I mean in some cases I can understand why they force you to take an ambulance. Back in 2012 when I had that first lung collapse. When they had been running tests on me for nearly 2 hours and finally figured out what it was. She came back in like "he needs to get to a hospital NOW. We already called an ambulance." My Dad kept asking (cause he was the one there with me) if he could just drive. She just shoke her head saying I needed an ambulance cause the lung was already pretty much fully collapsed and it could start to make the other collapse at that point. So if on the way there it started collapsing to then I wouldn't be able to breathe. So they had to roll me out of there and everything and put me in an ambulance. Pushed me way ahead in the ER thought right to next in line for immediate surgery. Which is good in that case because it's life threatening.

Yeah I know that's why, but it's sad. I've had to have multiple. I've seen things on tv lately where people have multiple right after another. One so much so where a kid went to the hospital with trouble and constant pains. The scanned the neck and nothing, but the doctor thought he noticed something and was like "scan again, but scan further up." Come to find out he was right as saw what he needed to. A very rare type of cancer. See though, it's the little efforts that can save lives. Sure you may not be able to physically see it, but that's what all the technology we have today is for. To help improve our healthcare and lifespans. Without some of these machines now we wouldn't be able to catch things in time or notice certain things that save countless lives. All it takes is one person with that authority to stand up and make a change.