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How much did you last pay and where(what state) did get it done at?
I'm just curious as to what people are paying around the country. Much thanks. |
#2
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How much did you last pay and where(what state) did get it done at?
$100, cash, in Iowa. Quite the rip off, for 15 minutes of "work"... -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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$100, cash, in Iowa.
Quite the rip off, for 15 minutes of "work"... ....and thrity minutes waiting in the waiting room for you to boot. I hate it when I get to the doctor's office at the scheduled time and have to wait thirty minutes to be call. Then the nurse takes me to the first room where I get weighted and my height is recorded. She then takes me to another room where I have to wait AGAIN for the doctor to come see me. There should be a way to "back charge" our wait time at the doctor's office. The Monk |
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On 1 Dec 2005 21:29:34 -0800, "Flyingmonk" wrote:
There should be a way to "back charge" our wait time at the doctor's office. Still, it beats the former system, where everyone went to the doc at the same time, at night because everyone worked during the day, and you waited your turn in the waiting room. $60 in Dover NH. That was however two years ago. Will report back on my 2005 experience. -- all the best, Dan Ford email: usenet AT danford DOT net Warbird's Forum: www.warbirdforum.com Piper Cub Forum: www.pipercubforum.com the blog: www.danford.net In Search of Lost Time: www.readingproust.com |
#5
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There should be a way to "back charge" our wait time at
the doctor's office. ************************************************** ************** Like you, I hate to wait more than a few minutes for ANY scheduled appointment... My time is valuable just like yours... I try (really, really try) to run my office on time... Lessee, let me remember yesterday... Sara was scheduled in for a blood pressure check and to refill her meds (BP and arthritis), she told the receptionist that she had no other problems when she made the appointment two days before, 'routine check up with three or less meds' - ten minutes is blocked off for her by the scheduler... She has no transportation so she rides the County Commission on Aging buses, they drop her at 8:15 and are scheduled to pick her back up at 8:50... Appointment was 8:30, I walked into the room at 8:28... 8:35 I had checked the BP (OK), listened to heart and lungs (OK), squeezed ankles for signs of edema (NONE), asked her how her arthritis was behaving (OK), wrote her prescriptions, and I'm edging towards the door... I'm gonna get out of here with a couple minutes to spare, yippee Then she whips out the dreaded L I S T... AARP tells her to put everything on a list and DEMAND that I cover each and every item before I leave the room... So, with a sigh I dig into her list... By really pushing her not to describe the history of each item back to 1941 in agonizing detail I manage to finish her list and push her to the checkout desk by 8:55... I am now one full 15 minute appointment behind (and the bus driver is not thrilled either, I can see his lips moving as he sits slumped over his wheel)... The next two 'routine visit with refills' go well and I recover 5 minutes on the schedule, but I'm still 10 minutes behind, though I have hopes of making a miracle recovery... All I need is a couple of sports physicals and I can 'almost' close the gap... Then the show stopper walks in... Scheduled for a 15 minute block (she always takes extra time) for a simple one prescription refill she is weeping and shaking when I walk into the room... long tale of woe will be skipped here By the time I push her out the door I am a full 30 minutes behind... The patients are now snarling at me when I stagger into the exam room... By 11:00 I'm snarling back... Thank Gawd for lunch where I can at least restart on time... The afternoon goes better, but I still slowly slip about 20 minutes behind by 5:00 Oh, hey doc I also need you to fill out this inurance form for that week I was off last month and it has to be in the mail today or I won't get my sick pay in time to make the mortgage payment on the house. jeez... I agree that some docs should have their rear end kicked because they over book patients, yak on the phone with their golfing buddy, etc., etc. until the office looks like a parking lot.. But most docs try hard to run on time we like to go home before it is pitch black outside, just like you... The realities of running a n office in the 21st century is that it is a business... There are seven people on the time clock every hour the office is open, the heat and lights are on, the lot is plowed free of snow, the malpractice insurance premium is paid up, the slip and fall insurance is paid, the accountant gets paid every month, and on, and on... As a family doc I don't have the luxury of being paid 300 hundred dollars for a routine visit and two prescriptions, so to make the overhead we have to keep the appointment book full, or go out of business... Simple as that... denny |
