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Wednesday, Nov. 11, 2009

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Art of medicine requires long hours, waits

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DEAR ABBY: May I respond to your column regarding excessive waits in doctors’ offices (Sept. 1)?

I am a board-certified interventional cardiologist who has been practicing for 30 years. I work 85 to 90 hours each week. As hard as we try, our office schedule often falls behind. Despite recommendations that acute problems go to the emergency room, unscheduled patients come to the office with chest pains, and they must be attended to. Even scheduled patients can develop complex medical issues that require extra, unplanned time to evaluate and treat.

Our patients with a history of heart disease do not mind waiting when the office runs behind because they receive the same specialized extra-care treatment when they need it. Delays that result from spending extra time evaluating and treating sick patients with complicated problems is not “unprofessional” behavior as “Larry W.” implied.

And for the architect, I wonder when he last worked a 90-hour week, took seven or eight phone calls from his clients after midnight, and got up at 3 a.m. to do an emergency two-hour procedure before returning to his office at 8 in the morning bright-eyed, bushy-tailed and running on schedule the rest of the day? — Dr. Ron In Las Vegas

DEAR DR. RON: I felt it was only fair to print your response to my follow-up column on “Sick of Waiting in Denver.” That column elicited a mountain of letters, all of them offering reasonable explanations for the delays in medical offices. Read on:

DEAR ABBY: Many factors cause doctors to run behind. Routine physicals can reveal life-threatening conditions that must be dealt with immediately.

Also, people do not reveal the true reason for their visit when they call, so they are not given the appropriate amount of time for the appointment. A teenager brought in for vomiting could have the stomach flu, onset diabetes or even be pregnant. — M.D. In Woodstock, Ill.

DEAR ABBY: My husband is a thoracic surgeon. When I ask my husband what held him up when he gets home late for dinner, his response is always the same: “I give each patient my undivided attention. I would never cut them off or hurry to see the next one until I know every concern was addressed.” If these readers who complained about waiting have a doctor as kind and caring as my husband, their wait is worth every second. — Married To A Wonderful Man

Dear Abby, written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Write Dear Abby at P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

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