Physicians have a natural role as advocates

As physicians, we are often called upon to be advocates for our patients. Sometimes they have no other person to turn to. At those times, in particular, we evaluate their health in the context of relationship, family, and workplace. Having practiced family medicine for so many years, and now in counseling medicine, I have had the responsibility of advocating for my patients with their health insurance companies, within their families, and with their employers. I take this responsibility very seriously.

Occasionally I see a patient who has been previously seen by another health care provider who does not want to advocate for the patient. These providers feel uneasy about “taking sides,” and do not want to find themselves in the morass of letters and forms that inevitably come as the price of advocacy. Perhaps they are not sure if the patient is really sick enough, depressed enough, injured enough. They may think that if the patient pushed harder, that she could go to work, that the pain isn’t that bad, that there must have been some good reason he was fired.

Healing takes place through the relationship between doctor and patient. The foundation of that relationship is trust. The patient trusts us with the most intimate details of his life. She trusts that I am competent and caring, that I’m giving her the best care I can, that I will respect his privacy, that I will listen with full attention and an open mind. He trusts that I will tell the truth, ask for help when needed, and that I will never abandon him. I, in turn, trust my patient to tell me as full and accurate a story as possible, to be clear about what she needs, to cooperate with the treatment plan and follow-up.

It is part of my job to believe in my patient. (Yes, we all have occasional patients who are seeking drugs or inappropriate treatment, or who are challenging or abusive, but even those patients deserve our belief in their ability to change and heal, while we set appropriate limits or regretfully decline to continue to see them.) Sometimes the patient is unable to believe in herself and her ability to heal (this includes situations where cure is not expected, and refers to recovering wholeness), and it is my responsibility to hold that possibility for her when she cannot.

Thus I feel strongly that we have a natural role as advocates. If a patient could benefit from a treatment not covered by his health insurance, we must go as far as we can to get him that treatment. I remember a case from my family practice days in which a patient had a potentially life-saving treatment in another state denied by health insurance, and the doctor spent hours and days calling and arguing with the insurance company. Eventually the patient received the treatment and did very well. If a patient needs us to continue to write letters and complete forms in order to qualify for disability benefits, it is another opportunity to use our “MD” degree in service of our patients.

To benefit our patients, we willingly put in long hours of work, we regularly pursue continuing education; we spend time consulting other doctors and health professionals. We hold family meetings, visit our patients in the hospital even when we are not directly treating them, and some of us still do the occasional home visit. When we freely advocate for our patients, our trust and belief in them becomes manifest, and our therapeutic relationships become strengthened. This benefits both sides of the doctor-patient relationship.

Danielle Rosenman is a former family physician and founder of medical counseling practice. She blogs at 5 Cents: The Doctor is In.

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  • Anonymous

    Thank you for being a provider who truly cares about your patients.  Unfortunately, this kind of care is rarer than it should be. Individuals such as yourself give hope to those struggling.  You will never know how much your care means to another, how you’ve impacted their lives by believing in them and caring for them.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_2LRZNHDZS6DU45WQ567LPQ7CMI ninguem

    “FORMER family physician”

    We’ll be seeing a lot more of those.

    • Danielle Rosenman

      In my medical counseling practice, I still carry the viewpoint of a family physician.  I can only hope that many of our dedicated young physicians choose family medicine – challenging as it is to practice primary care medicine in today’s environment, it is the bedrock of medical practice.  I enjoyed family practice very much, only stopping because of back pain.

  • Anonymous

    “Physicians have a natural role as advocates.”:

    I don’t know if its natural, but it sure as heck is much of our role now. Trying to locate essential medications the federal government has shut down production of.   Fighting abusive monopolistic insurers to get minimal treatment. Battling sleezy and lazy hospital adminisrators trying to dump unstable patients into “outpatient” care.

    I rather be treating than advocating.

  • Anonymous

    Now if only we could bottle and package your beliefs and put them in all the other doctors!!!  It would be wonderful to have a Dr. that would listen objectively, without judgment, especially for Chronic Pain patients, and not immediately assume we are all drug seeking – acknowledge our pain is REAL, and treat our different pain conditions as required.  We all have to advocate for ourselves more than any physician would probably ever realize.  Between physicians, insurers, pharmacies, specialty items and tests, as well as disability or trying to live on peanuts, we have learned to advocate for ourselves and others most every day. Add all that to living in immense pain and you have people who are just ‘done’ with the ‘games’.  Physicians talk about the patients being their partners in healthcare but it only works if you are as this physician stated…  a TRUE advocate for the patient as well.   A TRUE partner with the patient.  

    Signed,
    A RSD/CRPS and Fibromyalgia Fighter (as well as other diseases)
    Lisa C. 

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100000867325578 Sunni Patterson

    The angle presented by this doctor is certainly refreshing,
    and it’s true that doctors can often end up being advocates for their patients.
    In today’s complex American medical industry, patients often need advocacy to
    understand how insurance companies, government programs, and other third
    parties work, and how outside decisions may affect care. But whether or not a doctor
    is willing to be an advocate, patients can also be their own advocates, or,
    when an individual patient lacks the skills or abilities, a family member can
    also step in. In addition, households struggling with medical debt or other
    billing situations can get outside help from professional advocacy groups that
    can help families go up against insurers to get the care that they deserve. 

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