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- A Question of Time
A Question of Time
- By Rejoyce Wilson-Herbert
- Published 09/5/2008
- Health & Fitness
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Rejoyce Wilson-Herbert
Rejoyce Wilson-Herbert is the founder of National Information Resource Services (NIRS), an organization committed to educating people on the home care industry. Currently residing in Newport Coast, CA, Rejoyce is one of the most highly-sought after speakers in her field. During her engaging presentations she speaks about in-home care and offers advice to other home care owners, clients and family members. Rejoyce is an established speaker and has spoken on a variety of topics for various organizations. She is a proud mother, grandmother and great-grandmother and continues to work hard and help people realize their own goals.
After arriving for my scheduled appointment at four different doctor’s offices, I found myself sitting for at least a half hour passed my scheduled time. It occurred to me at the fourth office that doctor’s appointments aren’t the same as professional appointments. Doctors really have no intention of honoring the appointed time; they just want to make sure they have patients on the books for payment. They know that once you are there, the likelihood that you will leave is very slim.
Doctors' offices schedule more than one person for the same time slot, and so your 8:00 a.m. appointment may put you in the company of three or four other people who also have an 8:00 a.m. time slot. As if going to the doctor’s office isn’t stressful enough physicians add insult to injury by making you wait 30 minutes or more before ushering you in for a rushed office visit.
Given the current state of healthcare, most of us will take any appointment that a doctor has available. When you consider that most people are either trying to get to work or get back to work after an appointment, it seems there should be a better way.
The irony of all this is that while I was waiting in the doctor’s office for my 3:30 p.m. appointment, a lady showed up for
Apparently the doctor’s time is much more valuable than the patient’s time. That is certainly the sentiment displayed by the front office staff. And if you want to talk to the doctor to see if he shares their sentiment, too bad ... you can’t!
Healthcare is about people and those in this field would do well to consider putting people first. Between the insensitive nature of most front office staff and the complete disregard for a patient’s time by the doctor’s office, it's no wonder our system is in crisis. We are a time-sensitive culture; doctors know this as they try to rush you in and out of their office. I would suggest that as strict as they are on penalties for late or missed appointments, is as strict as they might want to be in keeping their self-established schedule.
Many offices have a policy that states that appointments not canceled twenty-four hours prior to the appointment will be billed at the full office visit cost. I'd like to suggest this go a step further. In consideration of the patients who wait so patiently, let's institute a delay penalty. If the doctor is delayed more than 10 minutes, the patient isn't charged for the appointment. I'm guessing that this won't fly well with the doctors or their staff, but why should they be treated differently than any other profession.
When there is a cost for the lack of respect for a person's time, on either side of the team, people will become more aware of their actions, and their commitments. As my daddy used to say it always gets attention when it hits the old pocketbook.
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1 Response to "A Question of Time" 
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said this on 07 Sep 2008 2:13:18 PM CDT
I've got a personal policy that I give people 15 minutes of wiggle room or explaining time. If they don't respect me or themselves enough to apologize for a reasonable delay then I don't do business with them. Last I checked we weren't on a socialized medicine system. Obviously you can't do this if you're seriously ill. I think that's why doctors do this ...
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