Agreed. However, if you are in the US, ERs are required by law to stabilize and treat. So if nothing else they will be able to establish that your ailment is not immediate or life threatening by ruling out things such as infarction, Stroke, ect. They may end up giving you a breathing treatment via nebulizer and if you show signs of improvement from that it would help to narrow down your issue, and make it easier to endure until you can see a gen practitioner who can do the more extensive testing.NiceGurl_14 said:The sad thing is is even the people in the ER here are touchy about that. For example, they won't do tests generally unless you have some kind of insurance and just going in and seeing a doctor is like $400 (that's ridiculous)
Suggestion: If you cannot afford the visits, and have no insurance, Doctors, Urgent care, ERs all have sliding fee scales, and Charity cases that are evaluated by social workers. you simply need to ask for the paperwork to submit, which will generally make the cost infinitely more affordable.
And as for everyone talking about 15 days being unheard of? Seriously? have you been to a doctor in the US within the last decade? I cant speak for major metropolitan areas, but I know in smaller towns and cities this can easily be relatively normal. To see a dentist I had to wait 3 weeks, My last doctor appt I had to schedule a week and a half in advance because there were no open slots. It might not be the case everywhere, but it is far more common in the US than to liken it to a third world country.