Why Some People Don’t Like the Public Health System

I’ve shared here before that I’ve had some very good experiences in the public health system with multiple specialists that I see (free if a legal resident), but when something is too slow from their overload of patients, I can, and occasionally do, choose the private healthcare system with many doctor choices and all expensive (though not as expensive as in the states!).

Last Wednesday evening my next door neighbor climbed up on a folding chair on his front porch to knock down a wasp nest and fell off on his hard tile floor and was calling out in pain. I went over to check on him and he did not want me to call a Red Cross ambulance, because they charge you and he has no funds for that, so I call a taxi and took him to our Atenas Clinic Emergency Room. The service there was very good (better than sometimes in the crowded Emergency Room!) with all his vitals checked and seeing a doctor within an hour and a half, it was no slower than any of my ER trips in Nashville! 🙂 The doctor called for a social security van ambulance to take him to the closest public hospital for an X-ray as he was acting like his arm was broken, maybe in two places. Within another 30-45 minutes he was in an ambulance on his way to Alajuela. So far, pretty good for not a penny of cost for him!

Then at Hospital San Rafael de Alajuela, he was seen quickly and x-rayed within about an hour. He has a broken shoulder and elbow! They scheduled him for the first available orthopedic surgeon which was 10 days away and said “we want you to stay in the hospital until after the surgery. But sorry, we have no available beds and you will have to wait in a chair in the hallway for a few days until a bed in the orthopedic ward becomes available.” 🙁 Saturday he was told he would probably have a bed on Sunday, the day I’m writing this and I haven’t communicated to see if he does.

THAT IS WHY MANY PEOPLE ARE UNHAPPY WITH CAJA (nickname for the Social Security Healthcare System): (1) A 10 day wait for surgery in an otherwise good system that is overloaded and under-staffed. (2) Like most public hospitals here, the government doesn’t provide enough money to expand and provide more beds and thus often there are no beds when needed. It was especially critical during Covid. He will survive but neither of the above two situations are good!

So, the next morning (Thursday), I took him some personal items from his house he will need in the hospital. Then I returned to my house a little after noon and started vomiting all over the place, followed by the expected diarrhea! No fun! And I did not want to deal with CAJA again, so I got an appointment with my private GP the next morning to be treated at my cost, which is always an option if you can afford to pay (my neighbor could not). So in some ways it is like the states, if you have money, you get quicker service (private room, etc.). But I am still not well, though no more vomiting or diarrhea. The private doc had me get all the lab work on blood and stool sample and I have 4 different medicine lasting 4 days to a week. (All costly!) Hoping I’m over it soon! 🙂

And how much different would my treatment have been at the public clinic? I don’t know, but was feeling so bad I did not want to find out! 🙂 And yes, I could get private healthcare insurance here, but at an unaffordable high price. And my local GP’s clinic has a “Membership” at $100 a month and I had it before I started using public, but I never needed that much service and it did not include the lab or pharmacy costs. So I dropped that. As you get older, medical services become more important and almost always depend on your income and available funds. If I every need another big cancer surgery & treatment, it will have to be with the public system, regardless how long I have to wait. I don’t have enough money to do it again. But at least Costa Rica has a basically very good public healthcare system, even if sometimes very slow. And 10 days is not near as long a wait as some people have for some surgeries.

Sorry! I got more long-winded than I intended! But maybe that partially explains why many people here don’t like the public health system, but remember that for the poorest person it is often a lifesaver! And though with a big overload of patients and work, they are extremely well-organized and with a computerized healthcare system that’s the envy of many countries!

So, I still like it! But will occasionally exercise my freedom to go private when I can afford it, as I did again this week.

¡Pura Vida!

Winter Solstice Party Yesterday

One of the neighbor couples, Russ & Holly, had their second Solstice Party yesterday and it was cloudy (but never rained) meaning no really good photos, but an example of expat life in Costa Rica. 🙂

Solstice Party, Roca Verde, Atenas, Alajuela, Costa Rica
Solstice Party, Roca Verde, Atenas, Alajuela, Costa Rica
Higher up the hills have wider vistas than me! 🙂

¡Pura Vida!

¡Feliz Navidad! — Merry Christmas!

You ask me why I dwell in the green mountain

The green mountains of Atenas, Costa Rica seen from my terrace.

You ask me why I dwell in the green mountain;

I smile and make no reply for my heart is free of care.

As the peach-blossom flows downstream and is gone into the unknown,

I have a world apart that is not among men.

~Li Bai, 8th Century Chinese Poet

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That is sort of my response to the U.S. election and what has been going on there for many years now. And as I finish my life retired in Costa Rica, I will continue, as long as able, to photograph and write about birds, butterflies and flowers! 🙂

The photo is of the green hills of Atenas, Costa Rica as seen from my terrace at breakfast.

¡Pura Vida!

2 Charlie Photos in Auction Tomorrow!

for the Democrats Abroad Fundraiser & Voter Help . . .

Keel-billed Toucan photo by Charlie Doggett, 16×20 printed on metal.
Pura Vida Butterflies, 2nd Edition by Charlie Doggett –
Photos of 250 species of butterflies with index of common names in English and scientific names in Latin.

Both of these have a minimum bid well below the retail price, but of course the fundraisers hope you will bid much higher! 🙂 The silent auction is from 1-4 tomorrow, 30 September 2024, at Huaraches Atenas Mexican Restaurant, with auction winners announced promptly at 4 pm. If you are a U.S. citizen and don’t know how to vote from abroad, people will help you. And if you have prepared your overseas ballot for mailing but don’t trust the post office, then people can take your mail-ready ballot and deliver it to the U.S. Embassy for their mail pouch to the states. And while you are there, bid on some of the many wonderful things in the auction including one of my wall art photos and one of my photo books! 🙂

¡Pura Vida!

