So You Think There Are No Waits in the American Health Care System

The other day I was talking to a woman in the neighborhood and we got on the subject of national health care — or what she automatically dubbed “socialized medicine.”  All those people in Europe, Canada, Australia — pretty much every other industrialized country in the world — are in trouble she said because she was certain they all had to wait unconscionably long times to get to see a primary care doc or specialist.  Here, in the US, however, there are no waits.  You’ve got coverage, you’ve got a doc, when you need him or her.

What planet, I wondered, does this woman — and so many other Americans like her — live on?  No waits in the US?  For whom, Warren Buffet (I’ll get to him on another posting).  Bill Gates?  People who can afford to pay $2000 to $25,000 for concierge care and instant access to their doctor?  Well for the rest of us insured Americans, even well insured Americans, there are waits and very long ones at that.  Let me give you a couple of examples.

A woman in her forties who develops type 1 diabetes.  She was diagnosed by her PCP and he began to treat her.   He prescribed a particular drug.  Nonetheless, he recommended that she see a specialist.  The ones she called could only see her  in four to six months.  Finally, a friend of the family pulled some strings and got her an appointment three weeks later.  And it was a good thing because the PCP was prescribing the wrong med.  If she had continued on this medication  for the six months it would have taken –without string pulling — to see the specialist, could have really hurt her.  Unfortunately, most people don’t have any strings to pull.

I do and it certainly didn’t help me a couple of years ago when I just felt really sick but didn’t know what was wrong.  Thinking I maybe had a UTI, Urinary track infection, I called my PCP and tried to get in to see him.  This was in October and the secretary said maybe he could fit me in in February.  February?  For a UTI?  Couldn’t I just come in and give a urine sample.  I had to fight for that.  Without seeing him at all, they gave me an antibiotic, which didn’t help because five days later when I went to the ER in a hospital in Vermont, I had acute appendicitis which he would have been able to diagnosis by palpating my stomach in the right spot.  But since my appendicitis, like many, didn’t present with lower right quadrant pain, and vomiting, who knew?  I didn’t and therefore didn’t think to press on my right lower abdominal quadrant, which, it happens, was very tender indeed.  I can’t tell you how much it cost me to have surgery in a tiny under-staffed hospital.  The complications still plague me.

A recent article in the Boston Globe enumerated the problem.  In Boston alone the waits for non-urgent appointments for surgeons, dermatologists, OB-GYNs, orthopedic surgeons has grown steadily longer.  Try to get to see an OB and the average wait — and this is for people with good health insurance — is 70 days.  As for primary care docs, well there aren’t enough of them, and it is almost impossible to get to see one.  Here are the facts folks, we actually have fewer doctors per 1000 people than some countries with so-called socialized medicine.  We have way fewer primary care doctors than most other countries and the shortage of primary care docs is getting truly catastrophic. If we had more and they could handle things before they became catastrophic, we wouldn’t need to see speicialists so often.

So please — check out other countries and their wait times before you bemoan the evils of so-called socialized medicine. Yes some do have long wait times.  But in others, things are far better than here.  Several years ago, I had a stomach infection and a colonoscopy to see what might be wrong.  The nurse from the gastroenterologists office called me to tell me that they found a suspicious spot in my gut.  Maybe, at age 57, I had Crohn’s disease, but then again maybe I didn’t.  Freaked out by this I asked a bunch of questions, to which she answered, ” I don’t know, you’ll have to ask the doctor.’  To which I replied, so put me through to him.  No, she said, you’ll have to wait — as in WAIT — for three weeks till your appointment with him.  Needless to say, this was a potentially devastating diagnosis.  Terrified I called a good friend who is a nurse in Australia.  Yes, I woke her up in the middle of the night.  She was horrified.  “You mean the doctor didn’t tell you this in person?” she asked.  “A nurse who couldn’t answer you questions told you this?  You have to wait three weeks to talk to him?”  She was incredulous.  “That would never happen here. You’d be in his office the next day and he would give you the results and talk you through them.”

Showing 3 comments
  • Marie Whitehead, MS, RN
    Reply

    No waits? Where does that woman live? There may be places like that, but here in the big city as you mentioned, it can take months to find a primary MD that you can trust and a specialist appointment can take 4-6 months on average.

    And, in the university medical center specialty practice I work for, the concierge services may get a patient in sooner, but it can still be a couple of weeks or more depending on what is wrong with them.

    As for people pulling strings- I, as one of the practice nurses, have to field many of those calls for sooner new patient appointments than the next available appointment and spend more time than I would like assessing how ill someone is over the phone, reviewing records and then try to get a physician to add one more slot to their already too full schedules.

    Then when patients complain that they have had to wait in the waiting room longer than they would like, I want to scream, but don’t. I apologize for the wait, and try to diffuse the anger that we face every day.

    The calls that really break my heart are the ones from people who have no insurance/ or insurance we don’t accept and really do need to see one of our docs, who could help them tremendously. We, at times, will see the patients and not bill them for the office visit but without appropriate testing it is difficult or impossible to get a correct diagnosis and needed treatment.

    For my 25+ years in nursing, this so-called health care system has been unraveling, It is time for a radical revamping of the so-called system.

  • Lorettajo Kapinos
    Reply

    Has your neighbor been to an Emergency Room lately? This blog about sums up why most people do come to the ER. Some are even sent by the overburdened PCP for evaluation. Something has to change this endless cycle of our health care nightmare and I hope it happens soon.

    Sincerely,

    Lorettajo Kapinos, RN

  • Mayo Victim
    Reply

    I am familiar with and have used socialized medicine in many industrialized western democracies and have never had to wait for any consultations or treatments. The stories put out by the AMA about socialized medicine is just propaganda.

    However, although I think the system, costs and quality of treatment in the American system is inferior to that of other western countries I have to say that in over 30 years of living in NE Florida I have never had to wait to see my PCP. Sometime I have been squeezed in the same day I called. Indeed, my PCP (2 doctors, 2 PAs, 6 nurses) has a sign outside their office stating: “Walk ins welcome.” They have a well equipped facility and they are all good, caring and competent professionals. And yes, I am elderly, and on Medicaid/Medicare.

    On the odd occasion of being referred to a specialist my wait time has been just 2 or 3 days only. True and serious emergencies get sent to the local hospital with which the practice is affiliated.

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