What about Children's Hospital Los Angeles? Do all of the patients have instantaneous access to all needed medical care, or is that mostly for the children whose parents are donors?
That's a picture of the caption of the first picture at the Children's Hospital Los Angeles website.
Poor Saylor. It's improbable that she or her parents know that the hospital is exploiting her name.
This is what it was like at Boston Medical Center the last time that I was there, thinking that I was going to have an appointment for the painful and frightening medical problem that I have had since September 2016:
I filmed that video on January 27, 2017, 3 weeks after I was sent the letter from the property management's law firm that informed me that I was being evicted for my "false" accusation of voyeurism in my apartment, which the conglomerate knows is not a false accusation:
This is what happened at Boston Medical Center on December 20, 2016:
I filmed that video at a group counseling session. At the previous session that I had attended, I had tried to talk about the hidden, illegal cameras in my apartment. The therapist facilitating that group seemed to have assumed that I was paranoid and delusional, because when I tried to talk about the issue on December 20, 2016, she had me thrown out of the group.
Maybe my publishing that video on December 20, 2016 was what emboldened the law firm for the property management to send me its accusatory letter on December 22, 2017:
My filming and publishing the video on December 20, 2016 was what led to the hospital having a male security guard in the hallway and a female security guard in the room with the doctor when I went to what was supposed to be a medical appointment on January 27, 2017. I know that it was, because after December 20th and before January 27th, I had an appointment with my psychiatrist and she told me that someone had spoken to her about my having filmed and published the December 20th video. She told me that it might be better if I only had individual counseling and didn't talk about my problems at the group sessions, because it had upset other clients in the group. I told her that other clients in the group hadn't seemed upset by my talking about the voyeurism, that they were concerned and supportive, and that it was the therapist's assumption that I was delusional and her having me thrown out of the room for no reason that was terrifying for everyone. My psychiatrist said that she would talk to the therapist, but I think the hospital administration had already decided to deny me access to appropriate health care. After I told Patient Advocacy about having been met at the January 27th urogynecology appointment by the security guards and expected to have my verbal discussion and my physical exam while the female security guard was in the room with the doctor and me and the male security guard was in the hallway, which I had quietly walked away from instead of having the appointment in such degrading conditions, and then been followed out of the building by the security guards, I was sent a letter from the office where I was supposed to have had that appointment, calling me a bad patient, saying that I couldn't have medical care from that office and that the providers at that office wouldn't respond to any other communication from me.
My subsequent phone calls for help to my psychiatrist's office and the office of Patient Advocacy have been unanswered. I haven't made another appointment anywhere at the hospital, other than when the pain from my untreated physical problem was so awful a few weeks ago that I went to the Emergency Room and was sent to Urgent Care. I continue to have symptoms and to feel that I don't know what to expect other than to be treated like a criminal if I approach Patient Advocacy again or try to make another appointment for anything.
Anyone who has wanted to know what medical care is like for someone who's poor could have had that information from what I have published since 2010, not only about what has happened to me because of the conglomerate, but because of what I have had to say about how impoverished clients of the mental health care system are treated. The old saying is "If you're rich, you have problems; if you're poor, you're crazy," and that's not less true after 8 years of the Obama administration.
That's the address of a Guardian article that was published on May 1, 2017.
I have deleted a video that I published at YouTube a few months ago; so many people were exploiting what I had said that I decided it was less trouble to erase it.
I'd appreciate it if Mrs. Clinton would stop pinning that Tweet.
Copyright, with noted exceptions, L. Kochman, May 3, 2017 @ 8:01 p.m./No code, all policies operative, all the time. I'll publish my preliminary page and similar pages again./I don't choose the adresses of videos that are published at YouTube. Unlike the conglomerate, I don't choose excerpts or supporting information for code purposes.