Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think many do not take Insurance..they just cater to those who can pay out of pocket.
Very, very few. How out-of-touch do you have to be to think many people can pay out-of-pocket?
I don't need many people. I just need some. I don't take insurance though some of my patients self submit the bills. Life is so much better. It's the future for those that can afford it. Others will wait to see the doctors that take it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think many do not take Insurance..they just cater to those who can pay out of pocket.
Very, very few. How out-of-touch do you have to be to think many people can pay out-of-pocket?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cut back to 24hr a week now that med school loans are paid off. Enjoying having a life again. I’d work 40 hours if patients weren’t so miserable and management didn’t try to cram my schedule way past full.
What makes the patients miserable? I mean, specifics in terms of behavior thet shouldn't be doing.
Just angry about wait times in the office (that I can’t control), having a lot of things that they “insist “ on being tested for despite it not being relevant for their symptoms - and some tests will yield a lot of false positives if you test everyone for them. It sounds wrong- like, “if I test positive, and the test is 99% accurate, then it’s a real positive!” but google the Bayes Theorum and you’ll see that’s actually wrong. But patients INSIST on testing for things. And it muddies the waters and makes my job harder and doesn’t make their symptoms go away because now they’re convinced they have, for example, chronic Lyme disease and they won’t consider that their fatigue is actually probably from sleep apnea or depression. Anyways I’m ranting.
None of that sounds miserable to me. It sounds human. It sounds like humans who are struggling and are asking doctors to help them feel better.
Anonymous wrote:Pay has no increased in decades, docs are leaving networks or choosing to not work for Pennies on the dollar. Thank you Obama care.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cut back to 24hr a week now that med school loans are paid off. Enjoying having a life again. I’d work 40 hours if patients weren’t so miserable and management didn’t try to cram my schedule way past full.
What makes the patients miserable? I mean, specifics in terms of behavior thet shouldn't be doing.
Just angry about wait times in the office (that I can’t control), having a lot of things that they “insist “ on being tested for despite it not being relevant for their symptoms - and some tests will yield a lot of false positives if you test everyone for them. It sounds wrong- like, “if I test positive, and the test is 99% accurate, then it’s a real positive!” but google the Bayes Theorum and you’ll see that’s actually wrong. But patients INSIST on testing for things. And it muddies the waters and makes my job harder and doesn’t make their symptoms go away because now they’re convinced they have, for example, chronic Lyme disease and they won’t consider that their fatigue is actually probably from sleep apnea or depression. Anyways I’m ranting.
Anonymous wrote:Pay has no increased in decades, docs are leaving networks or choosing to not work for Pennies on the dollar. Thank you Obama care.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cut back to 24hr a week now that med school loans are paid off. Enjoying having a life again. I’d work 40 hours if patients weren’t so miserable and management didn’t try to cram my schedule way past full.
What makes the patients miserable? I mean, specifics in terms of behavior thet shouldn't be doing.
Anonymous wrote:I think my GP and my kids’ pediatrician are both part team, seems very common these days, more than a few years ago.
Anonymous wrote:The go concierge.