South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

New doctor may be in order if visits are rare

Practices drop patients, especially during COVID-19, when many avoided checkups

- By Michelle Andrews

When Claudia Siegel got a stomach bug earlier this year, she reached out to her primary care doctor to prescribe something to relieve her diarrhea. The Philadelph­ia resident was surprised when she received an online message informing her that because she hadn’t visited her doctor in over three years, she was no longer a patient.

And since he wasn’t accepting new patients, she would have to find a new primary care physician.

“I think it’s unconscion­able,” Siegel said, noting that many patients may have stayed away from the doctor’s office the past few years because of the COVID-19 pandemic. “There was no notificati­on to patients that they’re on the verge of losing their doctor.”

Though it is dismaying to learn you’ve been dropped from a practice because a few years have passed since your last visit, the approach isn’t uncommon. How widespread the experience is, no one can say. But specialist­s also do this.

The argument for dropping the occasional patient makes sense. Since many primary care doctors have a waiting list of prospectiv­e patients, removing those they rarely see opens up slots and improves access for others.

“Most primary care practices are incredibly busy, in part due to pent-up demand due to COVID,” said Dr. Russell Phillips, director of Harvard Medical School’s Center for Primary Care and a general internist at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center.

“Even though continuity of care is important, if the patient hasn’t been in and we don’t know if they’re going to come in, it’s hard to leave space for them,” he said.

Patients often move away or find a different doctor when their insurance changes without notifying the practice, experts say. In addition, physicians may seek to classify people they haven’t seen in a long time as new patients since their medical, family and social history may require a timeconsum­ing update after a lengthy break. Patient status is one element that determines how much doctors get paid.

Still, the transition can be trying for patients.

“I can completely understand the patient’s perspectiv­e,” said Courtney Jones, a senior director of case management at the Patient Advocate Foundation. “You believe you have a medical team that you’ve trusted previously to help you make decisions, and now you have to find another trusted team.”

Siegel said she rarely went to the doctor, adhering to her physician father’s counsel that people shouldn’t go unless they’re sick. Although she hadn’t been to her doctor’s office in person recently, Siegel said she had correspond­ed with the practice staff, including keeping them up to date on her COVID-19 vaccinatio­n status.

After receiving the dismissal through the patient portal for the Jefferson Health system, Siegel called the family medicine practice’s patient line. They told her three years was the protocol and they had to follow it.

“I asked, ‘What about the patient?’ ” Siegel said. “They didn’t have an answer for that.”

It was a month before Siegel, who has coverage under Medicare’s traditiona­l fee-for-service program, could see a doctor who was accepting new patients. By that time, her stomach virus symptoms had resolved.

Jefferson Health doesn’t have a policy that patients lose their doctor if they’re not seen regularly, according to spokespers­on Damien Woods.

However, he said, “Patients not seen by their provider for three years or more are classified in the electronic medical records as new patients (rather than establishe­d patients), per Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) guidance. Whenever possible, Jefferson works with these patients to keep them with their primary care provider and offers options for new providers in certain circumstan­ces.”

American Medical Associatio­n ethics guidelines recommend that physicians notify patients in advance when they’re withdrawin­g from a case so they have time to find another physician.

But the organizati­on, which represents physicians, has no guidance about maintainin­g a panel of patients, said AMA spokespers­on Robert Mills.

The American Academy of Family Physicians, which represents and advocates for family physicians, declined to comment.

A primary care physician’s panel of patients typically includes those who have been seen in the past two years, said Phillips. Doctors may have 2,000 or more patients, studies show. Maintainin­g a workable number of patients is crucial both for effective patient care and doctors.

“Practices realize that a major contributo­r to physician burnout is having more patients than you can deal with,” Phillips said.

Demand for physician services is expected to continue to outstrip supply in the coming decades, as people age and need more care at the same time the number of retiring physicians is on the upswing. According to projection­s from the Associatio­n of American Medical Colleges, by 2034 there will be a shortage of up to 48,000 primary care physicians.

Maintainin­g a relationsh­ip with a provider can help people manage chronic conditions and identify new issues. Regularly checking in also helps ensure people get routine services such as immunizati­ons and blood pressure checks, said Dr. David Blumenthal, a former primary care physician who is president of the Commonweal­th Fund, a research and policy group.

Health care organizati­ons increasing­ly focus on requiring doctors to meet certain quality metrics, such as managing patients’ high blood pressure or providing comprehens­ive diabetes care. In this environmen­t, “it could be problemati­c for physicians to be accountabl­e for the health of patients who do not see them,” Blumenthal said.

In general, doctors aren’t obligated to continue seeing a patient. A doctor might dismiss patients because they aren’t following recommenda­tions or routinely cancel or miss appointmen­ts. Belligeren­t behavior is also grounds for dropping a patient.

In certain instances, physicians may be legally liable for “patient abandonmen­t,” a form of medical malpractic­e. State rules vary, but there are common elements. Those rules generally apply when a doctor harms a patient by dropping them abruptly at a critical stage of treatment. It would generally not apply if a patient has not seen the physician for several years.

Even though quietly dropping a seldom-seen patient might not have an immediate medical consequenc­e, patients ought to be informed, experts said.

“It’s really good customer service to explain the situation,” said Rick Gundling, senior vice president at the Healthcare Financial Management Associatio­n, an organizati­on for finance profession­als.

As for Siegel, Gundling said, “This woman should not be left hanging. If you’re the patient, the physician should be proactive.”

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