07-07-2018, 01:07 AM
(07-06-2018, 03:12 PM)eric Wrote:(07-06-2018, 04:01 AM)dicappatore Wrote:I assume this is not Rosalee's first visit to her doctor, as well as what ever clinic/hospital the scan was done at. While Monroe might have overlooked the name on the screen, her/his insurance company would not have done so. An insurance card is the first thing they want to see, unless the knife stuck in your chest is moving because its attached to your heart. They will ask your spouse for it immediately however. No ID with your last name on it, no service except for accidents.(07-05-2018, 11:19 PM)Zansy Wrote: I've already stated my opinion on the debate. (And I told you about the family crest on the platter in the thread in question so my opinion isn't changed by this.)
But Sean Renard is actually using his father's name. - Elizabeth's last name is Lascelles. (4.02 Octopus Head) And Sean's half brother Eric canonwise is refered to as "Eric Renard" by the media when they report his death. (3.02 PTZD)
Thank you for the correction on the Sean Renard name. I should know better to take anything syscrash states as facts and got trapped into trying to have a discussion with a contributor that has no clue on which end is up. Sean Renard character is my least favorite support character in the show and one of the least i would care to research much.
I do recall your reference to the platter on that posting, I wasn't sure about. I did recall the door stain glass window more than the platter but after I re-watched S3E12, It clarified my memory on why I believe Blutbaden is his last name. Back to that posting, your claim of having a surname "Blutbaden meaning Bloodbath" as being awkward is lame. There are surnames with worse meanings or references in existence that are worse than "Bloodbath".
This constant reference to the sonogram as proof of his last name is weak. Clerical errors in medical records are as common as having a burger with french fries.
Lets say the writing team did screw this one up? My argument is just more valid. The Monroe character is portrayed as a perfectionist. He would have easily overlooked a clerical error while being excited to see his wife having triplets than to continue a 200 year old lie.
Last time I went to a hospital, here in the USA for non emergency, As you enter the main entrance, you are directed to proceed to an area called "ADMISSIONS" and sit at a desk with an interviewer. This is where you fill out all the paperwork at once, before being admitted.
If you go to a private doctors office or a clinic, you do the same. You fill out a bunch of paperwork, FIRST. You do not do show proof of insurance when you get in the examination room or in this case, the sonogram room, if they have a specific room for it.
Does all that info transfer to the sonogram screen? It could with advanced medical software connected to a networked sonogram machine.
This is stuff you pick up working as a troubleshooter field tech for 10 years repairing commercial internet and telecom services from 10 meg to 10gigs. I even had access to a 100gig tester in case I had to test the few 100gig lines we supplied/serviced. And yes, some of my customers were hospital, medical clinics and satellite doctors offices networked to affiliated hospitals.
Can any of you prove the machine used for Rosalee's sonogram on the hospital or office network? Or one that the med tech had to type in by hand. Hence, a possible clerical error.
As for the insurance company, the authorizing board might get the sonogram video but the billing department generates bills from the forms you fill out when you are admitted. Procedures are billed when approved, thats before the sonogram is taken.
As for insurance coverage? Both Rosalee and Monroe were both separately self employed. A watchmaker and a spice shop owner. Does anyone have any proof of any medical insurance? What type, group or individual. Are they even on the same insurance plan or they still have separate ones.
I prefer arguments made with concrete facts not speculated assumptions.
You know you are OLD, when you see the Slide Ruler you used in college selling in an ANTIQUE SHOP!!