That’s hard to do sometimes because of the bait and switch some medical offices are doing! |
It would drive down salaries for all. More doctors aren’t necessary. Most people don’t have some rare, hard to treat disorder. Most people have common medical aliments a mid level provider can absolutely handle. |
What? No. These are patients who were not referred out by the mid levels. The ones I've gotten (outpatient) have come to me because they moved, their provider moved, or they realized that the care they were getting was not good, or (inpatient) because they were hospitalized. I do also get plenty of patients that were previously managed by MDs, for all the same reasons. So no, these were not complicated patients sent to me because the mid level needed more help. I do in fact think that the overmedication/mismedication that I've seen is a reflection of the very hubris that you are attributing to doctors, and of NOT asking for MD help when they should. Because MDs have had many many more training hours, we've had more chances to see when things go wrong, and I think that because mid levels don't get that opportunity, it's not altogether surprising that they can be more cavalier. |
Why would someone go into so much debt to attend medical school when you could become an NP for cheaper and still have similar responsibilities? |
Fine, you've seen that. And in my family I have one member facing a terminal condition because his doctor blew off symptoms and told him his cancer was a "sinus infection" and my entire family of 4 was minutes away from a catastrophic scenario when my dh had a seizure just before getting the car due to medical mismanagement. Both MDs. Both experienced. Does this mean I don't trust doctors? Of course not. So spare me the "horror stories" about NPs/PAs, doctors make bad and dangerous decisions all the time and you know this is true. |
Says anyone who knows anything about practice management. Says anyone who had read the "patient bill of rights." It's not Wal-Mart, you're entering a practice as a patient and should be made aware of how they triage visits and to whom so you can go elsewhere if it doesn't suit you. That's totally legit. But you have no "right" to any particular doctor. I mean try it, tell the risk and quality management director that you have the right to a certain doctor and see what they tell you. |
Tell the jury that “the practice” didn’t abandon a patient when they sought to see a physician with whom they had an established relationship, were refused, and were not warned of the dangers of delaying attention. Go ahead. Tell them that. |
As previously noted, “the practice” (and their “triage”, and their “risk and quality” director) do not establish the standard of care or the duty owed to patients. Jury trial is a strong remedy against the ravages of medical industry arrogance. |
I'm so sorry about your experiences, both terrible. But your n is 2, and mine is in the hundreds if not thousands. I see many, many patients coming from both mid levels and MDs, and have had many, many opportunities to compare the care they provided. |
The reason why there are so few doctors is because the gov't pays for the residents and this budget has not increased for a long time. Why the hospitals don't want to pay for their residents doesn't make any sense to me. |
Friend, I have worked in healthcare for 16 years, in multiple practices, on both coasts. I know something about the standard of care and patient rights. Standard of care does not equal “what I want.” In the case mentioned now multiple pages ago a patient had concerns, was offered an appointment with somebody with the training to provide care and declined because it wasn’t what they wanted. If they had seen the NP/PA, received inadequate treatment and had a bad outcome then - yes - the practice/clinician is responsible. But they refused care. There is no jury out there who would call this abandonment. Patients want all kinds of things that sometimes can be accommodated and sometimes can’t. That is at the discretion of the practice. A patient who demands a white provider? Sorry, generally not happening. A religious female who requests a female provider? All efforts are usually made to make sure that happens. Patient abandonment is a serious matter and considered criminal. People who don’t understand the term shouldn’t throw it around. |
I’m a nurse who works in quality assurance type work and I agree with the doctor. My experience is also in the hundreds or thousands of record review. The inappropriate treatment plans are BY FAR coming from mid-levels. |
The issue isn't a lack of MDs, the bottleneck is a lack of residency spots. That's up to Congress. In other words, we're screwed. https://www.openhealthpolicy.com/p/medical-residency-slots-congress |
Just curious, in how many cases of mismanagement by mid-level did either the mid-level or the managing physician/clinic suffer consequences for the malpractice? |
"It is also established that a nurse's conduct must not be measured by the standard of care required of a physician or surgeon, but by that of other nurses in the same or similar locality and under similar circumstances." https://law.justia.com/cases/california/court-of-appeal/4th/5/208.html |