Shaman Singh, M.D.
, developed red bumps on both feet. The 44-year-old initially chalked it up to bug bites, but when the rash spread up his legs and the itchy bumps began to blister and became painful, he knew something was seriously wrong. As soon as he got home to Arlington, VA, he rushed to the ER, but was shooed out without a diagnosis. “I was left empty-handed except for a spreadsheet of dermatologists in the area I could try calling,” says Dr. Singh. “I was like ‘You’ve got to be kidding me.’ The earliest appointment was 10 days away.”
In desperation, Dr. Singh scoured the Internet and stumbled upon Zocdoc, a website that helps patients find and book doctors. He found a dermatologist who could see him immediately; that doctor took two biopsies and the results confirmed that he had, a rare skin disease that causes inflammation of the blood vessels. Since this condition can damage kidneys, he was referred to a nephrologist, who started him on protective medications.
Had it not been for Dr. Singh’s appointment with the dermatologist, the intervention for both the rash and the kidneys would have been delayed. Even though Dr. Singh himself is a doctor, he had no more clout than the rest of us who face long delays for health care—and unfortunately, in the U.S. there are a lot of us.
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