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Τρίτη 28 Μαΐου 2019


(MedPage Today) -- More work can be done over time, says Hans Duvefelt, MD
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by Hans Duvefelt, MD
May 28, 2019
How long does it take to diagnose guttate psoriasis versus pityriasis rosea? Swimmers ear versus a ruptured eardrum? A kidney stone? A urinary tract infection? An ankle sprain?

So why is the typical "cycle time," the time it takes for a patient to get through a clinic such as mine for these kinds of problems, close to an hour?


Answer: Mandated screening activities that could actually be done in different ways and not even necessarily in person or in real time.

Guess how many emergency room or urgent care center visits could be avoided and handled in the primary care office if we were able to provide only the services patients thought they needed? Well over 50% and probably more like 75%.

Primary care clinics like mine are penalized if a patient with an ankle sprain comes in late in the year and has a high blood pressure because they are in pain and that becomes the final blood pressure recording for the year. (One more uncontrolled hypertensive patient.)

We also get penalized if we see an infrequent visitor only once in a given year and don't screen and provide interventions for depression, alcohol use, smoking, and a host of other conditions unrelated to what the patient came to us for.

So we can't afford to have quick visits since anything less than comprehensive makes us look bad.


Imagine if you pull up to an ATM for $40 in cash and the machine insists on going over your annual budget with you. That's what primary care feels like sometimes.

Of course, I will look one or two steps beyond the chief complaint. If a smoker has bronchitis, I'll talk about smoking. And if an alcoholic falls down his front steps, I will take the opportunity ...

But I can't do everything for everybody in every visit. I can be comprehensive, over time, if I am not penalized for squeezing in patients with simple problems for quick visits. I think that is more comprehensive than declining to provide rapid access and thereby forcing patients to fragment their care between multiple unrelated providers.

Here is my simple prayer:

Dear overlords of CMS and all you other healthcare policymakers and deities: Let us judge how to best meet our patients' needs when they come to our clinics. Admit that sometimes a sore throat is just a sore throat.

Hans Duvefelt, MD, is a family physician who blogs at acountrydoctorwrites.com. This post also appeared on KevinMD.

LAST UPDATED 05.28.2019

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