56 days gone without a trace

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Charleston, West Virginia
Noticed some messages of replies to threads I post in, and others of "where are you". Problem is, I 've been in a local rehab center getting my busted left knee rehabbed. They have a crappy Fortinet hardware firewall on the building, so I could get email, but could not reply or post on my forums.
Anyway, I experienced the ultimate stupid accident. Went to the local corner gas/snacks/beer/armed robbery store on the corner two blocks from my apartment. Had a craving for some chocolate and a Ginger Ale, of all things. Slipped my American Arms 22LR PX-2 in my back jeans pocket and took the walk. It was about midnight on June 7. Got home with no problems.
Pulled the pistol from my back pocket, dropped the mag (it's a Walther style semi), and jacked the slide to eject the chambered round. Hand slipped, and even though my trigger finger (right handed) was parallel to the slide, one of the others hit the trigger as the slide slammed shut. BANG I shot myself in my left knee - in the big bone, luckily, but the damage was done. 32gr HP.
Surgery the next morning at the crack of dawn, and now, 56 days later, my Medicare/retirement insurance cancelled me, saying I was back to normal. Yeah, right...
So, now I am back home. My left knee hates it, for now. PT is not close to finished. Only major improvement is I haven't had a cigarette in 56 days, and am not really craving one, yet.
We shall see.
Glad to be back, and though worse for wear, something I never expected going into my 75th year.
 
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I had a cop friend that shot himself through the kneecap with a Glock 45. He was walking 12 hours later, using a walker and a straw through his leg as a drain. By day 2 the walker and straw were gone and a cane was all he used. Did he ever take a ribbing, not on the shooting but on letting people see his white legs in shorts.
 
"... and now, 56 days later, my Medicare/retirement insurance cancelled me, saying I was back to normal." What does this mean?
It seems that now my Medicare Part C (before I retired the provider was my regular health insurance), and Medicare, stated that I was finished with Occupational Therapy (whatever that is) and back to the physical condition I was before the accident. The cut-off is usually around 21 days (so I was told by rehab staff), but oddly I made it to 35 days before the first notice. A doctor somewhere overruled the first discharge at 35 days. Second one came 18 days later, and I had less than 36 hours to file an appeal. This time, I was turned down. All parties at the rehab center, and online at Medicare, said the odds of getting the second reversal was little to none... I bailed, as a second review could take up to 14 days (was told two weeks was not unusual), and I would end up being billed back to the release day (Friday - one day of grace), and owe nearly $8,000 for 14 days service...

There are big kinks in long term care now, especially if you are there to try to rehab and recover. Seems if you are less crazy than full institutionalization, or not yet sick enough for hospice, the corporate places which now run healthcare will keep you going for a long while.

An aside that probably added 10-14 days to the first 35 day stretch - a week in, I caught a bladder infection. Never had one before. Six days of deep painful antibiotic shots in my hips. Got a clean bill of health from my original surgeon. Then two days later I had a different bladder infection, and now an I.V. in my left arm, with antibiotic drips every 8 hours for the next 7 1/2 days. Hard to do PT with a plastic line in your forearm...

My apologies to the staff for pontificating, but this has been a terrible summer lead up to a milestone birthday.
 
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