By HANS DUVEFELT
I suspect the notion of calling in narrower specialties is quite different from mine. Surgeons operate, neurologists treat diseases of the nervous system, even as the methods they use change over time.
Primary care has changed fundamentally since I started out. Others have actually altered the definition of what primary care is, and there is more and more of a mismatch between what we were envisioning and trained for and what we are now being asked to do. Our specialty is often the first to see a patient and also the last stop when no other specialty wants to deal with them.
We have also been required to do more public health, more clerical work, more protocol-driven pseudo-care and pseudo-documentation like the current forms of depression screening and followup documentation. And don’t get me started on the Medicare Annual Wellness Visit. How can we follow the rigid protocol and be culturally and ethnically sensitive at the same time?
We are less and less valued for our ability – by virtue of our education and experience – to take general principles and apply them to individual people or cases that aren’t quite like the research populations behind the data and the guidelines. The cultural climate in healthcare today is that conformity equals quality and thinking out of the box is not appreciated. The heavy-handed mandates imposed on our history taking and screening constantly risk eroding our patients’ trust in us as their confidants and advocates. The finesse and sensitivity of the wise old fashioned family doctor is gradually being squeezed out of existence.
The call to primary care medicine, if it isn’t going to pave the road straight to professional burnout, today needs to be a bit like the call to be a missionary doctor somewhere far away:
To go into a sometimes hostile environment, without the right kind of resources, where people don’t speak your language, where you never feel you can do everything you hoped to do for your patient, and where some of the things you want to do might even encounter cultural or political taboos.
In other words, to do what we can in the moment for each patient, regardless of the system and the circumstances.
That is a very noble call, but not one for the faint-hearted.
Hans Duvefelt is a Swedish-born rural Family Physician in Maine. This post originally appeared on his blog, A Country Doctor Writes, here.
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