Consumer Watchdog: Take an active role in choosing a new doctor [Detroit Free Press]
| By Zlati Meyer, Detroit Free Press | |
| McClatchy-Tribune Information Services |
The 88-year-old
Today, close to two years later,
Zaremba, 58, of
Experts say it's common for people to rely on the recommendations of others or fail to thoroughly research doctors, with some studies showing people spent more time researching a new vehicle purchase than choosing a physician. A bad car can translate into years of grumbling -- but a lousy physician can mean life or death.
As more people are signing up for health insurance under the Affordable Care Act, along with increases in referrals to specialists, experts say it's more important than ever for people to take an active role in their health care and who provides it.
-- Full coverage: A guide to the Affordable Care Act
"The stakes are higher, and health care is complicated," said Dr.
Hoven's advice: Trust your instinct.
"You've got to keep your eyes and ears open and not be afraid to ask questions," she said. "People have got to learn it's not like going online to find a good restaurant to eat. It's a different situation, and you must use all resources available to you."
Referrals growing
"We took the recommendation,"
Merrelli, who has practiced family medicine for 27 years, said he screens the specialists to whom he directs his patients.
"He had the training. He had the personality, and he was extremely available," Merrelli said of Fata. "Patients don't just wander into oncologists' offices. They go there because someone trusted their care. He obviously convinced a lot of people."
Americans are going to medical specialists more and more. According to a recent national study in the journal Archives of Internal Medicine, the probability of receiving a referral during a doctor's visit increased from 4.8% to 9.3% between 1999 and 2009.
Feedback is key
Doctors use different criteria when offering referrals to their patients, but they say patient feedback is an important consideration.
Dr.
"I'm real close to
He estimated 10% is negative, adding that most of time it's because of personality and not bad medicine.
"We are very particular about who we send our patients to. There are a lot of unscrupulous doctors out there. They'll order a million tests," said Crader, whose mother saw Fata for iron deficiency and loved him. "I think it does fall back on the primary care physicians to review the information that comes back. ... I've had experiences where I didn't think the patient was well cared for."
And when a poor-quality referral slips through, no one benefits.
"It's just a bad thing for everyone because it destroys trusts on multiple lines," Merrelli said. "It destroys trust in all physicians who refer patients. It destroys trust patients have in the medical system and their physicians. It destroys trust in the hospitals (the doctor) had privileges at."
Checking on your own
Even if your primary care physician gives you a referral, experts say it's a good idea to do your own checking.
Start by running through the health professions division of the
The Licensing and
The
"Part of the challenge patients face is they wait until they're sick and then try to find a doctor," Crader said. "That's when it becomes more hastily done."
Some patients turn to websites like www.healthgrades.com or www.vitals.com, which are the medical equivalents of Yelp. The anonymity of the those sites can be problematic because anyone can post false information, and they have a limited number of reviews per physician -- so one bad review out of a sample of four could make a doctor appear to be a poor practitioner.
"Unfortunately, there's not a grading system out there right now that in fact does that," Hoven said about evaluating doctors, adding that the federal government is considering one in the future, like the
Summers suspects establishing such a system would take at least five years.
"The doctors are resistant to this. But there's another problem. How do you measure quality? It's not easy to measure in the case of physicians," she said.
Doing it differently
If Zaremba had it to do over, she says she would have sought a second or third opinion and talked to more people -- including her own primary care physician -- before settling on a specialist for her mother's care.
"I'd get a couple of opinions from friends or relatives, people in general who might know someone," said Zaremba, a fitness company owner. "If not, we look online or in the phone book. We don't always go with least expensive. That's probably what I should've done with my mom, but we were told aggressive cancer."
Zaremba failed to get a second opinion herself when she had thyroid cancer 11 years ago. But in that case, it worked out -- her doctor referred her to an endocrinologist she still praises today.
"I had a fantastic team," she said. "It went well, and I guess we thought it would go well for my mother."
___
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