DARE TO ASK: Doctor will be with you in a minute

By PHILLIP MILANO

Question

Why is it that if I’m 15 minutes late for a doctor’s appointment, I have to reschedule, but if I wait more than an hour past my appointment time, that’s OK because the doctor is busy?

Alma, 48, Kempner, Texas

Replies

I was a waitress, and if I made people wait 15 minutes before I went to their table, they would either a) be very angry, b) walk out or c) give me a lousy tip. I don’t think doctors or dentists care about their patients’ inconvenience.

S., 24, female, Cleveland

At my clinic, if it takes awhile for the doctor to get to you because “he is busy,” chances are he really is. The other day I stepped into the exam room to see a little girl there for a cold. Upon exam it became apparent she was pretty damn sick and literally dying before my eyes. Needless to say, my time with her went a little beyond the scheduled allotment. I then had the pleasure of walking into the next exam room and having a mother shower me with obscenities because she had to wait to get her kid’s warts looked at. What can I say? I thought keeping that little girl alive was sort of important.

Sam, 33, physician, Jackson, Miss.

The way they schedule appointments is stupid. They are too close together.

Aubrie, 20, Moscow, Pa.

I work in the health-care industry and watch doctors take a patient in for a 15-minute “checkup,” and the person will ramble on about every minor ache and pain . . . ! Would you rather he be rude and show the patient the door?

Dave, 48, Hartford, Conn.

Expert says

Patients with appointments waited an average of 20.2 minutes to see the doctor, according to a 2003 study by the American Medical Association.

Why that seemed more like six hours if a runny-nosed child was nearby playing The Legend of Zelda nonstop on Nintendo DS was not studied.

Wait times at the doctor can seem longer than they are because often you’re worried and, well, you’re not doing much of anything except looking at a magazine, said Samantha Collier, chief medical officer for Colorado-based HealthGrades, a health-care ratings company.

“Also, you’re getting a 15-minute slot based on a symptom, and then the physician has to figure out what it is. It could be as serious as a heart attack, and if you had that, I hope you’d want the other patients to wait.”

What’s unreasonable is waiting longer than 20 minutes and not getting an explanation or solution from the doctor or receptionist, she said.

One way to help: Arrive prepared, with specific descriptions of your ailments if possible, Collier said.

Overbooking doesn’t help, but with insurance sometimes doling out meager reimbursements for visits, physicians can boost their patient loads in order to cover their overhead.

“What if a physician gets only $18 from Medicare to talk about 55 medications with a senior patient?” Collier said. “My hair stylist gets more than that.”

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