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Peaches LeToure's avatar

In many cases, the patient is not the boss and this is the problem. The boss is the administrator. The doctor works for a hospital or a large group or a corporate entity. This is who dictates to them what must be done. The doctor needs to make the larger group happy. This is often, but not always, done by making the patient happy (not always even possible). The patient can sense that they are not in charge and that the doctor is trying their best to please someone else. This may contribute to a sense that the doctor doesn't want to see the patient.

Another issue that might contribute to the general public feeling as though doctors don't want to see patients is that the staff does not work for the doctor. They, too, work for the larger organization. Patients encounter the staff before they ever step foot in the office. The person answering the phone might have been told a hundred times by the doctor to fit in emergency patients. But the staff doesn't work for the doctor. Typically one would think that they would have been instructed by the administrators to schedule as much as possible. However, it seems that in my more rural area, the staff is instructed to fill spots in the computer schedule. The patient can sense that when they call for an appointment and are told that they can't be seen for a long time no matter how much they need to.

I personally have been told by my child's established pediatric practice that there were no appointments available for a suspected strep throat and if I really want him to be seen I need to take him to the ER. I then did what I was trying not to do and prescribed the damned antibiotic myself. But that is a privilege afforded to doctors and the lay person does not have that option. The typical patient sure as hell can get the idea from that kind of interaction (which is extraordinarily common in a "not city" where I live) that doctors don't want to see patients.

I have also referred out my own patients for care, specifically requesting them to be seen ASAP. I do this at the regional care centers located 2 hours each direction. I only do this as a last resort, typically for someone with cancer. I have been told by both our regional centers (one two hours to the south and one two hours to the east) that biopsy proven cancers are not urgent and can wait a full month to be seen for an initial evaluation. This is much different than it was even 10 years ago when I could call and have my newly diagnosed cancer patients seen within a couple of days. Try looking someone in the eye, telling them they have cancer, and then telling them they need to wait a month for their appointment to start evaluating the extent of it and to start formulating a plan. This will certainly contribute to the general public's perception that doctors don't want to treat patients. Mine, too, if we are being honest.

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Margaret Rena bernstein's avatar

The definition of stress, is responsibility without control. When doctor's owned their practices and made their own policies they were much more satisfied. Now, it seems that most doctors work for a healthcare system. This system tells them which office they will report to, how long they have with each patient, how many patients they must see everyday, and often their compensation is based on ridiculous satisfaction surveys.

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