Guest guest Posted March 29, 2010 Report Share Posted March 29, 2010 Am I bothered by this due to my biases as a primary care physician or have we forgotten that primary care can be comprehensive?: "Our first product we’re making answers the following questions when you’re in a medical bind and may need professional attention: When should I take care of this? Who should I see? (specialist, generalist, retail clinic, etc.) How much should I expect to spend? Since overworked primary care physicians refer about 70% of their visits to specialists, if we point you to a specialist instead of a primary care doctor, we’ll automatically be “correct” (in terms of the consumers experience) 70% of the time. Why should people, when spending their own hard earned money, waste money on a primary care doctor visit just to get a referral that will happen anyway 70% of the time?" From: How would you fix the access problem? I love teaching patients how to care for themselves and avoid overutilization with self triage. We used to do a lot of this in overloaded military clinics. However, if these folks are assuming that sending 70% of medical problems to specialists is appropriate then that's pretty sad. Maybe I'm just overreading this and they're just designing for the dysfunctional system we now have. In a system with primary care physicians working in overloaded, rushed clinics, it may make sense to replace them with midlevels and a program that triages most problems to a specialist. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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