Debjax wrote:Riv wrote:
I'm not so sure if you are right about that. Maybe you are right, but I would logically think that I wouldn't be lying, hiding things, so obviously defensive, so hair trigger sensitive to hard questions, contradicting myself, so nasty, if I were a top doctor as the term board certified indicated I was.
I think you are confusing "board certification" or even being in the top of a field with a physician's integrity or attitude with respect to the relationship with his or her patients . The ONLY thing board certification implies is that the physician has additional, specialized knowledge regarding the field and has passed a series of tests that certify that knowledge. It says nothing about his or her "bedside manner" or ability to communicate that knowledge to others.
I see your point.
Then what good is additional, specialized knowledge if the doctor doesn't (at least to my awareness) use it?
What I'm trying to do is to
1-Find out if there are any clues when meeting a doctor as to whether a doctor is good or not. Being board certified isn't a guarantee of getting good treatment even if the doctor knows more than the average doctor.
2-Open up a dialogue about this topic so that others won't be fooled by a mere board designation or being called a "diplomate" which to me (combined with my very low impression of that doctor) makes me picture a politicized sailor for some reason LOL (Chris Columbus?) pompously standing on deck, wearing a captain's hat as he sways unsteadily to the rhythms of the small boat he's on.
I looked the doctor up on line of course. Found a doctor rating site which gave him high ratings and I admit I was surprised. Then I saw that only two people rated him. LOL, your wife and your MIL could do that for you. Just tell them "extra money"..............Heck, you could rate yourself for the few bucks it costs to join one of those internet places and make it back by charging the insurance $300 for a five minute "consultation" which ends abruptly because you took offense at your patient's question.
Then there was a picture on the doctor's site from a local paper of the doctor's very own sleep study center with the doctor himself posing as a "knowledgeable, caring physician" next to a technician and a patient who is about to undergo a sleep study and gee didn't the doctor look so concerned LOL as he stood there and so obviously gently appeared to be adjusting the gadgets attached to the patient...........that's the usual picture taken of politicized owners who try to confuse the public into subconsciously getting the wrong impression that the owner is a "worker who cares and gets personally involved in the day to day blah blah" ala say Jimmy Carter "the peanut farmer" circa 1976 and how much would you bet that this doctor bootsied it out of there the second that the cameraman and the reporter got back into their car.
And then the quotes attributed to the doctor from various talk shows he was on or stories about sleep apnea which briefly interviewed and quoted him (by phone?)..................
That guy knows how to look good, knows how to get positive attention, knows how to make a good impression, knows how to leave a positive trail.
So he knows how to sell himself, fine.
But what does any of it have to do with how much he knows and how good a doctor he is?