SaraM, I'm sorry you've had such bad experiences. I hope one day you can escape from Kaiser's abuse also and have the freedom to choose your own doctors from anywhere.
I actually had better experiences with many of my Kaiser specialists than I did with non-specialists. My Kaiser rheum was one of the few docs I could count on to know I was sick with something (she didn't have the faintest idea what, nor could she provide any help or treatment, but she knew I wasn't making things up or anything like that).
I understand now why you needed to tell about your CFS. (Terrible when I want to hide an important condition from my doctors and advise other patients to consider the same, isn't it?? One day, the world will be different--I believe that). I'm glad your PCP is providing tests and disability support.
Laura, in my area, Kaiser too often does not even know how to diagnose standard in-the-box health problems unless you are lucky enough to get one of the competant or semi-competent doctors (you can tell who they are because they are not accepting new patients, lol). However I think in CA it may be like you describe.
Thanks for the sympathy regarding my experiences there. I have major trust issues with doctors now, which I'm starting to get beyond thanks to some competent and kind doctors I have met since dumping Kaiser (but which I had not met any like for my own care, even outside of Kaiser, in past years).
@all
The prescription coverage actually works out a lot better on our current plan because Kaiser charges the full copay even if the medicine is cheap, and Providence charges a percent or some such calculation but never more than the copay, so some of our meds are less than the copay (and some are only $4 because the pharmacy has a list of common meds for affordable prices, but you do not need any particular insurance to get this deal--just check at CVS, Target, whatever pharmacy, and ask if your med is on their $4 plan).