Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Better care to me means a dr spending the time with you to listen and to figure out what is actually wrong. Better care is the opposite of what i get at my gyno, reiter hill, where i wait for an hour to spend 1.5 mins with the dr. It's awful. I pay privia so my internist doesnt become my gyno. So he doesnt have to take on a ton of patients and see them all for 5 mins to make money, which seems to be what my gyno has decided to do.
Go midwife!
My (non-profit) OB has responded to increased financial pressure by shortening appointments to nothing to squeeze in as many paying patients as possible. I pay out of pocket for my midwife, who comes to my house for appointments and stays for an hour or more. There are GYN midwives out there, too, and I think it is worth every penny.
It is also true that primary care doctors, who have always made the least, now make even less. My MIL is a pediatrician, and her income has steadily decreased over the years, even as her patient load increased. She dropped Tricare in a military town, even though she came to America by joining the US military, because their reimbursement rates dropped below Medicaid. She is well past retirement age, still working 100+ hours a week, both because she loves her work and because the value of her practice has dropped so much. No more "selling practices" to retire...
I'm the PP w/reiter hill (cannot STAND them). What exactly does a midwife do? What kind of education is required of them? Can they prescribe medication? My first reaction to your post was "you have GOT to be kidding, a midwife??" but honestly I don't know anything about them and never even considered that as an option. (Sorry just being honest) Please educate me and others who also may have no clue about what they have to offer. Thanks.
Anonymous wrote:I am sorry some of you have to deal with this issue. It seems very wrong. I love my doctors who take my insurance, see me the same day if needed, take all the time needed to help with the problem, and call or email me personally. Doesn't cost extra, they are just wonderful people.
[/b]Anonymous[b wrote:]^ Yeah, the difference is if you get a bad haircut, no big deal. You get a bad doctor, diagnosis, or treatment, the stakes change.
Sad state of affairs when we compare healthcare to entertainment.
Anonymous wrote:[
Hogwash. It has to do with the insurance companies. Our doc instituted a similar fee structure this year. They simply could not sustain the practice at the rates the insurance companies were paying them. The insurance companies, on the other hand, are pressed by increasing technology/medical costs and the fact that there are not enough healthy people in the insured pool. (Plus, they need to pay their executives bonuses and salaries that would make Imelda Marcos blush!)
I haven't made up my mind on Obamacare, and malpractice is no small issue, but these fees are coming from someplace considerably more complicated than the pp's politically motivated pablum makes clear.
Anonymous wrote:I am sorry some of you have to deal with this issue. It seems very wrong. I love my doctors who take my insurance, see me the same day if needed, take all the time needed to help with the problem, and call or email me personally. Doesn't cost extra, they are just wonderful people.
Anonymous wrote: That's your right. But if you have one of these practices, I do look at you a little differently: your motives are not about helping all those in need. Your motives are about helping those in need who can afford to pay.
Anonymous wrote:I would pay $100 a year to be able to email a doctor and get an answer back within a day. That would be very cool.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Better care to me means a dr spending the time with you to listen and to figure out what is actually wrong. Better care is the opposite of what i get at my gyno, reiter hill, where i wait for an hour to spend 1.5 mins with the dr. It's awful. I pay privia so my internist doesnt become my gyno. So he doesnt have to take on a ton of patients and see them all for 5 mins to make money, which seems to be what my gyno has decided to do.
Go midwife!
My (non-profit) OB has responded to increased financial pressure by shortening appointments to nothing to squeeze in as many paying patients as possible. I pay out of pocket for my midwife, who comes to my house for appointments and stays for an hour or more. There are GYN midwives out there, too, and I think it is worth every penny.
It is also true that primary care doctors, who have always made the least, now make even less. My MIL is a pediatrician, and her income has steadily decreased over the years, even as her patient load increased. She dropped Tricare in a military town, even though she came to America by joining the US military, because their reimbursement rates dropped below Medicaid. She is well past retirement age, still working 100+ hours a week, both because she loves her work and because the value of her practice has dropped so much. No more "selling practices" to retire...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a doctor who takes virtually no insurance, which means I pay out of pocket, submit my receipts, and get whatever percentage my insurance offers for out-of-network. But all that is worth it because when I have an appointment at 10:00, I get seen at 10:00.
I get this concept but it's different from paying $45 monthly fee for better service at your doctors office.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let me guess. They are going "concierge." Our internist did this and we found a new doctor. It disgusted me, because we were told the $ was for "access" to the doctor, and not medical services.
This will probably be illegal in a few years. It should be.
are we entering a socialist state?