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Showing posts from October, 2017

Patient Navigators Climb Your Mountain of Medical Bills

To accomplish certain tasks, we need a little help from our friends.  No one can do it all, although many of us are more resourceful than others.  Some folks are adventurous and dive into a new arena with excitement.  They may be tinkerers who aren’t afraid to play with new gadgets.  Sure, they might break some china, but they are apt to widen their skill set and enrich their lives.  Others, eschew this dive bomb approach and prefer to wade cautiously into new experiences.  Their comfort zones are narrower.  They never break the china, but their personal growth is likely more stultified.  For some activities, we should simply call upon the professionals straight away.  Here are some examples of jobs that we should pay others to do for us. Cut down a huge dead tree on our front yard.          Replace damaged roof shingles. Investigate why smoke is seeping out of the hood of our car. Prepare our last will and testament from www.DIEWITHCASH.com or some similar website.

The Curse of Medical Records Documentation

Let me post a question that neither I nor readers can answer. How much of what I do during the course of a day directly benefits patients? Perhaps, I don’t want to really know as I would be dismayed at how much of my effort benefits no one. Ask a nurse who works on a hospital ward, how much of his or her effort is directly applied to patient care.  I would recommend that you have a double dose of antacid in hand – one dose for you and the other for the nurse.  Just today, I was gently reproved by a hospital physician administrator for a lapse in one of my recent progress notes, which I write after seeing every hospital patient I consult on.  Which of the following transgressions do you think I was cited for?  Only one answer is correct. I did not perform an adequate physical examination I failed to address the results of an abnormal CAT scan I neglected to write the time of day along with the date of the note. I did not discuss the case with the patient’s family.

I'm Taking a Knee on Journalism

Thanks to NFL players, our national anthem is getting more attention than ever.  Keep in mind that many of us could not recite its words without error, and fewer of us have the range to sing it.  Even fewer can cite the historical event being described.  This is the latest, but not the last, example of a solvable issue that is being exploited to divide us.  I lament that so many of controversial issues ricocheting in the public square are similarly solvable, and yet remain combustible. The media stokes these conflicts, in my view.  Listen critically to how CNN and other networks package and deliver the news.   Not only is the reportage suffused with editorial content and slant, but it sows overt division and partisanship by design.   Consider the following two hypothetical questions from a TV reporter.  Which one would the network be likely to air? “Senator, what is your plan for tax reform?” “Senator, the leader of the opposing party attacked your tax policy as a cruel

Why Are You Seeing A Gastroenterologist?

I write to you now from the west side of Cleveland in a coffee shop with my legs perched upon a chair.  Just finished the last Op-Ed of interest in today’s New York Times.  Do I sound relaxed? I rounded this morning at both of the community hospitals that we serve.  There is not a day that goes by that doesn’t have blogworthy moments.  If I had the time and the talent, I would post daily instead of weekly.   Read on for yet another true medical insider’s disclosure. Gastroenterologists, as specialists, are called upon by other doctors to address digestive issues in their patients.  For example, our daily office schedule is filled with patients sent by primary care physicians who want our advice or our technical testing skills to evaluate individuals with abdominal pain, bowel issues, heartburn, rectal bleeding and various other symptoms.  The same process occurs when we are called to see hospital patients.   If a hospital admitting physician, who is usually a hospitalist, want

Does Secretary Tom Price Deserve Forgiveness?

What is the explanation for Tom Price, a physician and current Secretary of Health and Human Services, taking private charter flights costing taxpayers hundreds of thousands of dollars?  Keep in mind that when Price was a conservative congressman from Georgia, he would have railed against such fiscal profligacy.  Is it hubris?  Entitlement?  Or, do folks who ascend to positions of power simply rationalize that such excesses are absolute necessities for getting the job done? By the time this piece is posted, Dr. Price, an orthopedic surgeon, may have been surgically excised from the government without anesthesia.  While his behavior is not quite Watergate, it was wrong.  And, if it was not wrong, it demonstrated impaired judgment.  And, if was not simply a repeated exercise of misjudgments, then it exhibited bad optics.  And, if it somehow passed the optics test, it was just dumb.  Would Price have been able to explain these expensive charter flights to average folks, half