On 4/16/2011 12:35 AM, Giusi wrote:
They had never seen a pump. That was made clear by the interpreter. I
gave then the phone number for Medronic, the pump's manufacturer, in
Milan. They refused to call.
Because he was in "intensive care" I was only allowed to spend 30
minutes with him once per day. On his last day, I came with a box of
chocolates and a big package of cookies or the staff. They let me stay
longer. First thing that came to my mind was the stories the WW2
soldiers told of giving our Hershey bars
I don't speak Italian and I was not permitted to stay with him longer
than 30 minutes one time per day. You can only imagine my frustration.
Giusi, I could not sit by. No one was permitted in that ward unless it
was the regular visiting schedule. Even my interpreter wasn't permitted
in. They had the door locked.
If you knocked, an attendant might or might not come to the door, but
NO ONE was getting in off the schedule.
Perhaps in Rome or Milan but definitely not in Palermo. There is no way,
having lived through that event, I would trade the US system, flawed
though it is, for what I experienced in Palermo.
--
Janet Wilder
Way-the-heck-south Texas
Spelling doesn't count. Cooking does.