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Originally Posted by Alumiyum
Maybe you should stop taking it so personally. No one ever said all doctors don't care and I in fact did acknowledge the fact that things get difficult sometimes. But things get difficult in EVERY profession and there are a LOT of people in careers for the job and not the money. The difference is many of those careers aren't involved directly in the medical health of clients. None of what you've said rules out the suggestion that doctors try to touch the bases the first time around saving time and money for both doctor and patient. Some do and will, but it's so difficult to find them while wading through those that have decided most of us aren't worth their time.
My hometown includes many, many doctors, lawyers, CEO's, etc. Several family friends have switched to a pay to be a patient system. All of them admitted it was because they wanted to work three days a week but keep their same lifestyle. No, that's certainly not the motivation for every doctor who goes this route, but it isn't all about scraping by.
Is anyone else excited about the tanning bed tax? As a former tanorexic who three years ago had a come to jesus meeting with the dermatologist I am glad their starting to acknowledge just exactly how dangerous tanning is.
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I'm not taking it personally. I'm not a primary care physician. I'm just telling you why they don't spend more time with patients. It's the way things are. I know a lot of primary care physicians, and they all say the same thing. I personally spend LOTS of time with my patients, but I have that option because I read very fast and am not limited by reimbursement patterns. Also, there is no reason a physician who has gone to school a minimum of 9 years with an average of $100,000 of school loans should have to scrape by. Look at the reimbursement codes if you don't believe me. Primary care physicians are by no means rich physicians. That's why there is a shortage, and medical students can't be persuaded to go into those fields.