How do you guys do it? I'm a young attending and trying to find focus and work/life balance.
**I'm always working even when I'm not in the office seeing patients: Administrative work, marketing, personal/professional education, policy & advocacy, staying abreast of recent scientific advancements, networking, rain-making, socializing, church and spiritual activities, etc. It all feeds one beast. My phone is always on and I answer it or text day and night. I can remote into my office server/EHR from anywhere in the world and basically do anything--Kid's on the ski team and I'm volunteered to gate judge? No problem. I can sign notes on my phone in between runs. Wife works in the office and we're face-to-face 20 hours a week. We have a weekly family strategic planning meeting to make sure that family calendar and work calendars are in sync. Go out dinner/lunch, talk about difficult patients, expense the meal. We have a family assistant/"nanny" who can help with pick-up/drop-off's, child supervision, meals, and event logistics. We coordinate family vacations with out of state/country CME events. There have been times we've done some home-schooling when the schedule has been too packed. Now, I've got the kid on the payroll in order to get her retirement and Roth started. It's really a family business.
Clinically, I do what the others do. Templates, macros, etc. I'm up at 0500 every day. In the office at 0715. Home at 1830. Usually have community commitments or conference calls in the evening. Lather, rinse, repeat.
Do you let reps in your work area? Do nurses send messages to you on computer, hand write them, text you, tap you on the shoulder?
**Reps are by appointment only and I never meet with them one-on-one. I have a staff person coordinate. One rep meeting per quarter. They can bring lunch or educational material for the office and set up in the break room. They get from noon-1pm and then they need to be out of there. My RN is my life-line. She sits 4 feet away from me. Wife on one side; RN on the other.
Do you work in an office with your door closed? Open work area?
**Open office/work area for maximum "situational awareness" of what's going on in the clinic at all times.
Do you write notes at home? On weekends?
**Usually don't need to, but if I do, no big deal.
How over the top do you go for a patient? They want their visit moved up, they want different sedation for their procedure (requiring changing locations), do you do it?
**Scheduler does this within established policies and protocols. There is a clear hierarchy of authority. If the scheduler can't make a decision, then it goes to the RN. If the RN can't make a decision, it comes to me. Ditto for the administrative stuff: First the team-leaders (front office, back office, billing), then the manager, then me. The trick to living this way is to push down as much work as possible to the lowest paid employee, have well-developed "standard work" routines, and discipline.