QuoteI'd suggest that her story points to a serious problem in health care: A physician's time is insufficiently valued.
QuoteThere's no denying the huge cost, and hassle, of paperwork for pre-authorizations of drugs and procedures, insurance coding, etc.
Quotethe reality is that many hospitals are cutting back on ancillary support, such as secretaries and clerks
Quote from: LinksEtc on July 13, 2014, 04:57:11 PM
"Are you giving your doctor a headache?"
http://www.cnn.com/2011/HEALTH/07/07/ep.doctors.complaining.cohen/Quotegetting information from other patients online is dangerous because "you don't know who these people are."QuoteShare Internet information with your doctor wisely. Don't walk in with a stack of printouts that your doctor won't have time to read during the appointment.
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"Doctors Confess: 11 Most Annoying Things You Do"
http://www.rd.com/slideshows/annoying-patients/?utm_content=bufferd925c&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=bufferQuoteAsk too many questions.Quote
If you have three pages full of questions, show them to the nurse. Say 'How many of these should I wait to ask the doctor about? How many can you help me with?'"
Quote from: LinksEtc on June 07, 2014, 07:00:57 PM
"Doctors Complaints About Patients' Behavior"
http://patients.about.com/od/doctorsandproviders/a/doctorcomplaints.htmQuoteSome doctors just don't want to work with empowered patients. They can't be bothered, or they are intimidated. Mary Shomon, the About.com Guide to Thyroid, reported that a doctor she used to see wrote "petite papier" (meaning "little paper" in French) on some patient records. The notation referred to the fact that Mary did much of her own research, and would compile questions ahead of visiting her doctor.
I think that a lot of docs like educated patients, but there are other issues like time, communication style, respect, understanding that the docs are the experts, different perspectives, etc. I've definitely made mistakes in how I approach docs with internet info.
Quote from: LinksEtc on July 01, 2014, 02:13:01 PM
Tweeted by @Talking2YourDoc
"Understand patient expectations as part of a negotiation"
https://www.acpinternist.org/archives/2014/07/communication.htmQuoteDoctors have things they want to address, but patients have things they want to address.QuoteAnd there should be an explicit negotiation about the agenda of the visit. Both parties should realize that there's going to be a negotiation, and that means that neither party is going to be completely satisfied.
QuotePhysicians say they're mired in paperwork – and why it matters to patients.
QuoteWith pressures to see more patients each day, doctors have fewer minutes to spend with and listen to each individual
Quote from: MomTo3 on November 16, 2013, 02:33:30 PM
I guess I'm kind of confused. Why does the Dr. need to be involved with the 504 plan at all?
We have 3-5 forms for the Dr. to fill out.
1) FAAP
2) 2- medication administration forms (1 for epis and 1 for benadryl)
3) General health form
4) 1 "This is why this kid qualifies for a 504- this is the daily activity that is adversely affected" This was provided to the school before our first 504 meeting and nothing more was needed for "qualifying".
I guess I don't see why the Dr. should be bogged down with much more than this. Most of them don't get the in's and out's of daily allergy life so I'm not sure how helpful they will be with much more. Perhaps I've just been really lucky with our schools and Dr's but