T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1121.1 | Operators standing by... | GOZOLI::BERTINO | | Tue Sep 03 1991 10:43 | 18 |
| Whether it is a group or private practice, you should never feel badly calling
them at off hours!
A doctor on call is expecting calls whether they are in a group or he/she is
covering for other private practice doc's. It's part of the job and they know
that.
The first rule of medical practice is people never get sick or hurt from
9 to 5. 9 to 5 is for paper work, and seeing people that are just getting
better from having gotten sick on the "off hours"!
Whenever my father beeper goes off, none of us say, "Oh, Jeeze!
There goes another person who doesn't know the rules! It's past 5 or we're out
to dinner, or at a play! How dare they disturb my Dad!"
By the way, Questions or concerns are the best kinds of calls! My dad who is
really nice all the time says he gets nicer when he finds out it's just a
question!!
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1121.4 | | MIVC::MTAG | | Tue Sep 03 1991 12:32 | 26 |
1121.7 | my vote...private practice | TENVAX::MIDTTUN | Lisa Midttun,285-3450,NIO/N4,Pole H14-15 | Tue Sep 03 1991 14:36 | 36 |
|
I guess I have fond memories of my favorite doctor when I was a kid
(went to the same pedi. from about age 4 'til 18), so that might have
colored my decisions. Take the following FWIW ...
I think it's hard enough for most kids to feel comfortable with their
doctor (especially as they grow out of the infant stage), so one of
my pedi-search criteria was that I wanted a private practice for my
daughter. So, she always sees 'her' pedi. when it's a scheduled visit
(and of course would see whoever was on call if it was an emergency..
where speed and medical expertise are the only criteria...knock on wood
we haven't needed this. But, I did check out the credentials of each of
the doctors in the practice and their 'back-ups').
For your info., don't assume just because it's a 'private practice' that
you'll have a 'dedicated' primary care physician. Some private practices
do not operate this way (as I found out when I was interviewing pedi's
while I was pregnant with my daughter). I know of one practice in the
Littleton area that alternates between it's 2 pediatricians and their
head nurse for all well-baby visits. This is true whether or not you
are in an HMO. As this was unacceptable to me (and I felt that 1 of
the partner doctors was a little too 'cold'), I didn't choose that
particular private practice. So, I'd ask alot of questions when you
contact them. The pedi's I called either met with me for a short
scheduled appointment (not sure if my HMO got billed or covered this)
or at an informal evening 'meet the pedi' session.
FWIW, it turns out that the 'cold' doctor mentioned above, attended at
the birth of my daughter (minor complications), and I still felt that
he was 'cold' (I had to ask twice how she was...and everything was
fine...you think they'd want to tell the mom that just delivered her),
BUT he did a very thorough job in checking her out and pronouncing her
healthy. I guess only you can decide how important bedside manner is in
your choice. As new parents, we wanted a doctor that all of us felt very
comfortable with.
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1121.8 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | | Tue Sep 03 1991 15:42 | 29 |
| It is very much the 'norm' in Canada to have a Family Practitioner
or G.P. as the doctor for the whole family. Some have their
specialties ... our previous Dr's was maternity, our current is
orthopaedics. They refer us to specialists as an when required.
One advantage of this is that you don't have to update each Doctor
with family histories every time something new comes up. Once you
have found a Dr you are comfortable you can be generally satisfied
that your children will have the same care level.
In England, the GP is the RULE. Unless you can afford private medicine
then you see your GP ... and in many areas you have little choice about
who you see. They often operate in group practices and you have little
control over the Dr you end up seeing. There are rarely more than 2
doctors offices serving a given area, and often just one. The GP will
when necessary refer you to a specialist who usually practices out
of on eof the hospitals, but the GP generally handles more of your
primary care than you might wish at times. A paediatrician is just
that ... a specialist ... not just a Dr for children.
One advantage of the group vs individual practice is that the Drs in
the group know each other and can communicate one with the other more
freely increasing the "group" knowledge, and if you should happen to
see one of the other Drs for some reason. On the other hand the
group where you never know which Dr you might see is a disaster. Add
to a group like that a blockade of nurse/receptionists who consider
their sole duty in life is to stop you from seeing the doctor and
you might prefer individual practice.