#1 Best Travel Destination AND #1 Best Place to Retire!

No big surprise for those of us who live here, but Costa Rica was named as the #1 Travel Destination for 2024 by Travel & Leisure Magazine AND the International Living Magazine and organization simultaneously named Costa Rica as the #1 Best Place to Retire in 2024! Read about it in Travel & Leisure. Or on International Living website.

View from my cabin at Playa Cativo Lodge, Piedras Blancas NP, Costa Rica. And feature photo is a Keel-billed Toucan in my garden in Atenas, Alajuela, Costa Rica.

For someone who made what a few American friends back in Nashville thought was a radical or crazy decision to move here in 2014, these announcements confirm the good decision I made back then! :-)

And these rankings are a good celebration of my 9 years of living in Costa Rica (as of December 24, 2023 — 2+ weeks ago). And my survival of cancer a celebration of the excellent healthcare here! Plus there is no better place for a nature lover and nature photographer like me! Tell your nature-lover friends to follow my blog to see what it is like to be “Retired in Costa Rica!” :-)

¡Pura Vida!

The Other Side of Atenas Yesterday

My birding friend from British Columbia, Canada, is here this week and we went birding on a former rural road on the west side of Atenas with lots of houses going up of course! Here’s 3 shots of the area and most of my bird shots were not real good because of light and distance plus I lost about 1/3 of them when somehow my computer deleted a bunch from the camera disk. Aghhhh! (I know! It was me hitting a wrong key or something! Grrrr!) Technology will be the death of me yet! :-) But the cows are cute! And that bright yellow tree is a Cortez Amarillo (Tabebuia Ochracea) tree that is blooming all over Costa Rica this time of year and in the landscape shot you can see yellow spots of them blooming. Thursday morning we will try a real country road south of Atenas and then Friday morning we are visiting a nearby nature reserve that I hope will be birdful! 🙂

Vista from a road on the west side of Atenas with my house on the side of that mountain across the valley.

And read on for a photo of a cow & calf nursing and a close up of the Cortez Tree! :-)

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Renewed Residency Today

I went to San Jose this morning to renew my residency with an attorney and 3 other American expats in Atenas. Since we were all three “Adultos mayores” or senior adults, we did not have to stand in that long line in my photo, but instead were escorted to the front of the line where we got the next available window to finish processing our paperwork (having paid in advance the fee amounting to a little over $100 USD, 66,000 colones). Then they photograph you and your new plastic card is ready in 30 to 40 minutes while you wait in an outside patio with coffee available.  🙂  Plus at the same time they email you the new (since my last renewal) electronic card that you keep on your phone and can use just like the plastic card. Getting too modern for me! 🙂 It is pictured below this Immigration Office line photo with my numbers scratched out. The actual blue plastic card is pictured in the center of the electronic one. Plus the plastic card is also electronic for card readers like on the public bus and government offices.

Waiting in line for residency cards at the Uruca Office of CR Immigration.

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Garden Pix

Walking through the garden on two mornings (March 11 & 12) and I chose these shots to share in a little slide show. Rainy Season usually sorta starts the middle of April and really starts in May, but by March 12 we have already had 3 little but nice rains! So I’m glad as is my garden!  🙂

Each and every bloom is unique and beautiful to me. Enjoy walking through my garden with the slide show below and here is the only one I can’t identify, from across the driveway in neighbor’s yard . . .

Unidentified in Neighbor’s Yard

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Calle Nueva won’t be “Country” Much Longer

And as a nature lover, I do not always embrace “progress” that henders nature, but as always, I learn to live with it!  🙂 This old dirt country road called “Calle Nueva” winds over three or four hills through the woods and farms on the western edge of Pueblo Atenas running from the western side of town to the nearby village of Rio Grande at the entrance to Ruta 27, our controlled access highway between San Jose and Jaco Beach. This narrow country dirt road has been considered an emergency exit road in case of a disaster requiring evacuation. Now it is about to become a major street or road to enter or exit Atenas. They first graded and widened it to 9 meters taking a few trees and lots of wild flower with their backhoes, graders and chainsaws. Now they have started at the Rio Grande end widening it to 14 meters and paving it! Working this way! And more than half finished! Already traffic has increased and when all is paved it will stay busy!

Where I enter Calle Nueva, just past Colegio Técnico on Avenida 10, with new black gravel up to the little one lane bridge where it is back to the plain red dirt again.

Of course I am disappointed that I am about to lose my little “shady lane” country road for birding and butterflies along with other nature photography, but even with pavement and more cars it will for a while have more birds and other nature than city streets, just gradually the farms along this road will be turned into housing developments as more foreigners move here in both retirement like me AND now so many younger adults who work on the internet and can live anywhere are choosing to live here! 🙂  It’s all part of our big changing world! At least I’m already living in one of those more desirable places in the world to live! 🙂

Recently graded and widened to 9 meters and soon to 14 meters and paved!

I will continue to walk this road for its nature until there is no more nature. The additional people, traffic and greater speed of vehicles will discourage the birds and other animals in time, but for now it is still a nature path, even when the pavement goes down. And I will continue to document here the birds and butterflies I find through these woods and farms, but for you who live here, be aware than “progress” is coming!  🙂

More photos of the road below from my March 10 sunrise walk . . .

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