Announcing the opening of I began making mental excuses for the doctor's tardiness, despite the fact that this was not the first time "Dr. A" had kept me wait- ing. He was as chronically late as I was habitually early. I told myself he was delayed because of an emergency, or maybe he was embroiled in lunch-hour consultation with a colleague about a critically ill pa- tient. At the 60-minute mark, I went to the counter and asked the re- ceptionist about the delay. She said the doctor wasn't even in the office yet. Then she added, "It shouldn't be much longer, just have a seat, dear." The other four patients also waiting for Dr. A already were grousing. We found ourselves forming a loose-knit, anti-wait- ing support group. We spent the next half-hour telling each oth- er of other "famous" waits that Dr. A had put us through. There is, however, only a mod- icum of relief in the "misery loves company" theory. As the storytelling waned, I overheard a nurse tell the re- ceptionist that Dr. A had just come in, but he was returning telephone calls. That sent me over the edge. As the minutes ticked by, I was transformed into a clock-watch- ing, toe-tapping patient who was oh-so-tired of being patient. At the two-hour mark, I made my decision. I went to the receptionist and said, "I'm leaving and I'm never coming back. I'm going to find another doctor — one who will be on time and keep his ap- pointments." I left in a huff, blood pressure and heart rate no doubt peaking at maximum levels. I did not blame the reception- ist, realizing she has only so much control. No, I took Dr. A's tardiness very personally. I re- member thinking, "Who does he think he is? Does he think his time is more important than mine?" The question then is — why? Why is it that some doctors are always "running late," while oth- ers are usually within 15 min- utes of being on time? It has to do with instructions that doctors give their staff, the patient load, the nature of the business of medicine, a physi- cian's specialty and quirks of fate. Many patients don't under- stand their role in the schedul- ing of appointments, said Dr. John Fisk, an orthopedic surgeon with Southern Illinois Universi ty School of Medicine. A doctor's office schedule is a finely tuned instrument that can go out of sync the moment the first patient is late. Office staff, often following the doctor's instructions, base their decisions about how much time patients need on the diagnosis and what patients say when they call for an appointment. That's the reason for questions like: "What seems to be the trou- ble?" or "Why did you want to see the doctor?" Says Dr. Fisk, "We're not al- ways able to determine that over the phone when they make the appointment with the front desk." Dr. Fisk said he tries very hard not to keep patients wait- ing, the result "of spending 10 years in private practice and be- ing frustrated by the lack of re- sponse to the needs of the patients." When patients do have to wait for him, Dr. Fisk said he always apologizes. "I'm always surprised when I hear a patient say they heard a physician apologize for being late," he said. While he was in private prac- tice, Dr. Fisk's salary and that of his staff depended upon the number of patients seen. He had a policy of not charging patients who waited more than one hour. Although he never docked any- one's salary, Dr. Fisk said staff members soon realized how se- rious he was about staying on time. A comprehensive program that provides, in your first visit, the information you need to make a confident decision about breast cancer treatment. William Beaumont Hospital, Michigan's leader in diagnosing breast cancer and a multifaceted center for cancer treatment, brings together a team of leading specialists to meet with you and provide information and recommendations for treatment — based on your medical and personal needs. And, we provide a hospital liaison to help women during treatment. Call (810) 551-0600. Knowledge you can draw on, support you can count on. "Does he think his time is more important than mine?" In a clinic setting, such as at SIU, patients and doctors often don't know each other, which can put a doctor behind schedule, Dr. Fisk said. A doctor who knows his pa- tients "knows which ones have special needs, unique personali- ties and can't be rushed through quickly," he said. "A new patient always re- quires more time than a return- ing patient," Dr. Fisk said. Some patients are reluctant to discuss their reasons for an ap- pointment with office staff But they often are the same people who, once in the examination room, want to talk at length about any number of ailments, said Dr. Tracy Lower, a pedia- trician with SRI who says she's "compulsive" about being on time. She said parents often call for an appointment for one child, then bring along another for her to examine. "They say, 'While we're here, could you look at (the other child) who has these other problems?' That can realy put you behind schedule," she says. DOCTORS page 60 Beaumont® William Beaumont Hospital ft.fr'POOthete: Of • ■ Dinner 1•2714ets to'AMOTheatni(miti:Putottse Dinner ( Min. Purchase $129) ■ 2114i4:1104*(10irti'lp4toose.$99):::::::.„, • Choice of Diritterat EQ. Nlcks W. 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