Stuart
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1121.9 | Group is fine with us | WR2FOR::BELINSKY_MA | | Tue Sep 03 1991 15:47 | 15 |
| After reading some of these replies I have to think that it depends on
the type of group practice that is selected. I wouldn't want one where
you never know which doctor you will be seeing at any given time.
My pedi belongs to a group at a clinic, and we have no trouble getting
appointments with him specifically, even when I have called when my
daughter was sick and he wanted to see her that same day.
When I call after hours or on weekends I get the Doctor on call, and
have been pleased with the response for the most part. Personally I
like having the other Doctors as backup, as long as they share the same
general philosophy.
Mary
|
1121.3 | Healthsource - must use Family Practicioner | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Pixillated | Wed Sep 04 1991 09:30 | 17 |
| I am a resident of New Hampshire, and subscribe to Healthsource HMO,
which has subscribing medical practices rather than a clinic.
We were "forced" onto the HMO when the costs for John Hancock went up
so high. But. We've some problems with the plan and may reconsider
during reenrollment in January.
One problem: In the Londonderry area, no pediatricians subscribe to
Healthsource. There are only family practicioners. We all go to a
family practice. I've been satisfied with the individual doctors
there. But I wonder if she would be better off with a pediatrician.
Any other Healthsource subscribers dealing with this issue?
Do other people use a family practicioner rather than a pediatrician?
Laura
|
1121.5 | It's not quite that simple | JAWS::TRIPP | | Wed Sep 04 1991 14:24 | 44 |
| I just would like to say that just because you're with a "private"
practice, doesn't alwasy guarantee your doctor will be available. In
fact when I was pregnant my OB was in practice all by himself, when he
went away on vacation he gave me a list of the covering doctors, and
offered to arrange a meeting for me wiht each "just in case". I
declined and fortunately never needed them. My internist doesn't work
any weekends, and when my gall bladder announced its presence at 5am on
a Monday morning, (that's still part of a weekend I guess), it took 2.5
hours for the covering doctor to call me back, which felt like 2
MONTHS! He pretty much said go to the hospital ER since I don't know
you. (fortunately by the the "weekend" was over and my own doctor met
me at the ER) I got pretty much the same reaction in another occation
when I developed a UTI on a Saturday, but then I had to meet a strange
"covering" doctor at the Hospital ER. Guess I only DO sick on
weekends!
My son sees a pedi which is part of a "group", but we chose one of the
many doctors within the practice. The only time we don't see his own
pedi is if she's either not working late that day, or off or doing her
once every so often day at their other office.
At one point, due to difference in opinion, I asked to be reassigned to
another doctor within the group and was told this couldn't be done if
it were a personality issue, only if I was requesting a change so that
my son could have a doctor of the same gender. I have had one bad
experience with one of the doctors in the group, wrong diagnosis, and
have made it clear that if that doctor is the only one available I will
take my son to the Hospital ER instead. They can usually find someone
other than the one I don't like for us. This group practice, and the
doctor came highly recommended by my OB, Internist and several of each
one's staff.
They take our John Hancock, as well as Central Mass, welfare
receipients, and several other insurances. They will bill my insurance
before asking me to pay the balance, in fact the doctor has been quite
nice about not asking us to pay the difference several times,
especially since some weeks we've been there up to 3 times. They won't
charge for an office visit if you end up going to the hospital for
further evaluation, and the office has the capability to test
blood,urine and strep so you don't end up going to the hospital or lab
if further testing is needed.
Just my experiences....
Lyn
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1121.11 | make sure the staff is on your wavelength | PERFCT::WOOLNER | Photographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and dense | Wed Sep 04 1991 14:25 | 62 |
| I'm on the John Hancock expensive plan (!) and we use a private
practice of 3 pediatricians. Alex is registered as the patient of one
of the three, and sees that doctor for regular checkups; the others
fill in as necessary in an emergency or for off-hours questions. I
like our pedi a lot, and the other doctors pretty well, which is
probably why I like the overall setup.
BUT! I don't like the absolutely sap-draining chore of dealing with
the practice's support staff. I called them about a week and a half
before school started, since I was nervous about the kind of medical
records our school system (or Massachusetts) might require.
[Alex is starting first grade (today!) and her school hadn't said a word
about what they needed; halfway through the parents-of-first-graders
meeting I asked, and found out that Alex would not have been allowed to
enter the school without a record of her immunizations.]