#6
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Denny,
Thanks for the reality check. It's so easy to blame someone else when you really have no idea what's going on behind the scenes. "Denny" wrote in message oups.com... There should be a way to "back charge" our wait time at the doctor's office. ************************************************** ************** Like you, I hate to wait more than a few minutes for ANY scheduled appointment... My time is valuable just like yours... I try (really, really try) to run my office on time... Lessee, let me remember yesterday... Sara was scheduled in for a blood pressure check and to refill her meds (BP and arthritis), she told the receptionist that she had no other problems when she made the appointment two days before, 'routine check up with three or less meds' - ten minutes is blocked off for her by the scheduler... She has no transportation so she rides the County Commission on Aging buses, they drop her at 8:15 and are scheduled to pick her back up at 8:50... Appointment was 8:30, I walked into the room at 8:28... 8:35 I had checked the BP (OK), listened to heart and lungs (OK), squeezed ankles for signs of edema (NONE), asked her how her arthritis was behaving (OK), wrote her prescriptions, and I'm edging towards the door... I'm gonna get out of here with a couple minutes to spare, yippee Then she whips out the dreaded L I S T... AARP tells her to put everything on a list and DEMAND that I cover each and every item before I leave the room... So, with a sigh I dig into her list... By really pushing her not to describe the history of each item back to 1941 in agonizing detail I manage to finish her list and push her to the checkout desk by 8:55... I am now one full 15 minute appointment behind (and the bus driver is not thrilled either, I can see his lips moving as he sits slumped over his wheel)... The next two 'routine visit with refills' go well and I recover 5 minutes on the schedule, but I'm still 10 minutes behind, though I have hopes of making a miracle recovery... All I need is a couple of sports physicals and I can 'almost' close the gap... Then the show stopper walks in... Scheduled for a 15 minute block (she always takes extra time) for a simple one prescription refill she is weeping and shaking when I walk into the room... long tale of woe will be skipped here By the time I push her out the door I am a full 30 minutes behind... The patients are now snarling at me when I stagger into the exam room... By 11:00 I'm snarling back... Thank Gawd for lunch where I can at least restart on time... The afternoon goes better, but I still slowly slip about 20 minutes behind by 5:00 Oh, hey doc I also need you to fill out this inurance form for that week I was off last month and it has to be in the mail today or I won't get my sick pay in time to make the mortgage payment on the house. jeez... I agree that some docs should have their rear end kicked because they over book patients, yak on the phone with their golfing buddy, etc., etc. until the office looks like a parking lot.. But most docs try hard to run on time we like to go home before it is pitch black outside, just like you... The realities of running a n office in the 21st century is that it is a business... There are seven people on the time clock every hour the office is open, the heat and lights are on, the lot is plowed free of snow, the malpractice insurance premium is paid up, the slip and fall insurance is paid, the accountant gets paid every month, and on, and on... As a family doc I don't have the luxury of being paid 300 hundred dollars for a routine visit and two prescriptions, so to make the overhead we have to keep the appointment book full, or go out of business... Simple as that... denny |
#7
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Uhm, $140 in Washington, DC, and they got my social security number
wrong, and lost my certificate and just typed out a new one that didn't match the number on the form on file at FAA, which I didn't find out until just before I was supposed to take my checkride, causing me to have to cancel, but you guys have heard this one before... |
#8
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Amen to that! Today there will be even more different reasons beyond
your control for getting behind. And more expenses that dwindle those "high" fees of yours :-( Denny wrote: There should be a way to "back charge" our wait time at the doctor's office. ************************************************** ************** Like you, I hate to wait more than a few minutes for ANY scheduled appointment... My time is valuable just like yours... I try (really, really try) to run my office on time... Lessee, let me remember yesterday... Sara was scheduled in for a blood |
