sardonicone said:If it's an emergency, you should go to the emergency room. A general practitioner is not the place to go for gunshot wounds, cranial trauma, fractures, dismemberment, the plague, impalement, hypoxia, ect ect.
gotmilk said:You should see my hours
8 to 8:30 am-WORK
8:30 am to 11 AM-brunch
11am to noon-Siesta
Noon to 4 Pm- do nothing
4PM to 9Pm- work on business proposals and check on constuction updates
fistfullofsteel said:their hours reflect how much care, which is very little.
Angel said:I fully agree. The bank that we go to has 2 branches here in town, 1 the next town over, atm's every corner and another branch 2 towns over...Where as our doc is only around 4 days a week and is only 9-4
The Shadow said:No PA to cover during lunch??
Odd
I know the feeling. I made a appt for my son and it is not until May!velvett said:I just made an appt with the Endo and it's 1 month and 3 days away.
ARGH
velvett said:You are a sarcastic one.![]()
I've gone to the ER with a migraine .
HumanTarget said:how bout those snappily dressed pharmaceutical reps?
You just want a "reason" to fling pooHumanTarget said:let's revolt. it's the only answer.
Mr. dB said:Banks are actually under competitive pressure to provide good customer service.
a reason? for that? when isn't it time to fling? hmmm? like grabbing a dirty diaper by the corner and winding up like the hammer throw and just whipping it at one of your friends. it's gratifying.The Shadow said:You just want a "reason" to fling poo
that's what i'm getting at. they walk in with that cheesy smile with an Olive Garden bag in one arm and go to the front of the line. and then, God forbid, they have to wait 2 minutes, glancing around with that "i'm not comfortable being in a sick, shabbily dressed room full of people" look. do you need to go to school for that?dead_reggin_storage_fashi said:that is a joke of a job
About 2 weeks ago Pfe cut 10,000 jobs most being sales reps. Have you ever met a pharmaceutical sales rep? pfft
dead_reggin_storage_fashi said:please
please
HumanTarget said:that's what i'm getting at. they walk in with that cheesy smile with an Olive Garden bag in one arm and go to the front of the line. and then, God forbid, they have to wait 2 minutes, glancing around with that "i'm not comfortable being in a sick, shabbily dressed room full of people" look. do you need to go to school for that?
canadianhitman said:Keep in mind, you're just counting the doc's office hour. Most docs also work at a hospital, where they do rounds. Some general practitioners also serve as the plant doctor for industry, and do rounds at nursing homes as well. Odds are that your doc works more hours in a week than you do...just not all at his office.
Ugh, don't get me started on pharmaceutical reps. The females are gorgeous and well dressed, and they have excellent profiles on physicians they meet. Everything from their prescribing patterns (yes, this information is maintained by a national company and sold to the pharmaceutical industry) to their personal hobbies and reading interests.HumanTarget said:how bout those snappily dressed pharmaceutical reps?
i had an enjoyable experience. i waited 17 minutes on a walk in. i was psyched, i actually felt better just because of that.swatdoc said:Ugh, don't get me started on pharmaceutical reps. The females are gorgeous and well dressed, and they have excellent profiles on physicians they meet. Everything from their prescribing patterns (yes, this information is maintained by a national company and sold to the pharmaceutical industry) to their personal hobbies and reading interests.
My hospitals strictly forbids pharmaceutical reps from providing us lunch/dinner, free pens, or even visiting us. I enjoy it more that way since our ED is always busy and I have no time for them. (Although they are excellent eye candy to stare at!)
Regarding physician hours, most of the physicians I know work 8:30a-4:30p with an hour for lunch. They also see admitted patients (inpatients) from around 6:30-8:30 am and again in the afternoon for a brief period of time. This is why I did not choose internal medicine as a career. Most work a lot of hours each week (60-80 counting call).
canadianhitman said:Keep in mind, you're just counting the doc's office hour. Most docs also work at a hospital, where they do rounds. Some general practitioners also serve as the plant doctor for industry, and do rounds at nursing homes as well. Odds are that your doc works more hours in a week than you do...just not all at his office.
swatdoc said:Ugh, don't get me started on pharmaceutical reps. The females are gorgeous and well dressed, and they have excellent profiles on physicians they meet.
).
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