M.A. asks from North Arlington, NJ on October 13, 2008
Interviewing Pediatrician
I am in the process of interviewing pediatricians does anyone have any suggesstions as to what I should ask.
Featured Answers
K.R. answers from New York on October 14, 2008
Hi M.-
You should find out how many doctors are in the practice. The more doctors, the better chance you have of having someone on call 24/7. My former pediatrician wanted me to take my son who was 4 DAYS old to the hospital on Christmas Eve( I said NO WAY!) since his office was closed and he thought he MAY have a hernia because he was having trouble going to the bathroom. I changed his formula to soy (on my own) and that did the trick.
The new pediatrican I have is on call 24/7 and will meet you in the office if need be.
Good Luck and Congratulations!
S.D. answers from New York on October 14, 2008
There is an interview sheet listed on Babycenter which I found helpful.
Go to babycenter.com and enter pediatrician interview in the search box. It should come up. If not email me and I'll send you the link.
Good Luck!
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K.G. answers from New York on October 14, 2008
Here is what I would ask:
1. Hours including the policy for after hours and weekend hours
2. How many vacations he or she takes in a year and who are the covering doctors
3. If there are multiple doctors in the practice - what is the procedure as to who you see and can you request to see a specific doctor
4. What is the policy for call backs during office hours
5. What is the sick visit policy / procedure. (i.e. do they leave a certain number of appts open for sick visits every day
6. How far in advance do you need to book a well visit
7. Policy on referrals, filling out of school forms and if there is a charge
8. If you have multiple kids - will they book one appt or back to back appts for all of them
9. Pose a hypothetical and ask them if you were bringing one child for a well visit and you other child all of a sudden became ill - would the doctor take a look at the sick child while you were already there.
Good Luck
2 moms found this helpful
C.O. answers from New York on October 14, 2008
M. - I took a very different approach so I will tell you what I did and if you decide to go this route, good luck and let me know what happens!
Once I narrowed down my list of potential docs/practices, I called the offices ahead of time to find out the simple stuff like office hours, what happens in case of emergency what are the hours etc... all the stuff you don't want to ask the doctor(s) when you get in front of him/her. I wanted to make the most of that face time so I weeded out as much as I could via the office staff by phone. You won't have a ton of time with the docs so make the most of it by getting that simple stuff out of the way.
I made appts to talk to the docs (if this is difficult to accomplish this could be a hint of the attention you will get as a patient). I arrived about 20-30 minutes early to each appt, so that I could wait in the waiting room for a while, and WATCH the office in action. How long did people wait to be seen? How friendly did the office staff seem to be to the waiting families? Did it appear to be a well oiled machine in progress or were people huffing and puffing about the wait, the service etc... You will also have a chance to talk to a few moms/dads in the waiting rooms, ask them how they like the practice/doctor(s). You may learn more in the waiting room that you will ever get from the staff/doc.
Are there two waiting rooms - one for those feeling sick and one for those feeling ok for well visits? They should be separate especially for babies visiting for a simple well visit.
Most doctors are expecting you to drop them the abundance of questions that all the 'expecting' books have ingrained in us to ask. Instead of asking those, off the bat I told my pediatrician I really only had one question. I asked my Ped to explain to me why I should choose their practice over any other. That will take them off guard and they will have to sell YOU on their practice. They will have to earn your trust as a patient. It changes the way they will see you as a parent, I assure you.
When I did this, the doc I ended up going with asked me at the end of our meeting "Will you choose our practice?"
Then he told me he never asked anyone that before! He said he felt like he was being interviewed for a job and I said in a sense he was!
You want the doctors to tell you why they are the docs who will care for your child the best. It is afterall an honor you are granting them to take care of your kids. You shouldn't feel like they are doing you the favor for letting you come in and pay for treatment/services!
Good luck!
1 mom found this helpful
J.S. answers from New York on October 14, 2008
i know one thing important to me was separate sick and healthy waiting areas..
