spirit wrote:It was not Levine but he was doing someone else there at the same time. We will be going after the report tomorrow.
I did talk to a Woman at Coloplast whose initial reaction was denial until I explained things and answered her questions. She then got quite serious about my situation. Her suggestion was to call my surgeon and make an appointment. Something tells me a "second opinion" first is the way to go???
Getting your insurance carrier on board, especially for a second opinion, seems prudent.
Biblically, one is supposed to bring a grievance to the party in question before you bring in outsiders. Then, if no satisfaction, eventually, to your Rabbi for adjudication. It would be fair to notify your surgeon that you think he did wrong, but, of course, we here are incensed at the degree of wrongness and feel that you might not get heard fairly by the surgeon who did the work. If you can talk to the surgeon's supervisor or the head of urological surgery (depending on who did the surgery and his place in the ranking), that might be best. On the other hand, if you get resistance from the organization, having a second opinion on hand and a lawyer's backup puts you in a position of strength (which you may or may not need).
Use your best judgement to balance these questions.