FSU MED Magazine Fall 2019, Vol. 15 | Page 20

PUTTING PATIENTS AT EASE In silvery scrubs reminiscent of “Star Trek,” the docs look like jocks. In fact, they are. Langley is a surfer, Visser a former decathlete. And as they walk each patient out to the front desk, it’s as if they’re talking to a pal. This is the kind of patient-friendly atmosphere they’ve had in mind since early med school. “We were both exercise physiology majors,” Langley said. “We cared a lot “We were ready to start a practice, but we had no clue what we were doing,” Visser said. “We figured the safest route would be to try to partner with a hospital.” They negotiated with an Orlando hospital to help them build a new practice. “There’s a lot of planning, and it takes time to start a practice, so during that time we worked in the emergency room,” Visser said. “But the process about staying active and being physically fit. But we knew the experience was taking longer than expected with the hospital, so we decided, after a that we wanted patients to have was going to be more customer-focused. year, to say: ‘Hey, we’re going to go try it on our own.’” We evaluated the best customer-service companies, like Disney and the Ritz-Carlton, to see what they did, and thought: Why can’t we do that in a medical practice?” Off they went. They had a business plan, Langley said, and that’s what banks need to see. “They want numbers,” Visser added. “‘What’s your three-year pro forma For starters, they didn’t want their office to feel like a clinic. or estimates?’ ‘How much do we give you?’ ‘What’s the money going “We did the beachy-spa theme with grays, light blues and whites,” Visser toward?’” said. “We put up some shiplap, oars and plantation shutters.” And even though it violated the designer’s color scheme, they hung framed FSU jerseys. Their answers included a lot of guesswork, Visser laughed, “but I will say we were pretty close.” “Each practice has certain expenses that recur each month,” Langley said. “Everything from biomedical waste to keeping the power on to salaries.” GETTING STARTED Both did their family medicine residency training at USF’s Morton Plant “We were lucky enough to be introduced to an OB-GYN provider who had just started to practice, and she connected us with a lot of stuff, like Mease Family Medicine Program, in Clearwater. After three years, Visser IT people,” Visser said. “A health-care attorney friend connected us with stayed on for a fellowship in sports medicine. Langley worked a year with an insurance contractor after we tried to do it ourselves.” Several faculty Suncoast Hospice. members provided good advice, as well. “We got as much data as we could, Visser 18