Anonymous wrote:Mine includes a full physical and bloodwork and EKG plus up to 5 sick visits a year. She did not take insurance anyway, so I was paying out of pocket for these things. I think it's $3500/pp. She's excellent and very attentive. Your Dr. does not sound like that. I'd leave after a year.
Anonymous wrote:Things that doctors used to do for free: like answer your phone calls!
They like it because they can work less and make more.
Bye bye to their non-wealthy patients.
Anonymous wrote:We are with one medical because my cop went to them. I get prompt answers to messages, forms done online for kids. Urgent televisions or in person visits when sick. And it's what a $200 fee per person per year.
Anonymous wrote:Things that doctors used to do for free: like answer your phone calls!
They like it because they can work less and make more.
Bye bye to their non-wealthy patients.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My PCP went to a concierge model, so I followed and paid $2100 for just an annual physical exam. In my case, I have all normal labs with no health issues. Additional fees are charged for any other appointments. Their assistant is not prompt at responding to any voice mails I leave, and I had to initiate calling again to ask about scheduling and another very benign question. Also, I recently discovered that the portal that I was using previously (prior to the physician going concierge and using the same portal) --- will not allow me to email my provider directly. (Prior to joining this concierge model, I was able to email my provider directly!) I feel irritated now that I have to always leave a voicemail and cannot message directly, plus I am paying substantially more.
I understand I can't hound the physician for mundane requests, and of course the provider should be compensated for their time fairly -- but I'm now paying for a concierge fee and would like to understand how I am suppose to contact the provider directly rather than always have a dilatory assistant to funnel through. I thought the point of the concierge model to be able to handle a certain number of patients without overloading and burdening the office. I've been to the office several times, and there is no other patients jammed up and the assistant is sometimes not even sitting at their desk to acknowledge my presence (i.e. I end up waiting around looking to see if anyone is there).
If you have a concierge model for primary care, do you get to email your doctor directly? I'm annoyed and wondering if I switch to another concierge doctor, would I get the same lackluster service.
I get better service at One Medical.
Anonymous wrote:My PCP went to a concierge model, so I followed and paid $2100 for just an annual physical exam. In my case, I have all normal labs with no health issues. Additional fees are charged for any other appointments. Their assistant is not prompt at responding to any voice mails I leave, and I had to initiate calling again to ask about scheduling and another very benign question. Also, I recently discovered that the portal that I was using previously (prior to the physician going concierge and using the same portal) --- will not allow me to email my provider directly. (Prior to joining this concierge model, I was able to email my provider directly!) I feel irritated now that I have to always leave a voicemail and cannot message directly, plus I am paying substantially more.
I understand I can't hound the physician for mundane requests, and of course the provider should be compensated for their time fairly -- but I'm now paying for a concierge fee and would like to understand how I am suppose to contact the provider directly rather than always have a dilatory assistant to funnel through. I thought the point of the concierge model to be able to handle a certain number of patients without overloading and burdening the office. I've been to the office several times, and there is no other patients jammed up and the assistant is sometimes not even sitting at their desk to acknowledge my presence (i.e. I end up waiting around looking to see if anyone is there).
If you have a concierge model for primary care, do you get to email your doctor directly? I'm annoyed and wondering if I switch to another concierge doctor, would I get the same lackluster service.
Anonymous wrote:I'd look elsewhere. I get excellent and quick response both by email and telephone. I even have doc's private cell number with a guaranteed call back w/in 15 minutes (which I've used once in 5 years).
Anonymous wrote:I'd look elsewhere. I get excellent and quick response both by email and telephone. I even have doc's private cell number with a guaranteed call back w/in 15 minutes (which I've used once in 5 years).