I think you missed the question. |
| Yes doctors can fire patients if they give them notice. The way things are now with large panel sizes (2000 plus patients), it is not feasible for a doctor to provide individualized attention (ie tons of questions on messaging and doctor’s respectful of time and other patient needs). Concierge medicine is built for this type of intensive relationship so I would consider investing in this type of model of care. |
Legal action? No. Unless you think there was some sort of illegal discrimination going on, doctors are perfectly free to drop a patient with proper notice. |
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There is a shortage of doctors right now for a lot of reasons. Concierge medicine is one, and various kinds of fallout from the pandemic is another.
You can blame docs for taking on large panels, but at a certain point, they can't fit everyone into the work hours anyway. It's not to make more money -- it's to try to address need. |
It's broader than that. My husband's gastroenterology practice, for instance, fires patients who have their screening colonoscopies done by another practice. That's one of the most profitable things they do, so they don't want patients that go elsewhere for those. |
DP. And that doesn't sound selfless, of course, but then again medical practice is just a business. That is a reasonable business practice. If you want doctors to be just like any other workers, and for medicine to just be a job, then this is how things shake out. You can always fire them if you don't like the way they are running their businesses. |
Doctor here. I once had to fire a patient because he was violent toward me and staff. This was 20 years ago. |
Exactly. As we have learned on this forum, it seems more than one person here feels it’s totally reasonable to fall out of the sky with dozens of self identified pubmed articles demanding they be read during a GP appointment and declaring care substandard if it doesn’t happen. |
This is extreme and well warranted. This is more about getting rid of a patient without reason. It’s happening I can’t help but feel it comes down to money. Low, Medicare, reimbursements, unlikely to get paid, that type of thing |
Disagree-doctors build their practices around accepting Medicare/medicaid/certain insurances (or not accepting them.) they aren’t going to them fire patients with that insurance for no reason! Much more likely is that the patient is a repeated no show/rude/non-compliant and doesn’t adhere to agree upon treatment plan or office procedure. |
| Doctors can fire patients for nonadherence with treatment, missing multiple appointments, misusing or diverting prescribed medications or violating practice agreements, which are usually signed by the patient upfront. This list doesn’t even include threatening the doctor or any of the staff or other patients of the practice or being disruptive to the medical setting in some way. Of course, the patients who were fired aren’t going to tell you the truth about any of these issues and just blame the doctors or the practice. |
To be fair, I've had doctors flat out refuse to treat an actual medical diagnosis I have as well as refuse to treat symptoms of an undiagnosed condition. Both resulted in dire consequences to me. Sometimes they need to have that hard conversation with a patient. |
My kids are on Medicaid and they've received excellent care from attentive and caring doctors. As a PP noted, either the practice is built to include those patients from the get-go, or the practice isn't, and they tell you upfront. |
Way to bury the lede, OP. |
If they refuse to treat you, it's usually because it's not within their purview and they direct you to the right specialist. Sometimes the decision of which physician treats what condition is blurry and debatable - but usually it makes sense. |