I'm curious if this is normal medical practice in the age of COVID?
I have been having bad sinus problems for 3ish weeks. This is fairly normal for me during peak ragweed season. However, 2 weeks ago, I started running a fever, so I called into work sick and went to my PCP. He tested me for COVID (negative) and said "take some Tylenol and get some sleep". A week went by, with me so congested I couldn't sleep, and with intermittent fever. Went back to PCP. Still tested COVID negative. Still, my PCP said "take some Tylenol and some mucinex. Get some sleep."
Finally yesterday, I went back a third time. Still tested COVID negative. He gave me a script for amoxicillin. And 24 hours later, I feel great. Everything drained out.
Does it really take 3 visits to diagnose a bacterial sinus infection? Or is this just a covid-fatigued PCP not seeing the obvious?
I have been having bad sinus problems for 3ish weeks. This is fairly normal for me during peak ragweed season. However, 2 weeks ago, I started running a fever, so I called into work sick and went to my PCP. He tested me for COVID (negative) and said "take some Tylenol and get some sleep". A week went by, with me so congested I couldn't sleep, and with intermittent fever. Went back to PCP. Still tested COVID negative. Still, my PCP said "take some Tylenol and some mucinex. Get some sleep."
Finally yesterday, I went back a third time. Still tested COVID negative. He gave me a script for amoxicillin. And 24 hours later, I feel great. Everything drained out.
Does it really take 3 visits to diagnose a bacterial sinus infection? Or is this just a covid-fatigued PCP not seeing the obvious?