Anonymous wrote:I have an annual Doctor Day in January. I've done this for years. In September (I actually plan to do it this week!) I make a list of all the appointments I need this year, then I call through and schedule them all for the same day in January. Call the one you think will have the toughest scheduling first (usually that's any kind of specialist, but my dentist also weirdly fills up fast) and then go through the list.
For me this year it's GP, gyno, dentist, mammogram, dermatologist, hematologist. My dentist and dermatologist are in the same building and the radiologist is only a few blocks away, which helps. And the gyno and hematologist are at the same location as well. If you've got more than you can fit in a day, or they're further apart geographically, then just pick your priorities and do them.
It is funny to call and they're like "okay, next available is October 12th, I've got an 11am and a 3pm" and I'm like "No, I want January 22nd, ideally around 1pm?" But it works!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Same. Full time job and kids’ appointments, sports.
During Covid I turned 50 and had the colonoscopy, mammogram, pap, etc. because there was finally time and nobody else was going in for appointments.
I kept up with 1 the yearly physical and am doing mammograms every 2-2.5 years. Haven’t seen a gyno- but zero issues and on the 5 year pap schedule.
I hurt my back a year ago and should have seen an ortho/PT etc but can’t find the time. I do exercise daily
"5 year pap schedule." What is that? Do women only need one every 5 years now? Things keep changing it's hard to keep up. I know mamos changed too you can go longer between as well.
im' on the 5 year pap - not sexually active
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:is it not a requirement of most medical insurers that you have a standard annual physical?
No? Literally never heard of that, and I’ve had easily at least 10 different insurance plans with various employers over the years. I don’t even understand how you think that would work - like, if you don’t get a physical, you… what? Don’t get anything else covered by the plan?
A big driver for me personally is that your physician can drop you as a patient if you don’t come back in a certain number of years. Happened to me once, i think it was after 3+ years, I was no longer considered a current patient and the practice was not accepting new patients any more so I had to scramble to find someone else.
Another thing is certain medications or conditions require a check in, but again that’s more on the physician side than insurance in my experience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Same. Full time job and kids’ appointments, sports.
During Covid I turned 50 and had the colonoscopy, mammogram, pap, etc. because there was finally time and nobody else was going in for appointments.
I kept up with 1 the yearly physical and am doing mammograms every 2-2.5 years. Haven’t seen a gyno- but zero issues and on the 5 year pap schedule.
I hurt my back a year ago and should have seen an ortho/PT etc but can’t find the time. I do exercise daily
"5 year pap schedule." What is that? Do women only need one every 5 years now? Things keep changing it's hard to keep up. I know mamos changed too you can go longer between as well.
Anonymous wrote:Same. Full time job and kids’ appointments, sports.
During Covid I turned 50 and had the colonoscopy, mammogram, pap, etc. because there was finally time and nobody else was going in for appointments.
I kept up with 1 the yearly physical and am doing mammograms every 2-2.5 years. Haven’t seen a gyno- but zero issues and on the 5 year pap schedule.
I hurt my back a year ago and should have seen an ortho/PT etc but can’t find the time. I do exercise daily
Anonymous wrote:is it not a requirement of most medical insurers that you have a standard annual physical?
Anonymous wrote:is it not a requirement of most medical insurers that you have a standard annual physical?