Axel Slingerland
Wordy Blues Rocker
Well, I had my Occipital Nerve Block shots this morning. It's now been over 8 hours and the Novocaine has worn off, and for the first time in three months, I am in about 80% less pain than I was in this morning. I'll never be 100% pain free until they cremate me (which I am in no hurry for), but I'll take a pain level of 3 over 9 any day. I've been looking for a new pain specialist Doctor since I found out the guy who has been doing my ONBs for two years is not a Doctor, he is a Physician's Assistant. What's the difference? Education and Experience.
To become a Doctor / Physician, you have to earn a 4 year Bachelor's Degree, a 4 year Doctor of Medicine Degree, and then do a Residency program lasting 3 to 7 years depending on the specialty. Pain Management falls under Neurology, which is one of the longer Residencies. Further training in a Fellowship for a subspecialty can add another 1 to 3 years. A Licensed MD can practice independently. A Physician Assistant (PA) requires 4 year Bachelor's Degree, a 2 to 3 year Master's Degree from an ARC-PA-accredited program and while they can do a lot of things a Doc can do, they must be under the supervision of a Licensed Doctor.
I have not had any luck finding a new Doc. There is one in Bakersfield (15 miles away from me) that is a DO, a Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine, but to get in I need chart notes from a Licensed MD, which I don't have. So I have to call his office and see if he will take a referral from my primary care Doc with a new MRI instead. I haven't had one in years anyway and based on what my DO in Eureka told me, I'm past due for one. My last one was in 2015.
So today I go to see the PA because he's "all I got" as the old saying goes, and it turns out he's on vacation. But his Attending Physician comes in and gives me the shots, immediately showing a night and day difference. He's Indian (as in he's from India, not a Native American) and as such I can barely understand a word he says. But his skill level is far beyond the PA, and he has an MD after his name...
To become a Doctor / Physician, you have to earn a 4 year Bachelor's Degree, a 4 year Doctor of Medicine Degree, and then do a Residency program lasting 3 to 7 years depending on the specialty. Pain Management falls under Neurology, which is one of the longer Residencies. Further training in a Fellowship for a subspecialty can add another 1 to 3 years. A Licensed MD can practice independently. A Physician Assistant (PA) requires 4 year Bachelor's Degree, a 2 to 3 year Master's Degree from an ARC-PA-accredited program and while they can do a lot of things a Doc can do, they must be under the supervision of a Licensed Doctor.
I have not had any luck finding a new Doc. There is one in Bakersfield (15 miles away from me) that is a DO, a Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine, but to get in I need chart notes from a Licensed MD, which I don't have. So I have to call his office and see if he will take a referral from my primary care Doc with a new MRI instead. I haven't had one in years anyway and based on what my DO in Eureka told me, I'm past due for one. My last one was in 2015.
So today I go to see the PA because he's "all I got" as the old saying goes, and it turns out he's on vacation. But his Attending Physician comes in and gives me the shots, immediately showing a night and day difference. He's Indian (as in he's from India, not a Native American) and as such I can barely understand a word he says. But his skill level is far beyond the PA, and he has an MD after his name...
