Greenwich Time

Ambulance snubs hospital preference

- Keith Roach, M.D. Readers may email questions to: ToYourGood­Health@med .cornell.edu or mail questions to 628 Virginia Dr., Orlando, FL 32803.

Dear Dr. Roach: I have had bad experience­s with my local trauma center. Mainly, they will not consult with my doctor or my hospital, and vice versa. Things would move more quickly and safely if they got my medical history rather than starting from scratch. As a result, I ask the EMTs or paramedics to take me to MY hospital. Most times they refuse. Can I insist? I am so adverse that I ask a friend to take me to the emergency room instead of an ambulance.

C.S.

Answer: The first thing I would say is that in a true emergency, you should call an ambulance, not a friend to drive you. You don’t want your untrained friend to be the only person there if you need emergency interventi­on.

When the ambulance comes, you can ask to be taken to your hospital of choice, but the paramedic crew has the judgment to determine whether this is safe or violates state or local protocol.

Electronic medical records, despite severe shortcomin­gs, do hold promise for improved communicat­ion between different hospital systems. In the meantime, personto-person communicat­ion between your attending physician at the trauma center and your regular doctor is still critical, but it takes both parties to be willing to do this.

Dear Dr. Roach: At my annual physical this year my white blood cell count came back low (3.4, with normal being 3.8-10.4). All other labs were normal. My doctor had me repeat the lab after six weeks, and it came back with the exact same result. He now wants me to wait six to eight months and repeat again. Why? What could be the cause of this low lab value, and should I be worried while waiting a half year to repeat it?

R.C.

Answer: White blood cells fight off infection and play other roles in protecting the body. The biggest proportion of white blood cells numericall­y are the granulocyt­es, which are also called neutrophil­s.

Periodical­ly checking your CBC and differenti­al is reasonable. However, a visit to a hematologi­st would be the best way to get more informatio­n on whether you need to be concerned about this.

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