#9
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Every time I am late to see a Dr, I always remember how accommodating they
have been to me in the past when I have something extra at the end of a normal visit. Remembering those times always lowers my blood pressure and extends my patience. Thanks, Jim (who had his last physical last month, Class II, $80 and gladly waited through lunch which put his appointment over 1 hour later than scheduled.) "Denny" wrote in message oups.com... There should be a way to "back charge" our wait time at the doctor's office. ************************************************** ************** Like you, I hate to wait more than a few minutes for ANY scheduled appointment... My time is valuable just like yours... I try (really, really try) to run my office on time... Lessee, let me remember yesterday... Sara was scheduled in for a blood pressure check and to refill her meds (BP and arthritis), she told the receptionist that she had no other problems when she made the appointment two days before, 'routine check up with three or less meds' - ten minutes is blocked off for her by the scheduler... She has no transportation so she rides the County Commission on Aging buses, they drop her at 8:15 and are scheduled to pick her back up at 8:50... Appointment was 8:30, I walked into the room at 8:28... 8:35 I had checked the BP (OK), listened to heart and lungs (OK), squeezed ankles for signs of edema (NONE), asked her how her arthritis was behaving (OK), wrote her prescriptions, and I'm edging towards the door... I'm gonna get out of here with a couple minutes to spare, yippee Then she whips out the dreaded L I S T... AARP tells her to put everything on a list and DEMAND that I cover each and every item before I leave the room... So, with a sigh I dig into her list... By really pushing her not to describe the history of each item back to 1941 in agonizing detail I manage to finish her list and push her to the checkout desk by 8:55... I am now one full 15 minute appointment behind (and the bus driver is not thrilled either, I can see his lips moving as he sits slumped over his wheel)... The next two 'routine visit with refills' go well and I recover 5 minutes on the schedule, but I'm still 10 minutes behind, though I have hopes of making a miracle recovery... All I need is a couple of sports physicals and I can 'almost' close the gap... Then the show stopper walks in... Scheduled for a 15 minute block (she always takes extra time) for a simple one prescription refill she is weeping and shaking when I walk into the room... long tale of woe will be skipped here By the time I push her out the door I am a full 30 minutes behind... The patients are now snarling at me when I stagger into the exam room... By 11:00 I'm snarling back... Thank Gawd for lunch where I can at least restart on time... The afternoon goes better, but I still slowly slip about 20 minutes behind by 5:00 Oh, hey doc I also need you to fill out this inurance form for that week I was off last month and it has to be in the mail today or I won't get my sick pay in time to make the mortgage payment on the house. jeez... I agree that some docs should have their rear end kicked because they over book patients, yak on the phone with their golfing buddy, etc., etc. until the office looks like a parking lot.. But most docs try hard to run on time we like to go home before it is pitch black outside, just like you... The realities of running a n office in the 21st century is that it is a business... There are seven people on the time clock every hour the office is open, the heat and lights are on, the lot is plowed free of snow, the malpractice insurance premium is paid up, the slip and fall insurance is paid, the accountant gets paid every month, and on, and on... As a family doc I don't have the luxury of being paid 300 hundred dollars for a routine visit and two prescriptions, so to make the overhead we have to keep the appointment book full, or go out of business... Simple as that... denny |
#10
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("Denny" wrote)
Like you, I hate to wait more than a few minutes for ANY scheduled appointment... My time is valuable just like yours... I try (really, really try) to run my office on time... Lessee, let me remember yesterday... [good stuff snipped] I *always* try for one of the first appointments of the day. So far, so good. Not much waiting. I called and told the office-clinic I'd be 20 minutes late for a follow-up staple removing visit. The surgeon wasn't there yet when I arrived. I went into the room and waited for all of 2 minutes. He came in and I said, "What took you?" He said, "Don't give me that #%^&, I pulled in right behind you in the parking lot!" Oops :-) Montblack |
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