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251 lines
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Plaintext
Episode: 3516
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Title: HPR3516: Rant about RX
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3516/hpr3516.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 00:51:11
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---
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This is Haka Public Radio Episode 3516 for Monday the 24th of January 2022.
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Today's show is entitled, rant about RX and is part of the series, Hells and Hellscare.
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It is hosted by Operator, and is about 22 minutes long, and car is an explicit flag.
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So, this is a rant mostly about prescriptions on Hellscare.
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Hello everyone, welcome to another episode of Haka Public Radio, the host Operator.
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Today is going to be more of a rant slash, um, thing about prescriptions in healthcare or whatever.
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My experience, I'm on, you know, prescriptions, a couple of prescriptions, one of the controlled
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substance, and I'm just going to voice my extreme distaste for the whole process and people involved
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and what they can and can't do, and it's kind of a call to if anyone can help me understand the
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process or help me get through this or help me do it better. I made HD, and I'm trying to feel
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my prescriptions. I had to graduate my doctor, they'll only give me one, two, maybe three slips if
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I'm lucky, and then of course, you know, I won't fill them, and then I go to fill them, and I'm late,
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and you know, I haven't filled it all out, and it's been less than 30 days, and they say they can't
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fill the prescription, and I go to a store, and one store wants to charge me, you know, originally,
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I was paying $170 or something ridiculous, $120 for, uh, through my insurance.
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And, you know, even the other insurance plans will do things like, oh, well, you have to use
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Walgreens or you have to use CVS, or they'll say, okay, well, we'll let you fill two prescriptions
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at CVS, but if it's not a controlled substance or whatever the other thing is, we're going to make
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you do the mail-in bullshit. And, you know, I don't have a problem with any of the whole, I don't
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have a problem with any of the hoops and the loops and whatever, but when I change jobs, every five
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years, or what's even worse is that I'm working somewhere, and they change their insurance, and I'm
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forced to change and get a new insurance card and get a new insurance number, and these guys, you
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know, you know, I'm from the health insurance side, they keep the same numbers, and you go there,
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and you get blood work, or whatever it is, and they keep the same numbers, and they ship that over,
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and then you get these nasty grams and emails, or whatever it is, you get, you get a bill in the
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mail that says, you owe, you know, $778, because, you know, they're using an old code, or they got
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your name wrong, or they fat-finger something, and guess what? It's a computer talking to a computer,
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the talks to a computer, it calls to another computer, and they all, nothing, nobody actually does
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anything, nobody actually checks their work, nobody takes responsibility for checking these things,
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or whatever, they just kind of ship, throw shit over the fence, and wait for it to, to, to stick,
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and, you know, I, I had the tendency, and I started this 15, 20 years ago, when I get a bill,
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for health care in the mail, I will ignore it, and if I get another one, I will ignore that one,
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and after the third one, I may or may not, depending on how much money it is, and depending on how,
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how BS I think the bill is, I may or may not ignore that one, but usually after about the fourth
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one, or the third one, I'm calling someone and saying, hey, you know, this is bullshit, I'm not
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paying for this, I have insurance, whatever, do whatever you got to do to figure it out. Oh, well,
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you know, your insurance company said this, and of course you call the insurance company,
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and the insurance company says, oh, well, you got to call the, you know, the provider,
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and they messed up a six, and put a four instead of six, and they have to call less.
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Well, what I like to do is, which is working less and less, as things are all automated,
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and nobody wants to talk to you, what I would do is I would say, okay, hold on, just one moment,
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I'm going to bridge in the other side of the equation, and y'all, I will put you on mute,
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record the conversation, because Georgia is a single party consent state, and whether or not
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the other side's single party or not, I observe that, and if I hear that, you know, that their,
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you know, call may record it, whatever, if they don't state that they're a single party,
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then I just assume that they're, or they're not a single party, that that's assumed they're
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single party, if they haven't stated that in their, in their messages, then I'll say, you know,
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if you're comfortable, you know, I'm recording this program, this, this conversation,
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and I will, I will have them conferencing with each other, and figure out whatever they need to figure
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out, and just be belligerent about it, and just say, I'm not paying this, I can't pay this,
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I don't have the money, and they will eventually, you know, whittle it down to a reasonable number.