The snippy pedi staff person (SPSP): We don't mail out medical records.
Leslie: [thinking, At $65 per visit you can't afford a 29 cent
stamp?] OK, then when can I pick it up?
SPSP: Do you have a form?
L: No, that's why I'm calling you. I need whatever it is that
Massachusetts requires.
SPSP: Well you'll have to call back later. I don't know when we
can get that done. School is starting and we have a lot of
requests.
L: That's why I'm calling you NOW [a week before school
starts].
SPSP: Just call us before you come over to make sure it's ready.
L: When?
SPSP: The day before school starts.
L: Tuesday the 3rd? Will you be open then?
SPSP: Yes, we're open.
L: All day?
SPSP: Yes, all day.
L: Because I had to drop something off a while back and when I
drove over there, on my lunch hour, you were locked up
tight.
SPSP [incredulous]: Well we were at LUNCH!
L: ALL of you? All at once? [Aside from the pedis, they have
the SPSP I was talking to, someone who takes the money, and
at least one nurse.]
SPSP [indignant]: Of course!
L: OK. When is your lunch hour....?
SPSP: 12 to 1!
L: So you're open from when until 12?
SPSP: What?
L: You are OPEN from WHAT TIME until 12?
SPSP: 9:00!
L: OKAY! How do I know what time you open?
... So on Tuesday I called around 10:15 and was treated, again, as
though I'd just stepped from a green spaceship ("do you have a form?").
This time the SPSP pretended not to understand what I meant by "medical
record", so I said "A list of all her immunizations from birth to the
present. Okay?" SPSP said it would be ready at 1:45.
We arrived at 1:50 and had to wait 10 minutes for them to fill out A
STOCK FORM (with their letterhead on it). Reminds me of "The Boys in
the Band" ("who do I have to %#&@ to get a [form] around here?!").
Leslie
|
1121.12 | | STAR::MACKAY | C'est la vie! | Wed Sep 04 1991 14:54 | 12 |
|
When we were living in NH, we went to a group of 4 pediatricians,
3 of them were great, one was so-so. Their hours were very good,
they open till 9 pm.
When we moved to MA, I looked into a group practice and put off by
the receptionist's attitude. We stayed with the NH group until a really
nice doctor opened his own practice 2 blocks from my house.
I think the most important thing is the doctor(s) him/themselves, not
the style of practice.
Eva
|
1121.13 | E B look alike?? | JAWS::TRIPP | | Wed Sep 04 1991 16:19 | 8 |
| Hey Leslie, (.11), have you considered being an Erma Bombeck Fill In?
No offense, I think your writings look like some of the things I've
read in her books....GREAT!!
Lyn
(too bad life can be so funny and trying at the same time!)
|
1121.14 | Family Doctor | FSOA::EFINIZIO | | Wed Sep 04 1991 16:54 | 25 |
|
When I was pregnant with Matthew, My OB gave me a referral list
with Pediatricians on it. I started selecting Pediatricians that were
close to my area, and on my HMO, Central Mass list. I came across a
family physician that was in the same town, and decided to check him
out.
I'll tell you, it was the best move I've ever made. He's wonderful.
My son has a low white blood count, which has led us back and forth
many times to the Dr. He always calls me back within minutes of my
calling the office. And if he's on call, the longest I've waited for a
call is 15 minutes! And he's wonderful with Matthew! His diagnosis
has always been right on target, and he's fought, with success, to get
CMHC to approve Matt to go to Childrens Hospital. I wouldn't change
him for the world. On top of that, he has knowledge of our family
history.
Only downfall is when he's not on call (he's a workaholic, and it's
doesn't happen often) when we have to go to another Dr. that were not
to thrilled with.
I think with a private practice, your able to gain a better
relationship with your Dr.
Ellen
|
1121.2 | both | ASABET::TRUMPOLT | Liz Trumpolt - ML05-4 - 223-7153 | Thu Sep 05 1991 08:52 | 18 |
| I like a pedi who has a private practice, just for the reason taht he
is the only one that my son see's and that he knows everything about
Alexander. One reason why I like a private practice pedi is because
Alexander is prone to getting colds and usually ends up getting
tonsillities or strep along with it. So when this happens his pedi and
the pharmacy knows what to do/give him for it which is usually a sulfer
based medication.
