What do patients hope to achieve when they go to see their
doctor? The simple answer is: a
diagnosis and treatment. However, their
actual expectations may be a bit more complex and rooted in the evolution of
the modern American healthcare system.
The physician has historically been a highly respected
member of the community, classically making house-calls to sick patients with a
briefcase of medical supplies so that a bedside clinical diagnosis could be
attained. As the American population
grew, physicians began to see patients in their office to increase efficiency
and allow for more office procedures (i.e. microbiology cultures, strep throat
tests, and urinalysis) that would aid in diagnosis. With insurance reimbursements declining over
the recent decade, physicians have been forced to increase their efficiency
even more to accommodate more “customers” in the same amount of time in order
to afford their overhead costs (office staff, medical supplies, and office
rent). This general trend has led to
strict time limitations on the patient-physician interaction and,
unfortunately, increased dependence on and use of medical diagnostics (which do
help the physician reach an appropriate diagnosis but also add to the reimbursements
garnered from insurance companies for the visit).
Resource availability has dramatically changed over the past
few decades. Medical information used to
be a “black box” for the general public.
Physicians may have been highly respected because they spent years
training to learn and understand vast amounts of information that could be
filtered and delivered to the patient when appropriate. Medical literature was only contained within
large textbooks that were expensive and usually only purchased and read by doctors. Now, medical resources for the layperson are
widely available on the internet and in medical literature specifically
directed to the average citizen. A
patient is one “Google search” away from a host of websites waiting to diagnose
them based on their symptoms.
Additionally, a diagnosis given to the patient by a physician oftentimes
leads to an online search of the layman’s medical literature. This can be both good and bad – empowering
patients about their illness can be helpful, but all patients are different and
their nuances may be part and parcel to their physician’s recommended treatment
regimen. Additionally, the “magic” of
the doctor’s office becomes more transparent to the patient, which affects
expectations.
The legal industry has preyed on doctors for decades. Physicians are constantly dealing with
life-or-death matters, and mistakes can be made. Mistakes come from different places, though,
and not all of them have secondary motives.
However, the legal industry has attacked physicians so fervently that it
has affected practice patterns by many doctors.
Unnecessary tests and medications are often prescribed in an excessive
manner because of trends created by litigation and can lead to unnecessary side
effects and complications. It also leads
to an atmosphere of “doing” as opposed to “thinking” about patients.
What results from all of these changes is a culture of
expectations that may not be serving our patients well. Not all patients need that MRI that they end
up getting for lower back pain. Not all
patients need antibiotics for the fever they developed yesterday. Sometimes, the medical decisions that are
made because of the complex interactions of the legal system, patient’s
expectations, and the high-throughput nature of modern-day healthcare can lead
to a population that is sicker now than ever before. Is that really what we
want?
Doc Veritas
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