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I second what Clausewitz is saying about a pain period when you inherit a bunch of patients. When I inherit trainwreck patients, I expect to do a lot more documenting.
You document the controlled substances they're already on that were not your idea, in your first visit note. You discuss that on chart review and discussion with patient, they're on xyz drug for xyz reason, started by Dr. Whoever. For xyz reasons, you feel they should taper to lower dose, dc, or switch regimens. You discussed with patient your goal to do this, and to schedule follow up to initiate. You explain that you will only write for the current script once and the next one will be a tapering dose or d/c, whichever is most appropriate. If, say, they are on stims, the choice is d/c or come back in to start your taper and/or alternate therapy. If they are on meds that truly require taper, like benzos, again, there will be taper whether they like it or not.
I never feel like I have to stop scripts I never started, right away. You need to document that you're continuing the script with a goal to taper, so you're not abandoning, nor abetting bad practice.
I see a lot of doctors just stop patients cold on a lot of drugs they don't like writing. Sadly, some of those scripts actually being legit for the patient.
You need to do standard of care and document.
If the charts clearly show you inherited 100 patients on bad meds, and following your records you are slowly but surely reducing that number, than you are not going to be held as a candy doctor. You need to show safe reasonable progress as you clean up what you can prove is someone else's mess. Bonus points if all YOUR patients are being managed appropriately, and the only ones that stand out as being bad were inherited, and you show progress to better.
You document the controlled substances they're already on that were not your idea, in your first visit note. You discuss that on chart review and discussion with patient, they're on xyz drug for xyz reason, started by Dr. Whoever. For xyz reasons, you feel they should taper to lower dose, dc, or switch regimens. You discussed with patient your goal to do this, and to schedule follow up to initiate. You explain that you will only write for the current script once and the next one will be a tapering dose or d/c, whichever is most appropriate. If, say, they are on stims, the choice is d/c or come back in to start your taper and/or alternate therapy. If they are on meds that truly require taper, like benzos, again, there will be taper whether they like it or not.
I never feel like I have to stop scripts I never started, right away. You need to document that you're continuing the script with a goal to taper, so you're not abandoning, nor abetting bad practice.
I see a lot of doctors just stop patients cold on a lot of drugs they don't like writing. Sadly, some of those scripts actually being legit for the patient.
You need to do standard of care and document.
If the charts clearly show you inherited 100 patients on bad meds, and following your records you are slowly but surely reducing that number, than you are not going to be held as a candy doctor. You need to show safe reasonable progress as you clean up what you can prove is someone else's mess. Bonus points if all YOUR patients are being managed appropriately, and the only ones that stand out as being bad were inherited, and you show progress to better.