I have a friend who goes to a group practice for her daughter and she
tries to make her appointments with the one she likes. If she can't
or he is on vacation then she unwillingly takes her to the other pedi
how is just as nice. But she has gottend to like the other one better
for some reason.
But like they say to each his own. So good luck pedi hunting, but use
your own judgement on picking a pedi.
Liz
|
1121.16 | | TLE::STOCKSPDS | Cheryl Stocks | Thu Sep 05 1991 09:04 | 22 |
| We have a family practice doctor, and we're *very* happy with him. I like
feeling that he's treating the whole family, so that when I bring the kids
in for their checkups, he also asks how *I'm* doing, and I can easily
ask him any minor questions I have about my own health, rather than
making a phone call or scheduling another office visit. It also means
I don't have to build a good relationship with multiple doctors - just
the one. It also seems to me that our family practice doctor is more
relaxed and flexible than the pediatricians that some of my friends' kids
go to - I don't know whether this is purely a personality thing, or
whether it's part of the "specialists are more rigid and dictatorial"
thing that I've also observed with other specialists. A relaxed approach
(not sloppy or careless! just relaxed) is what I like, so it's a good
match for us. I have referred several of my friends to him, and they
all are very happy with him, too (some have kids and some don't).
Our doctor is part of a group practice, but unless he's on vacation, we
normally have no trouble setting up appointments specifically with him.
The people that book appointments always ask which doctor we want to see.
cheryl
p.s. Laura, if you want to discuss local doctors, send me mail!
|
1121.17 | aw shux | PERFCT::WOOLNER | Photographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and dense | Thu Sep 05 1991 10:16 | 7 |
| As I said in a separate note to Lyn, Erma B. is one of my favorite
writers, so it's an honor to be mentioned in the same Note with her!
Just chronicling a typical confab with that pedi office (me with short
fuse, SPSP with gunpowder for brains).
Leslie
|
1121.18 | Pedi vs. Family doctor?? | JAWS::TRIPP | | Thu Sep 05 1991 13:28 | 18 |
| How about a different approach to this whole thing....
What are the thoughts of skipping the Pedi all together? There is fast
becoming a large number of general internists who will do "family
practice". My internist is an example of this, he treats the whole
family, regardless of age. I never gave this approach any thought when
I was exploring doctors before my son was born, and at this point I
wonder if it's worth checking into.
Are the "family Practice" doctors able to deal with the issues specific
to children? Does anyone out there deal NOT with a Pedi, but a doctor
who treats your whole family.
I need to say that is was kind of a culture shock a couple years ago
when I went for an apointment with MY doctor, and found a boy say
around 8 waiting for HIS appointment. (camp physical I think this was)
Lyn
|
1121.19 | Re -1 | SHIPS::GORE_I | Bar sinister with pedant rampant | Fri Sep 06 1991 08:40 | 17 |
|
As has already been noted, here in the UK a GP is the norm, with
specialists available as needed. Having been down both routes I'd opt
for a GP treating the whole family. My GP strongly believes that health
care is not just about specific treatments for specific conditions, but
involves the whole family situation, lifestyle etc. From a pragmatic
viewpoint, because he knows the medical histories of all of us, he's in
a good position to make correlations between our various illnesses and
be proactive in dealing with them.
I think another plus is that the GP doesn't feel he *has* to air
his speciality. Many times the only real "treatment" required by a
patient is a sympathetic ear and some reassurance. I'm not saying a
specialist can't or doesn't do this, but I tend to feel (irrationaly,
but I know I'm not alone in this) "Hey, this guy's a specialist! Why
doesn't he *do* something?".
Ian G.
|
1121.20 | Matthew Thornton | BCSE::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Sun Sep 08 1991 01:39 | 49 |
1121.21 | maybe it doesn't really matter | MARX::FLEURY | | Mon Sep 09 1991 09:26 | 10 |
|
Well, I originally asked this question because I wanted to narrow down
the number of pediatricians I needed to interview before making a
decission. Based on the responses I have gotten here, and all the
specific recommendations I have recieved off line (thanks - and keep
them coming) this really isn't a pertinent consideration.
Interestingly enough (to me, anyway), the vast majority of specific
recommendations have been for two doctors - one is a member of a group,
and the other is a partner in a private practice.
|