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Carol's avatar

So far as I can tell, what’s really driving the focus on maximizing quantity over quality is the high - & ever increasing - proportion of MDs who now work for healthcare systems rather than themselves. I’ve been in academic med for almost 20 years & I’ve watched exactly the same process in 2 states: systems suck up as many community hospitals & private practices as they can, until they dominate the entire market & there are few (if any) opportunities for patients to find help outside these behemoths, who have strict triaging/referral policies and years long waiting lists for appts.

It’s not primarily about loans or unavoidable costs (eg. malpractice premiums), but about meeting the financial demands of bean counters & bureaucrats. Ironically, by giving up their autonomy & resigning their clinical autonomy to “standard of care” protocols, they are putting themselves out of business… & the “healthcare” employers who they work to please are rewarding them by replacing them with mid-levels who make (sometimes) a fraction of what they do.

And from the patient perspective… if all an MD is going to do is spend 10 mins figuring out which Rx they should add to their existing polypharmacy, why *would* they prefer an MD over a PA?

No wonder there’s both burn out and a growing chorus of disgruntled MDs complaining about midlevels being called “doctor” & the like.

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Valerie's avatar

Honestly, it’s appalling how often I know more about something than my doctor does. I had a doc tell me recently that my cholesterol was high and I should stop eating dairy and avoid shrimp. That’s 1990s information. No, I never went back.

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