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If you just pay the bill, they will, they will hit you over the head. You can, you can pay $300
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$50 bill, or $20 bill, or even you're not even supposed to pay anything. They are, you know,
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we all know the healthcare system is messed up, but here's some techniques that you can do
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to help get around that as far as the healthcare and getting bills, and people screwing stuff up,
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and whatever, and you got these HSA accounts, and I can't ever remember to bring the card,
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and I can't remember the pen, and I have to look it up, and then they want my signature,
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and then they want me to scan the card, and then they want me to verify information,
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and then I do all this stuff, and they're like, oh, we can't fill your prescription,
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because you can't fill it till tomorrow. Okay, that's fine, I get it, it's a controlled substance,
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whatever, but it's a day, and I've never had any history of abusing the system. I've been whatever,
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I don't have, you know, a criminal history in my background, my identity has not been stolen,
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and if, if, from that standpoint, if you were to put a chip in me and say that that was a
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secure way to identify myself, or even if it wasn't, I wouldn't even give a shit. Like, the,
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I would say, if you could do like a single identity, that I could just walk around with, like,
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a minority report, and get my prescriptions, and not have to jump through hoops, and go to
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three different places, and get it filled, and pay too much money for that, and go over here,
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and, you know, do this crap, then I would do it. I would give away every piece of personal
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information that I have, if I could just go to the store, or have somebody, okay, I'd get it,
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you can't put controlled substance in the mail, sure, I'll go to the store and pick it up, fine.
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But, from that standpoint, I said to be able to go to the store and pick up my prescription,
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30 days early, a month early, two months early, a week early, whatever, because, you know, if you
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have a problem with remembering things, and the doctor only gives you the prescription of
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exactly the amount of pills you need, guess what, if there's any delay in that process,
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you're going to three different places, try to fill a prescription, and you're waiting in line,
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and then they tell you, oh, we don't have that, or oh, you know, it's going to be double what you pay,
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and I played $170, $150, once, and then I went back, and I was like, something's wrong, this is
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not, can't be right, and I eventually figured out a way to whatever, and then I eventually found
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good RX, and I started paying, what, Kruger, and Costco had the same drug, through good RX,
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which is basically a fucking coupons from 1990, I mean, even before 1990, whenever they started
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coupons, it's basically a bunch of coupons that, you know, give you discounts on medication,
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and I don't know where this money comes from, or who eats the cost with it, I don't know if it's
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the pharmacies, or, you know, the drug end of it, or whatever, but, you know, having to pay,
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even with insurance, $120 for generic drug, and then being able to look it up on good RX,
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and pay like, it was like $14 or $63, or something like that, that's just ridiculous, that's insane,
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like, that's insane, so I didn't know about good RX, somebody told me about it several years ago,
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and that's what I've been using, and I would suggest that, and I know I'm still ranting,
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I'm trying to not, trying to provide value here, but good RX is a good place to start,
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you know, what I can say, as far as filling prescriptions, is, you know, if you can wait,
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wait, wait for the prescription, because what happens with me is I'll get there, and they'll be like,
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oh, well, it's, you know, you can't fill this out till tomorrow, they're in a big rush,
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there's 15,000 people trying to get vaccination, this is January 7th or whatever,
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or January 3rd or 4th, I don't even know what day it is, because I have ADHD, and I've been driving
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around all, effing day trying to fill my prescription for the pills that will help me remember what day it is,
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so I don't know what day it is, I think it's the 4th, but anyways, you know, everybody's running around,
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trying to get COVID test, so all the pharmacies, pharmacies are running around in circles,
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half doing their jobs, which is, that's, that's what happens, that's what has to happen,
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sure, whatever, but at the end of the day, you know, I woke up this morning, I went to go fill my
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prescription, was it yesterday, actually yesterday, I went to fill prescription and Kruger,
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they said, no, this was last, this is earlier this week, so come Monday, I said, oh, I gotta fill my
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prescription on, get my prescription, make sure I get them, I have several in the queue, I have two
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extra of the control substances, just because I can't ever, you know, drive to the doctor,
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get the, call the doctor, remember to call the doctor, remember to go pick up the prescription,
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remember to drive to the right place, to fill the prescription, and then remember to drive
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back to the right place, when the prescription is filled, and then nothing evil or bad,
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or whatever happens in between, that's fine, usually I don't have a problem with the doctor,
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but guess what, my doctor's closed on Wednesdays, and Saturdays and Sundays, and they're closed
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from 1 p.m. to, what, up 12 to 130 p.m. or whatever, and I swear to God, every time I call my doctor,
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their answering machine goes off, or it's Wednesday, or it's, you know, after a certain amount of
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time, or after six, or whatever, and I swear every time I go to call, it's like a bunch time,
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and they're closed, and then I'm like, oh, I don't even remember to call them again, and I don't,
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because they're, they're, I forget, so, you know, I tried to set alarms, I tried to set
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timers, and I moved things around, I tried to fill my prescription last week at Kroger,
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for, like, for the Adderall, and I, and the Gavipenson, I think, I did those both like Monday,
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while she says, oh, you know, we can't do this, we can't give your Adderall till Friday, well,
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I don't actually need it, I have, you know, a probably 30 in the queue, but, you know,
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sometimes I go months without remembering to do fill my prescription, and it's not a routine,
