Unlike
my parents and their generation, who generally held their physicians
in excessively high regard, if not awe, I regard the medical
profession with what I consider a healthy degree of scepticism, and I
am prepared not only to challenge their edicts, but hold them fully
accountable for their actions. I recently had perfect vindication for
my attitude, and I believe that our system would work a lot more
effectively, and at less cost, if more of us adopted a similar
posture.
My most
recent experience was with my family doctor, to whom I relate fairly
well, but with substantial reservations – to the point that I will
only consult him if all else fails. A principal reason for my
reluctance to deal with him is the unnecessary difficulty I find in
arranging to see him. I don't know if it is a common physicians'
failing, but my doctor's office refuses to arrange appointments by
email. He claims that it's because his receptionist is not computer
literate, but I believe there is more to it than that. In any event,
one is obliged to phone for an appointment, and the process
inevitably leads to telephone tag, because Lucy, his receptionist,
spends much of her day on the phone returning missed calls. Also she
has an interesting recorded message for calls after hours, which
could have been lifted almost word for word from Joseph Heller's
Catch 22. It states, and I am paraphrasing from memory: “We do not
accept messages after hours, so please call during our working hours,
which are...”. She does not specifically state that if you call
during working hours you will reach an automated recording which asks you to leave a message, but the
implication is clear.
In any
event, my current interaction concerned getting inoculated against
shingles, a precaution I had been considering for some time, but had
deferred until now. My first instinct was to call the doctor, which
turns out to have been misguided. As expected, I left a message to be
called back, but clearly stated my purpose in calling. In the interim
I was informed by a friend that a doctor's prescription is not
required, and most pharmacies will provide both the vaccine and the
service. So I did some comparative shopping by phone, and found every
pharmacy I called had the vaccine on hand and the cost was mostly
within a 12% spread. So I went off to the most convenient and
friendly locale (the least cost, and least convenient, one - at
Costco - was booked up for a couple of weeks and erroneously
required a prescription), and half an hour later the process was
complete. The following day, I finally had a call back from Lucy, who
told me right away that the doctor said that I needed a prescription
for the vaccine and would therefore need to come in and see him. I
thanked her for calling back, and informed her that I did not
need a prescription, and that I had already had the inoculation.
This
leads me to a couple of comments about physicians' attitudes in
general, my doctor specifically, and questions about accountability
and transparency regarding our Medical Service Plan (MSP). First and
foremost, one of my principal beefs with physicians in general is
their absolute conviction that their time is many times more valuable
than that of their patients. Perhaps the filthy rich and politically
influential are able to avoid medical waiting rooms, but most mere
mortals are very familiar with them. I appreciate that scheduling is
subject to priorities and emergencies, but it seems to me that
effective and efficient planning and scheduling should minimize wait
times, and mostly eliminate them. I admit that I have never worked in
a medical office, nor have had to interact with dozens of people in a
day, but I firmly believe that a minimal time and motion study,
combined with a healthy regard for the ever suffering patient's time
would save a lot of frustration and waste.
Coming
back to my non-appointment with my doctor, leads me to speculate on
how much time I would have wasted on the consultation, purchase of
the vaccine, second consultation to have the injection, and possible
follow up. Further, what would it have cost MSP? Did my doctor
deliberately try and mislead me about the prescription requirement,
or is he simply ignorant? Either way, it does little for my
confidence in the medical profession and the medical system in
general.
In pursuing the issue further, I encountered the belligerent inefficiency of a system aligned to serve itself rather than the public.
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