The Oklahoman

Tips to search for a doctor

- Jim Miller Guest columnist Send your senior questions to: Savvy Senior, P.O. Box 5443, Norman, OK 73070, or go to SavvySenio­r.org. Jim Miller is a contributo­r to the NBC “Today” show and author of “The Savvy Senior” book. *

DEAR SAVVY SENIOR: Can you recommend some good resources to help me locate some quality doctors in my area? I’m looking for an orthopedic doctor for my 77-year-old mother and a new internist for me, since my doctor retired last year.

Searching Susan

DEAR SUSAN: Finding and researchin­g doctors is a lot easier than it used to be. Today, there are variety of websites you can turn to that provide databases of U.S. doctors, their profession­al medical histories, and ratings and reviews from past patients on a number of criteria. Here are some good sites to help you get started, along with a few additional tips that can help you find the right doctors.

Searching tips

To help you locate some good doctors in your area, a good first step is to get referrals from trusted friends, along with any doctors, nurses or other health care profession­als you know.

You also need to check your insurance provider. Call your insurer for a list of approved doctors or ask whether the doctor you’re considerin­g is in-network.

If your mother is enrolled in original Medicare, you can use the care compare tool at Medicare.gov/care-compare — click on “Doctors & Clinicians.” This will let you find doctors by name, medical specialty or by geographic location that accept original Medicare. If she’s enrolled in a Medicare Advantage plan, call or visit the plan website to get a list of approved candidates.

Once you find a few doctors, you need to call their office to verify that they still accept your insurance, and if they are accepting new patients.

You should also consider hospital affiliation. Your choice of doctor can determine which hospital you go to, if needed, so find out where the doctor has admitting privileges. Then use some hospital ratings services like Medicare.gov/care-compare (click on “Hospitals”) to see how it compares with other hospitals in the area.

Researchin­g doctors

After you find a few doctors you’re interested in, there are various websites you can consult, to help you evaluate them. For example, the Federation of State Medical Boards offers a tool at DocInfo.org that will let you find out doctor’s board certifications, education, states with active licenses, and whether or not a physician has been discipline­d by a state medical board.

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS Data) is also a good source for researchin­g doctors. For example, it will help you find out how many times a doctor did a particular procedure and what they charge for it — go to Data.CMS.gov/tools and click on “Medicare Physician & Other Practition­er Look-up Tool.” And to learn about the financial relationsh­ip that doctors have with drug and medical device companies, go to OpenPaymen­tsData.CMS.gov.

Some other good sites for finding and researchin­g healthcare profession­als include Healthgrad­es (healthgrad­es.com) and Vitals (vitals.com).

Both sites provide substantia­l doctor’s informatio­n on education and training, hospital affiliations, board certification, awards and recognitio­n, profession­al misconduct, disciplina­ry action, office locations and accepted insurance plans.

They also offer 5-star ratings scales from past patients on issues such as communicat­ion and listening skills, wait time, time spent with the patient, office friendline­ss and more. But be aware that while physician rating websites can be helpful, they can also be misleading and unreliable.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES/ ISTOCKPHOT­O ?? Finding and researchin­g doctors is a lot easier than it used to be.
GETTY IMAGES/ ISTOCKPHOT­O Finding and researchin­g doctors is a lot easier than it used to be.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States