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because it's random, so anyways, I had enough in there, I said, yeah, I can wait till Friday,
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whatever, and then I thought about it, and I'm like, you know what, you know, that's, that's not
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out of time, I need to go pick it up, you know, I'm gonna go pick up the Gavipenson anyways,
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I'm gonna be in there for that, let me, you know, just pull this prescription, and whatever,
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actually, no, I was doing the Adderall, and then I went to go back to Kroger to fill the Gavipenson,
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and I said, while I'm filling the Gavipenson, I'll pull the Adderall and fill it across the street,
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at the Walgreens, well, come to find out, the Walgreens charge double, and not only did they take
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me up prescription, when I went down there, and stood in line for three minutes, or more, finally,
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when they reached me, they said, oh, you know, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah,
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oh, okay, well, we can't fill this until tomorrow, well, that's great, I'm glad I drove all the way to
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here, you know, to try to fill this prescription for you to say you can't fill it, and I spent an
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entire day expecting that you're going to have my prescription ready, and you don't. Now, who's
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fault that is? I don't really care, that's not my problem, but that needs to be fixed, and the whole
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controlled substance and thing needs to be fixed. I should be able to go to the store and get my
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prescription, and I shouldn't have to drive to three different places to try to fill my prescription
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in a day. I shouldn't have to wait for my prescription, I should be able to just go to the store,
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and pick it up, I shouldn't have to physically drop it off, it should be digitally signed, and sent
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from my doctor to Kroger in a secure manner, I could drop it, I could lose it, I could make a
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photocopy of it, and maybe I do, maybe I will, maybe I'll get a printer that does nothing, but
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photocopies prescription, so I can just copy my prescriptions and write whatever prescriptions I want,
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so that I can actually don't have to drive all the way to the doctor, so I mean, I honestly
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feel like making my own method at this point, you know, so I don't have to go to the doctor, and I
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don't have to go through this red tape of filling out and getting crap, and then being disappointed
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every time I talk to a pharmacist. Anyways, good Rx call before, if you can, you know, call before
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see if they have it in stock, and you know, they're not going to talk to you unless, you know, you have
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insurance, or if you fill the prescription without the actual prescription, they're not going to
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tell you anything, they can't tell you anything, and these pharmacists bless their hearts, you know,
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most of them are women, you know, I don't, I don't want to make any comments about that or
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sexist comments or anything, but most of them women bless their hearts, I block flowers for the
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the croger that I'm out now, but I kind of lost my temper at the Walgreens because, you know, it was
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just like, oh, we can't fill this till tomorrow. It's like, well, that's great. I wish someone would
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have told me that before I, you know, spent the entire day thinking I was going to get my prescription
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filled. So here it is, you know, I go to croger, I get the adder off, fill the adder off, they say,
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they can't get it till Friday, I say, well, I need gabapentin. So I go to croger to do the gabapentin,
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I pull the adder off prescription, pick it across the street, fill it there. Oh crap, it's twice
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as much, it's $52 instead of $12 at whatever it is at Walgreens. So, and then not on top of that,
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they tell me that it's not even ready. I was willing to pay the extra money for the gabapentin,
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whatever it was at Walgreens, adder off Walgreens because I was just going to be done with it and
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have to pay an extra $25 just for convenience. But she says you can't fill it till the rest. So I
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pull that. So now I'm sitting here going to croger twice. I've gone to croger twice. I haven't
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gone to the doctor to pick up my new prescription, which is going to be for next month. And I went
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across the street to Walgreens twice now to fill it. So I've gone here now to the pharmacy four times
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today and I have one prescription. And within this week, I've gone to the pharmacy five times
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and I have one prescription to show for it. Now this is all my fault. I get it whatever. But for
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somebody that has issues remembering things and being cast-oriented, I need help. I need something,
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I need maybe there's some kind of thing I can fill out that will make me opt-in,
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opt-able, opt- whatever, my digital thing that could send over. I don't know. Maybe there's
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something you guys know about that I can use or utilize to make this process easier. Questions
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I can ask. Now I know, for example, this gabapentin ends if the prescription ends in like a 49 or
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nine. It's not a controlled substance, but it's one that they're kind of about. So for example,
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gabapentin ends in a 49. And that means that whatever that code is, I don't even know if there's
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a thing online, but I was told by the pharmacist and I probably should look this up that if it like
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ends in a nine or 49, whatever, that it's not a controlled substance, but it's they won't give you
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like three months' worth of of whatever for it. So that's one thing you remember. Now the Adderall,
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which I obviously don't have because it didn't get filled, it has a different number on it. It's
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like an eight or something. And if it ends in that, then you know that it's a controlled substance
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and you have to have, you know, all the bells and whistles and you got to have the the piece of
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paper with the anti-whatever. I mean, it's like it's like it's like going to the store with a
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$50,000 bond to fill a prescription. Like I feel like when I'm getting my Adderall, I feel like
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I'm caching a $50,000 check. That's how insane this process is. And you know, I can, I can,
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I can sit on a network and sniff traffic and grab somebody's bank credentials at a, at a Starbucks
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in about eight minutes and, and, and, you know, transfer money to myself and, you know, move to
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Buswine in eight minutes. And I don't need anything but a computer. But yet, if I want to fill my
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prescription with no history of any bad things, no, no history of identity theft, no, you know,
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anomalies and prescription, whatever, I have to go one through 16 loops and circles and whatever.
