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- Nov 24, 2006
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Hello folks,
I need something to think about that's less stressful than the boards. Tell me about what you say to patients who become overly casual or even condescending with you?
I'm used to the "oh, you're so young", and able to shrug that off with a smile. I do also get called "honey", "sweetheart", and "dear", which I can deal with, and sometimes even "kid" or "girl", which I am not very happy about.
So - what do you say when patients ask your name, and when you reply "Dr. Quinsy", they respond with "What's your first name?" - which they then proceed to use for the remainder of the visit, i.e. leaning over the emergency department counter into the physician charting area, "hey, Q, when are they going to decide what to do with me?"
(They never ask me "when are you going to decide what to do with me, Doctor?" it's always some other ill-defined entity who must be taking care of them from behind a Wizard of Oz-like curtain, because, of course, I am too young to be a doctor anyway)
This has become a pet peeve of mine, even when the patient is otherwise very amiable. I never call the patients "hey, Joe" or "hey, Jane" - always Mr, Mrs, Ms, even sir or ma'am. I feel like they're not respecting me, because I've never heard anyone do this to the older docs. Are there some good/slick ways to respond to this kind of behavior that won't come off as scolding or grouchy? "It's Dr. Quinsy to you" seems rude.
I need something to think about that's less stressful than the boards. Tell me about what you say to patients who become overly casual or even condescending with you?
I'm used to the "oh, you're so young", and able to shrug that off with a smile. I do also get called "honey", "sweetheart", and "dear", which I can deal with, and sometimes even "kid" or "girl", which I am not very happy about.
So - what do you say when patients ask your name, and when you reply "Dr. Quinsy", they respond with "What's your first name?" - which they then proceed to use for the remainder of the visit, i.e. leaning over the emergency department counter into the physician charting area, "hey, Q, when are they going to decide what to do with me?"
(They never ask me "when are you going to decide what to do with me, Doctor?" it's always some other ill-defined entity who must be taking care of them from behind a Wizard of Oz-like curtain, because, of course, I am too young to be a doctor anyway)
This has become a pet peeve of mine, even when the patient is otherwise very amiable. I never call the patients "hey, Joe" or "hey, Jane" - always Mr, Mrs, Ms, even sir or ma'am. I feel like they're not respecting me, because I've never heard anyone do this to the older docs. Are there some good/slick ways to respond to this kind of behavior that won't come off as scolding or grouchy? "It's Dr. Quinsy to you" seems rude.