L.L. answers from New York on October 14, 2008
I asked all kinds of questions like:
1. What are their hours?
2. What is his/her on-call process like? Are they prompt at calling right back?
3. What are his/her feelings on vaccines being linked to autism, and would they allow me to scatter vaccines instead of doing them all at once.
4. Do they plan on moving/retiring anytime soon? (I had that happen, loved our pediatrician but he was older and ended up retiring just a few months after baby was born.)
Hope that helps!
L.
C.R. answers from Syracuse on October 14, 2008
Everyone gave great advice to ask the doctor and I totally agree, however I would ask other mommy's in your area where they go, how they like it and so on...that's how to get the real scoop...especially if you are having a hard time deciding between two...the great thing about being pregnant is that everyone has advice so you can talk to anyone, anywhere and they'll tell you what they think...go to the doctor and ask questions, but ask the mom's in the waiting room and on the street...how is their bedside manner...and so forth...I had a great peditrican, but when he walked into the room and my 16month old said "Hi Dr. Jones" and he didn't even respond to it I was totally turned off, now I have a peditrican who will let the little ones sit in my lap while they do the exam and they say hello to the kid first and then to the mom and my child is getting the same medical care...of course I guess it also depends on what is important to you as well...good luck and congrats!
H.P. answers from Rochester on October 14, 2008
M. -
You got a lot of great responses and questions to ask - just thought I would suggest a couple of things. ONE - go with your gutt!! Walk in the office, use all your sences and see/hear/smell what it is all about. Your child/ren will be more 'H.' there if YOU are. See how the office is with you calling <prompt/ courtious/ etc> nothing is more disconserning if the office is not 'in touch' with their parents and you have an 'issue' and get put on hold and hold and switched from person to person.
ALSO - usually you are able to set up an interview appt. to meet and greet with the doctor. DO IT!! TAKE YOUR TIME - go early - see how the others are treated and how the staff treats patients / children/staff etc. THIS is the office for you child, should be VERY child friendly - or you are in the WRONG place.
As I did for setting up childcare - come back on a different day / different time - see how the office is early and then again later......some office schedule to see all the 'new' ones and prep the office to be 'ready' - your child/ren don't get sick on 'schedule'..........
BEST of luck to you and your family. :o)
K.K. answers from New York on October 14, 2008
Hi there. I used the pediatrician interview checklist on babycenter.com. It was very helpful and my husband and I both asked questions from it. It was very important to me that I used someone that was highly recommended, good credentials, personable, and took the time to answer any questions or concerns that I may have(without rushing me out of the office). I found a great pediatrician for my 18 month old daughter only to hear that she is relocating to the west coast in February 2009 and now I have to start the interviewing process all over again. She is the best pediatrician in my town and has been seeing my daughter since she was born. Some pediatricians also set aside "interviewing time" so you can get to know them. Good luck!
A.C. answers from New York on October 15, 2008
I never interviewed the doctors prior to having my daughter...instead I talked to a few pediatric nurses at the local hospital and listened to their suggestions--truly a great perspective to have!!!
For me, a factor was office location too. One of the top recommendations was for a doctor that was 25 minutes away and a close 2nd recommendation was a group of doctors 5 minutes from my home. I chose the close-to home group and I have been happy with my choice because when my daughter has been sick I think nothing of packing her up and taking her around the corner or when she leaves the office in tears from shots I know we will be home shortly. And with there being a group of doctors (about 7)--I have seen each one so that if my child is ever in the hospital I will know the doctor on call. One night I had to be patched through to a doctor's house after hours and I knew exactly who I was talking to.
keep in mind that office staff changes, doctor schedules change, but a doctor's bedside manner and willingness to be thorough doesn't!
The first day I walked in to the doctor's office I was filling out paperwork and another mother was standing there next to me who told me, "these guys are really good-all of them!" and that was reassuring too! Maybe you need another post asking for recommendations of pediatricians in your area?
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