JMummey
New Member
I took my 84 year old and frail relative to a new doctor today and something happened that, had I not been there, would have kept her there unnecessarily for several hours. In her condition, this cannot happen. She is so nice, there is no way she would have walked out had I not assured her that it was ok to do so.
This was a new doctor and this was the second visit (the first visit was for x-rays and evaluation), this second visit was to discuss possible physical therapy and laser therapy for neuropathy. She is already under the care of a primary physician she sees regularly and that doctor was in favor of physical therapy and was not against laser therapy since it had helped my relative in the past.
When we arrived they placed us in a room with other people, we sit down, they do an introductory speech about spinal adjustments and then play a movie and leave - the movie is a doctor rambling on and on and on about all kinds of things that have nothing to do with physical therapy or laser therapy. A few of the patients in the room fall asleep at the 15 minute mark. There is no indication of when the movie will end and no employees are in the room with us. At this point I begin to talk with her about leaving, she is hesitant but by the 25 minute mark of the video ramblings still going full steam ahead, we leave.
As we exit the room we are met with several employees all the way to the checkout desk asking us to stay to meet with the doctor to go over the test results and I was very nice and just repeatedly said thank you so much for your time but I am sorry we are unable to stay. I asked if we needed to pay anything for today, they said no, continued to press us to stay and I thanked them for their time and left.
This is the first time we met with a doctor that gave us no indication of what to expect from a visit and the behavior was so far removed from what I normally see with doctors. They normally give us as much as they can beforehand so the elderly patient can stay in their home as long as possible so that when we arrive we only have to deal with two things: waiting for the appointment (and often this is lengthy because emergencies happen every day and that is completely normal) and then seeing the doctor.
An elderly patient should not have to endure fear factor style sales pitches regarding treatments that they cannot have. The whole thing was so weird. If any of you reading this are elderly and have to go to a new doctor alone, please remember that it is ok to leave if you are not comfortable and you don't have to have any fear about doing it. Just take a deep breath, smile, get up, thank them for their time, pay them if you owe anything, and leave.
From the car, before we left the parking lot, I called another office near our home that offers physical therapy and laser therapy for neuropathy. We will see them next week and I didn't even need to ask her about what to expect, she told us what was going to happen, how long it would take, and what she would need in advance from my relative and her primary physician. I have a feeling this visit is going to go much better
Good luck out there!
This was a new doctor and this was the second visit (the first visit was for x-rays and evaluation), this second visit was to discuss possible physical therapy and laser therapy for neuropathy. She is already under the care of a primary physician she sees regularly and that doctor was in favor of physical therapy and was not against laser therapy since it had helped my relative in the past.
When we arrived they placed us in a room with other people, we sit down, they do an introductory speech about spinal adjustments and then play a movie and leave - the movie is a doctor rambling on and on and on about all kinds of things that have nothing to do with physical therapy or laser therapy. A few of the patients in the room fall asleep at the 15 minute mark. There is no indication of when the movie will end and no employees are in the room with us. At this point I begin to talk with her about leaving, she is hesitant but by the 25 minute mark of the video ramblings still going full steam ahead, we leave.
As we exit the room we are met with several employees all the way to the checkout desk asking us to stay to meet with the doctor to go over the test results and I was very nice and just repeatedly said thank you so much for your time but I am sorry we are unable to stay. I asked if we needed to pay anything for today, they said no, continued to press us to stay and I thanked them for their time and left.
This is the first time we met with a doctor that gave us no indication of what to expect from a visit and the behavior was so far removed from what I normally see with doctors. They normally give us as much as they can beforehand so the elderly patient can stay in their home as long as possible so that when we arrive we only have to deal with two things: waiting for the appointment (and often this is lengthy because emergencies happen every day and that is completely normal) and then seeing the doctor.
An elderly patient should not have to endure fear factor style sales pitches regarding treatments that they cannot have. The whole thing was so weird. If any of you reading this are elderly and have to go to a new doctor alone, please remember that it is ok to leave if you are not comfortable and you don't have to have any fear about doing it. Just take a deep breath, smile, get up, thank them for their time, pay them if you owe anything, and leave.
From the car, before we left the parking lot, I called another office near our home that offers physical therapy and laser therapy for neuropathy. We will see them next week and I didn't even need to ask her about what to expect, she told us what was going to happen, how long it would take, and what she would need in advance from my relative and her primary physician. I have a feeling this visit is going to go much better