rang? No idea what that's about. When was this supposed to be?

Or, there is... brushing it aside. Hm? Oh, that - yes, sure, I was just checking the date. (even better if she expects you to ferry her there and back, or there's some other reason you might need to know when her appointment is)

Or, and this wouldn't be before time, there is open defiance linked to sound rationale. Yes I did. There are things that your doctor needs to know. You're not telling him. Somebody needs to. So. What about it? Wanna bite me?

What sort of violence have you in mind?

The other reason to try again to flag your concerns with the doctor is this. Once the information has been passed to them, if they ignore it and something preventable happens, you have it on record that they *were* told.

That doesn't mean they can stop your mother falling or deteriorating because your mother is still free to refuse investigations and refuse treatment. But it does mean that her doctor will be in a better position to manage his patient to the best of his ability. You can but try.
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