Essayer OR - Gratuit
Yes, you should be worried
New Zealand Listener
|January 2 - 12, 2024
Two GPS have spent three years travelling the country plugging gaps in overstretched practices. The experience has been eye-opening.
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After the first 2020 lockdown, a duo of Auckland GPs hit the road as locums. They had sold their practice the previous year and wanted to get back into the workforce. The couple's ideal destination, Dr N* writes, is "a town that's big enough for a small hospital, has a few restaurants and is close to the best of the great outdoors".
Over the past three years, they have taken up the patient load all over the motu: Motueka, Rotorua and Invercargill have been some of their favourite stops. Here, Dr Nwrites of a recent day on the general practice frontline in another small centre.
The job of caring for people's health is a privilege and a responsibility, but it's also stressful and unrewarding at times. Let me share a morning from last week.
We arrive at 8am, deposit last night's leftovers into the fridge for lunch and grab a coffee. Someone has made a carrot cake for morning tea, so it's going to be a good day.
I make a start on the inbox letters and lab results before the patients start arriving. The first is a well-dressed woman who states she has insurance and wants three referrals. Please. She knows the names of the specialists she wants to see. A dermatologist for mild eczema, a urologist because she's had two urinary tract infections, and a neurologist because she gets headaches. And isn't it ridiculous, she says, that the insurance company insists she gets a GP referral.
I try offering her advice and explain that specialists are for problems that can't be managed in primary care. She starts getting loud, so I do what I'm told and tell myself that specialist visits might relieve her anxiety, even though it will result in increased insurance premiums for everyone else.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition January 2 - 12, 2024 de New Zealand Listener.
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