Anonymous wrote:Hey OP. I'm not going to try and convince you to stay with McKnight if it's not working for you, but I just wanted to note that there's a lab on the first floor that you pass to get to the elevators to McKnight's office. Have you ever been there before? We take our kids there for blood work as we've actually had better experiences there than at Children's National.
Anonymous wrote:I think McKnight could be more efficient with forms. But I thought a fee was pretty standard for practices that take insurance and aren’t concierge. I certainly don’t expect my doctors to perform unpaid labor for me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're currently with McKnight Pediatrics, which we chose because my OB recommended it before my first child was born and we live nearby. While we've always received excellent care for our children and like the newer practitioners, there are a few things about the practice that have led me to consider a switch.
- No on-site lab (have to schlep to Children's next door or elsewhere - not ideal when you're carting around a jaundiced newborn who needs frequent bili checks)
- Office is one of maybe 2 pediatric practices in a building that mostly caters to adults
- $25-$35 charge for school forms (cost depends on how quickly they're needed)
- Parking is $5 (or $8 if you have to piggyback to Children's for labs) and a total nightmare
- Office environment lacks warmth and is dated (not a huge deal, but throwing it in with my other gripes)
Thanks for your recommendations!
Avoid Foxhall Pediatrics. Used to be wonderful but now an awful and expensive experience. Personnel changes.
I couldn't disagree more! Foxhall Pediatrics is if anything more wonderful than ever. Dr. Sweeney and Dr. Daniel are both wonderful doctors, in all regards. They have an amazing manner with kids, are never hurried, have a great sense of humor, are thorough and cautious yet also pragmatic... And they're just fabulous people, from what I can tell. (One of them once opened the office up for us after hours so that we wouldn't have to go the ER in a situation in which it would have been really unpleasant.) The nurses are lovely too, as are the other members of the office staff. They are incredibly responsive, always get questions answered quickly, get us in when we need to be seen, take care of school forms with amazing efficiency, etc.
I don't know that they check all the OP's boxes (for example they don't draw blood on younger children, but you can def do that without going to Children's - one option being the Safeway on Bradley Boulevard), and for that matter I have no idea whether they're even accepting new patients--but if they are, I highly recommend them to people who are nearby and are looking for an old-fashioned feeling, personal, unhurried practice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're currently with McKnight Pediatrics, which we chose because my OB recommended it before my first child was born and we live nearby. While we've always received excellent care for our children and like the newer practitioners, there are a few things about the practice that have led me to consider a switch.
- No on-site lab (have to schlep to Children's next door or elsewhere - not ideal when you're carting around a jaundiced newborn who needs frequent bili checks)
- Office is one of maybe 2 pediatric practices in a building that mostly caters to adults
- $25-$35 charge for school forms (cost depends on how quickly they're needed)
- Parking is $5 (or $8 if you have to piggyback to Children's for labs) and a total nightmare
- Office environment lacks warmth and is dated (not a huge deal, but throwing it in with my other gripes)
Thanks for your recommendations!
OP, not sure about some of your gripes... Why does it matter who other practices int he same buildling cater to? And it's weird to be complaining about school fees being too high on one hand and then wanting more up to date decor... Do you really want to pay for that??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're currently with McKnight Pediatrics, which we chose because my OB recommended it before my first child was born and we live nearby. While we've always received excellent care for our children and like the newer practitioners, there are a few things about the practice that have led me to consider a switch.
- No on-site lab (have to schlep to Children's next door or elsewhere - not ideal when you're carting around a jaundiced newborn who needs frequent bili checks)
- Office is one of maybe 2 pediatric practices in a building that mostly caters to adults
- $25-$35 charge for school forms (cost depends on how quickly they're needed)
- Parking is $5 (or $8 if you have to piggyback to Children's for labs) and a total nightmare
- Office environment lacks warmth and is dated (not a huge deal, but throwing it in with my other gripes)
Thanks for your recommendations!
Avoid Foxhall Pediatrics. Used to be wonderful but now an awful and expensive experience. Personnel changes.
Anonymous wrote:We're currently with McKnight Pediatrics, which we chose because my OB recommended it before my first child was born and we live nearby. While we've always received excellent care for our children and like the newer practitioners, there are a few things about the practice that have led me to consider a switch.
- No on-site lab (have to schlep to Children's next door or elsewhere - not ideal when you're carting around a jaundiced newborn who needs frequent bili checks)
- Office is one of maybe 2 pediatric practices in a building that mostly caters to adults
- $25-$35 charge for school forms (cost depends on how quickly they're needed)
- Parking is $5 (or $8 if you have to piggyback to Children's for labs) and a total nightmare
- Office environment lacks warmth and is dated (not a huge deal, but throwing it in with my other gripes)
Thanks for your recommendations!