Lovely anecdotes you've got there. I'd love to see some real statistics by someone other than an organization dedicated to keeping doctors in business. |
I can probably count on one hand the number of times I've had an interaction with a doctor that lasted more than five minutes. Which is totally fine. I'm not there to chit chat. |
1. Run on time. 2. Inform your patients when they arrive how late you are running and when they can realistically be expected to be seen. Pick one. Either one, just commit. Or be totally inconsiderate and have your patients waiting an undetermined amount of time without any communication at all, I suppose. |
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I feel bad for doctors. Many work for large organizations that make their money on the number of contacts that their providers have during the day. So they're incentivized to double book patients, book patients over doctors' breaks and lunch, etc. Then the doctors run late because they had to see two patients in one patient slot, take all the sh*t from patients for being late, and make zero extra dollars for having an insane patient schedule.
My friend is a doctor who is currently trying to negotiate into her contract that the organization won't do this to her anymore because it's terrible for patient care. Guess what? The organization is refusing to do that. |
And there you have it. It is "unrealistic" to expect responsible scheduling from doctors. You will get 10-15 minutes and be scheduled at the same time as 10 other patients. Anything else is unrealistic. In what other field is this acceptable? Why do we permit doctors to treat their patients so terribly? The lack of respect is a slap in the face. |
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From: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5594520/
This review demonstrates that the involvement of nurses in advanced practice in emergency and critical care improves the length of stay, time to consultation/treatment, mortality, patient satisfaction, and cost savings. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK384613/ This evidence brief discovered little new evidence regarding health outcomes of patients receiving care from an independent advanced practice nurse (APRN) or physician. In primary and urgent care settings, there was no difference in health status, quality or life, mortality, or hospitalizations favoring either APRN or physician care, although the strength of evidence was generally low |
I see, you'd rather have a 6 month wait for a primary care visit. They squeeze in as many patients as they can see because the need is there. All it takes is one late patient or one lousy medical assistant to throw off the whole morning's schedule. I'm only in my 40s but I'm old enough to know that going to the doctor usually means a long wait. I always try to get the first appointment of the day when possible because these are usually on time. |
Exactly |
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The bottom line is that it would have cost the doctor nothing to start with something along the lines of "thank you for your patience" or "I'm sorry that we are running behind".
I had a similar experience with a doctor during my pregnancy who kept me waiting for 45 minutes (with a full bladder so they could do a sonogram) and then was a complete a$$ to me about it. And it turns out his office scheduled the appointment too early in my pregnancy and they couldn't do the test. I walked out of that appointment and never went back to that doctor. |
Listen doctors, your patients are not morons. We know the doctors that run late because they spend time with each patient, listening attentively, and the ones who cannot manage themselves if their practice depends on it. We know when doctors are late for emergencies -- because when it's an actual emergency -- the staff and doctor let you know. We know when are BSing us because you were late due to bad scheduling. You actually could schedule 30 min appt per patient. You've just decided that it's not financially worth it for you. |
I needed to take my 16 year old to a specialist earlier in the week, and she was planning when she'd return back to school. She assumed a 20-minute wait time in the exam room. You all think that's normal and not realistic to be on time. I think it's pathetic. |
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There just aren't enough doctors. If there were, doctors couldn't over schedule even if they wanted to.
https://time.com/6199666/physician-shortage-challenges-solutions/ |
Okay. Just to clarify -- published academic research showing an increase in negative outcomes would be convincing to you? Or are there other restrictions you have that we can get on the table before someone wastes time on it for you? |
Hey, this isn't my problem. But if you don't want to wait, pay for concierge. |
Let's see how that works out for you. Please update when you are happy.
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