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And, and, you know, it's just, I'm ranting about that. The other thing is it, what else, what
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what else am I saying? Uh, the other piece of information I'll say is if you can go without
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having your medication that you need for like a week, uh, or the longer you can go without
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having it, if it controls substance, the better. So if you can go a week, two weeks,
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that you, you, you ideally want to have at least two weeks of whatever prescription you need to
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take, uh, to, to have a buffer room because sometimes, you know, I, like I said, I forget.
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I don't remember. I'll fill up the prescription and then I'll, you know, forget that it's there
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or whatever. Uh, and I feel like, you know, I need at least two weeks if not more. And sometimes
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even then I'll be like, oh, I got, you know, I got four pills left. I need to make sure. And,
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of course, I forget and I forget and I forget and then I don't go to the thing and then I do
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this and this happens and whatever and I change insurance and it's just like,
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but the prescription thing, I'm just using good Rx. I don't have anything to do with
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prescriptions with my, with my health insurance now. But, you know, when you're working with an
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employer and you're, you change jobs every five years or your employer changes their, you know,
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health care system every five years. It seemed like you're recently, I've had, you know, uh,
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three different IT jobs within the past 10 years and one, if not two of them, both have changed
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their insurance slightly. So when you, this year for, for, for example, when I changed,
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when they changed stuff on our back in our choices were from, you know, we had four choices of
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health care, uh, different, uh, premiums to like two or three or something stupid. It was like,
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it was, it was the choices and the amount of flexibility we had with our plan was, you know,
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debons are really reduced and it's pretty much the worth health care that I think I've had since,
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since, you know, the past 20 years at my employers, um, you know, in, in, I didn't do the research,
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my wife did and she says, you know, these plans suck. Like you're paying the crap tonne for
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insurance. You weren't paying that much at, you know, some of the other previous employers,
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this is kind of BS and, you know, she's been getting stuff done. We're getting older. We're
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having other things that we have to do and pay for. And this health insurance thing is starting to
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be annoying. And when our kids, kids get older, I, I hope to God that there's something that, you
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know, whatever socialized medicine, whatever we got to call it, however we figure this out,
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we need to just figure it out and, and, and get it, get it sorted out because like this is,
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this is insane. Like I don't, this is not a viable way to run health care.
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Anyways, being as polite as you can to your pharmacist, it's not there fault. It's, you know,
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it's, they're only doing what they can. They're doing the jobs. It's the health care in the
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insurance companies and the pharmaceutical companies that are making your life a living hell
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and people, the 0.001 percent that take advantage of, you know, filling prescriptions and
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controlled substance and whatever, you as the customer have to go through all these loops and
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all this red tape because, you know, of the some crackhead at some point at some time did
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something he wasn't supposed to do and somebody died. That's not my problem. If I don't have a
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history of, you know, having any kind of, you know, issues or controlled substances,
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use or whatever and it parallels to everything else. That's my biggest beef with everything
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red tape today is that I have no history of doing anything wrong. So unless my identity is stolen,
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you should just give me what I need to have. I shouldn't have to, once you've authenticated me
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and you've identified me as the person as who I say I am, you just need to give me the
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service that you would give a normal person and not make them dump through to 15 hoops and
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provide 15 different things and provide this information and provide that information and, you know,
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it's, it makes, it doesn't make sense to make your customers run through all these hoops despite
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health care, but just in retail and whatever in general through a process to run through all these
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hoops to get what you pay for because, you know, the 2.001 percent of people abuse the system,
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everyone has to get punished. And it's just like, it's getting worse and worse and worse. And then
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when you finally do get the thing that you ever so hopefully think that you've got the right thing,
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but then you do get the thing that you went through all these hoops to get, well, guess what,
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it turns out it's the wrong thing and not only is it the wrong thing, you know, you might have paid
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too much for it. Or, you know, it's, it's, it's, you know, it's expired or whatever it is. Like,
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there's so many things that just need to be fixed in that regard. And I mean, I don't even know
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what I'm saying or I'm just ranting and I hope maybe this helps somebody or helps understand
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that puts them on another level playing field. So we're all suffering with this together.
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If it's just me, then it's just me, but I feel like everybody's suffering through the same madness.
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