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Alan Unell Ph.D.'s avatar

Hi Marion - this is a serious situation. One that many of my friends in Pasadena have had.

One thing that matters is the kind of Medicare you have (Advantage - PPO, HMO, , straight Medicare etc). Another, as you identify, is the location. Have you tried asking Medicare for help?

https://www.medicare.gov/care-compare/?guidedSearch=Physician

is their site to try and find doctors for you.

I will send you an email outside of substack to further discuss. I will also research how this is handled elsewhere and may wind up with a newsletter addressing it...Be well...Alan

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Marion Strong's avatar

I have recently returned from living in the San Francisco Bay Area for 10 years to an area on the central coast of California where I previously lived for 40+ years. I was covered by Kaiser Permanente in the Bay Area and was extremely satisfied with their excellent & efficient medical care. Here on the central coast I have found it nearly impossible to get an appointment with a primary care physician in less than a 5 to 6 (or longer) month wait because hundreds of doctors have left the area or have gone concierge. Where have all the doctors gone? They have moved on to more lucrative areas where the private insurance and Medicare rates of reimbursement are higher. That’s because the governmental powers that be have designated our area as “rural” (which is low) and the cost of living here has skyrocketed. They cannot afford to live here. My only recourse for a medical situation is the emergency room or an urgent care facility. If you have a chronic condition requiring care, you are out of luck. The situation for seniors is dire and no one knows how to remedy it. Local political representatives have tried for years to get the rate of reimbursement raised to no avail. Are there any suggestions out there?

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