Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Years ago, my wife and I had different PCPs, in fact, I don't think I even had one. She loved her doctor, and when she joined MDVIP, my wife didn't hesitate to pay the membership fee. I thought she was crazy. After several years she talked me into trying it out, and I reluctantly joined, using her same doctor as my PCP. I've been with her for several years now. Even though my wife and I are paying $4,400/yr for membership fees, I've never regretted it. The ability to get my doctor on the phone 24/7 has been invaluable. Plus, I travel a lot, and all it takes is a text to get her to call in a much needed antibiotic to deal with an untimely sinus infection, UTI, etc. One positive review on here said that it was the piece of mind that made it worth it. I've wasted a lot of money on a lot of things over the years, most of which never gave me the piece of mind that a concierge doctor has. Well worth it!
The MDVIP marketing team has finally joined the chat.
Anonymous wrote:Years ago, my wife and I had different PCPs, in fact, I don't think I even had one. She loved her doctor, and when she joined MDVIP, my wife didn't hesitate to pay the membership fee. I thought she was crazy. After several years she talked me into trying it out, and I reluctantly joined, using her same doctor as my PCP. I've been with her for several years now. Even though my wife and I are paying $4,400/yr for membership fees, I've never regretted it. The ability to get my doctor on the phone 24/7 has been invaluable. Plus, I travel a lot, and all it takes is a text to get her to call in a much needed antibiotic to deal with an untimely sinus infection, UTI, etc. One positive review on here said that it was the piece of mind that made it worth it. I've wasted a lot of money on a lot of things over the years, most of which never gave me the piece of mind that a concierge doctor has. Well worth it!
Anonymous wrote:OP back again with an update. I forgot about starting this thread. I did end up joining and I can say that luckily I haven't had to use the service much, but I've been happy with the level of care. The biggest thing for me has been peace of mind. I can call my doctor whenever I need to and he answers the majority of the time, but if I leave a message he calls back within the hour. The one time I was sick I got in same day with a few times to choose from. He has been communicating weekly during the coronavirus situation and he has tests he can use if his patients are suspected to have coronavirus. I was so frustrated with my old PCP's office and this has been a nice shift. Is it worth $1800 per year? I don't know, but having access to my doctor 24/7 during this pandemic has definitely given me some peace of mind.
Anonymous wrote:My long time internist of 30 years retired. I found another internist that I like. After one Medicare wellness checkup, the doctor switched to MDVIP. I decided to give it a try since the Medicare wellness checkup was not giving me what I used to get prior to my retirement. I assumed the annual MDVIP exam would include the traditional physical exam I was accustomed to. This included a hands on physical by the doctor such as blood pressure, weight, ears, throat, heart, lungs, abdomen, feet, reflexes, etc, and also included a prostate, hernia, and genital exam.
The MDVIP annual exam I just took did not include any of this. In fact I never saw the doctor! The nurse checked my blood pressure and weight, took blood, then put me through a battery of tests which included screening tests for lungs (spirometer), vision, hearing, hand strength, and a cognitive test.
This is all good, but the traditional physical I assumed would be included never came. I saw the doctor on a second visit for an explanation of the results and at that time no further examinations were performed.
Was it worth it. No, not for me.