• Neato@kbin.social
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    10 months ago

    Their time is more important than your time because they’ve triple booked all their patients in order to maximize profits. I hope 7min enough to discuss your entire physical health and chronic pain treatment options. If not they’ll have to schedule you a follow up because there are other patients waiting! /s

    • bleistift2@feddit.de
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      10 months ago

      Of course, they’re just greedy bastards. It’s not like there were too few doctors for too many patients.

      Every minute you’re waiting your doctor is caring for someone else.

      • ZephrC@lemm.ee
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        10 months ago

        Most doctors would absolutely love to spend way more time with each patient, but they’re not ultimately the ones in charge. The hospital administrators are absolutely intentionally overbooking their doctors to maximize profit. That’s not even a thing they’d disagree with if you asked them. That’s just how for profit healthcare works. America having a shortage of healthcare professionals came after that, because most people don’t like working under those conditions.

    • Catoblepas@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      10 months ago

      Growing up with a sibling who needed some pretty serious surgeries early on (and then needing some myself as a teen), I spent a lot of time as a kid in doctor’s offices. I learned very quickly that going to a doctor’s office and waiting is a good thing, because it means you are not the most urgent problem the doctor has to attend to. Someone else could be currently getting their cancer diagnosis explained to them, or the odds of making it alive through surgery, or any other dire shit people hear in doctor’s offices. Just because you’re there for antibiotics for a sinus infection it doesn’t mean everyone is.

      Like yeah, it’s annoying to wait. You literally have the internet in your pocket though, you can entertain yourself. If you keep getting rushed out of appointments because you have too much to discuss you need to tell the front desk when you call that you need to be scheduled for a longer appointment. If your schedule allows it always do early morning appointments, they have shorter wait times because you’re not dealing with 15 other people with appointments before you all being 5 minutes late and fucking up the schedule.

      You are now subscribed to Crip Facts.

  • TheWiseAlaundo@lemmy.whynotdrs.org
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    10 months ago

    I actually did ask my Doctor about why this happens once. Mainly it’s because if a patient before you has something that needs more time it messes up the schedule for every patient after… and this happens every single day. If no one cancels their appointments, then this problem just continually compounds throughout the day. The best bet to being seen on time is to be the first patient of the day.

    Or just intentionally show up a few minutes late and take the mild scolding from the receptionist. It’s not like they’re going to turn ya away

    • Stamets [Mirror]@startrek.websiteOP
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      10 months ago

      I wish that were true. It isn’t. My doc routinely sets me up as his first or second patient of the day and he’s always late. Docs seem to like blaming patients for their own faults.

      • waffle@lemmy.cafe
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        10 months ago

        Think about it. If the clinic staff are slow to room the patient, the physician likely tries to account for that. Additionally, your doc may have been rounding on folks (checking in on other patients) in the morning - e.g., say they did a surgery the day before, it’s often best practice to drop in to make sure people are recovering well.

        All of this adds complexity to an MDs schedule. Not to say that timeliness doesn’t matter or that your time isn’t important, but it’s not always a matter of someone being late - it could be the result of patients not being roomed on time for the last 2 years, so your doc shows up at 8:15 because the clinic staff don’t normally have the first patient roomed by 8 am.

        Source: wife is an obgyn

        • Stamets [Mirror]@startrek.websiteOP
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          10 months ago

          If that’s the truth then it’s even less acceptable than just simply being late.

          My doc isn’t checking in on other patients when I’m his first patient of the day. His practice opens the same time he’s booking the appointment for but I’ve gotta wait 10-20 minutes for him to check in on other patients? Doubtful. Also, every single job I have ever had says that if you need to get stuff done then you show up early to get it done. This Doc can’t show up 10-15 minutes early to make some phone calls and check in on the patients?

          If the patients aren’t being roomed on time because of staff that 2 years deep into incompetence, then maybe you should look into changing your employees over punishing your patients? That seems like the clinic staff are the problem. Not the patient. Why am I paying with my time because the clinics employees can’t do their jobs? It takes 1 minute, maximum, to get put into a room. You walk up to the screen, tell them your name, and then when a room is available they tell you to go to it. I cannot find a single reason why a Doc would think it’d take 15 minutes to get that done.

          • waffle@lemmy.cafe
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            10 months ago

            Yeah for sure. The clinic staff can make a huge difference and it’s not always the physicians administrative responsibility to ensure that the clinic runs on time. They can influence that, but do you know how challenging it can be to replace physician assistants and/or nurses? They’re in very high demand.

            Agree with a previous comment that some docs have a god complex and don’t care about other people’s time.

            Overall it would be great if the world aligned with the time slots I have scheduled for activities and appointments, but it’s not always as easy as it appears in semi-complex environments.

  • pinkdrunkenelephants@sopuli.xyz
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    10 months ago

    It’s because they took advantage of the lockdowns and the superior position it put them in to assert control over their customers – as in you. You’re not a patient to them; you’re a customer. They do stupid shit like that to make sure you know they’re in control of the interaction. They’ve been doing it since 2020 and will keep doing it until people push back, somehow.