Louisville Medicine Volume 64, Issue 12 | Page 18

REFLECTIONS HELLO! I NEED A DOCTOR NOW Teresita Bacani-Oropilla, MD I n a modern country like ours, when we need a physician, we call for one on the phone. A couple, all dressed up to attend the 25 th wedding anniversary of their colleagues, was on the way out when the call of nature came upon the man. Finished with his business, he mentioned to his wife that his stools were remarkably black. A quick phone call to their family physician resulted in an order for immediate admission to a hospital. A plea for a few hours’ reprieve to honor their hosts was flatly denied. Workup revealed a duodenal vessel actively spurting red blood from a newly discovered duodenal ulcer. Cauterization of the offending blood vessel and an ulcer regimen solved the problem. An elderly gentleman with diabetes and one functioning kidney was unable to keep his food and fluids down for two days. When he called his primary physician’s office, he was told that the first available appointment would be the next day and that he should go to an emergency room. Compliant with the recommendation, 16 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE they found that the wait to be seen by the doctor at the emergency room, however, would be more than two hours. His wife, noting how bad her husband looked, loaded him back in the car and head- ed for the nearest urgent care center. The staff there noted that he needed more care than they could provide and mercifully called and referred him to another hospital miles away. There, the patient was immediately admitted, rehydrated and stabilized before being discharged two days later. What is a patient supposed to do in a crisis? Physicians, with their vast knowledge and experience are able to judge, usually even from a phone call, what a patient needs. Despite the fact that not all phone calls from patients are crucial to the preservation of life, and besides, would certainly tax a physician's precious time if he/she answered them all, to the callers they are indeed emergencies and need to be attended to ASAP. In the days when doctors knew their patients and vice versa, many so called emergencies were satisfactorily handled by phone. In these days of fragmented care however, patients float in limbo, not owning one