Skip to main content

Should Doctors Lie for Patients

Even the most honest among us do not tell the truth all of the time.  We are flawed human beings.  We covet, we gossip, we steal, we lie and we stand idly by. You don’t think you steal?   Have you ever ‘borrowed’ someone else’s idea and represented it as your own?

A few weeks before I penned this, I was presented with 2 opportunities to lie in order to save a patients a few bucks. The first patient wanted a refill for her heartburn medicine, which she takes once daily.  She asked if I would refill the medicine to take twice daily, so she could get double the supply for the same price.  The second patient asked me to write a note that he was at risk for Hepatitis B so that he could get the vaccine for free.   Writing the note would be easy, but claiming that he faced risk of Hepatitis B infection would require some prevarication. 

I’ll assume that Whistleblower readers know how I responded to the above two issues.   However, many patients, and perhaps some physicians, who are so harassed by insurance companies and an uncaring medical bureaucracy are looking for any measure of relief when they can grab it.  Many of them have risked rising blood pressures and panic attacks trying to talk common sense with insurance company ‘customer service’ representative,s who have less medical training than hospital housekeepers, about getting their medications approved.   I’ve been down that tortured road more times than I can count, and I feel their pain. 

I routinely receive disability forms for patients who are seeking this benefit.  I advocate zealously for every patient who has a legitimate claim for any benefit they are entitled to, often making the phone calls with the patient seated beside me.   There are occasions; however, where no matter how hard I squint at the patient’s chart, I just can’t discern any medical evidence of a disability.  Sometimes, I haven’t seen the patient for years.  (Often, disability forms are sent to every physician the patient has seen, so some of these physicians are not appropriate targets.)  

  
George Washington, not a doctor, didn't lie.

Ethical quandaries can be tormenting.   Let’s say a patient is sent to me to evaluate constipation.   A colonoscopy is scheduled.  Since the procedure is diagnostic to evaluate his symptom, he will have to pay much more out of pocket than if the procedure is coded as a routine screening colonoscopy.    Should I slightly adjust my coding to help the guy out?  

It doesn’t take much effort to rationalize siphoning a few bucks from insurance companies that many of us think deserve it.  Somehow, we don't regard this theft as we would shoplifting or stealing a neighbor's TV.

I could state here that I respect medical insurance companies because of their unwavering devotion to protecting our health and serving the greater good.  But, I’d be lying.  

Comments

  1. the most of the time many patients try to saving in pills and if we can help them with that without harm anybody or say lies I Think we should

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

When Should Doctors Retire?

I am asked with some regularity whether I am aiming to retire in the near term.  Years ago, I never received such inquiries.  Why now?   Might it be because my coiffure and goatee – although finely-manicured – has long entered the gray area?  Could it be because many other even younger physicians have given up their stethoscopes for lives of leisure? (Hopefully, my inquiring patients are not suspecting me of professional performance lapses!) Interestingly, a nurse in my office recently approached me and asked me sotto voce that she heard I was retiring.    “Interesting,” I remarked.   Since I was unaware of this retirement news, I asked her when would be my last day at work.   I have no idea where this erroneous rumor originated from.   I requested that my nurse-friend contact her flawed intel source and set him or her straight.   Retirement might seem tempting to me as I have so many other interests.   Indeed, reading and ...

The VIP Syndrome Threatens Doctors' Health

Over the years, I have treated various medical professionals from physicians to nurses to veterinarians to optometrists and to occasional medical residents in training. Are these folks different from other patients?  Are there specific challenges treating folks who have a deep knowledge of the medical profession?   Are their unique risks to be wary of when the patient is a medical professional? First, it’s still a running joke in the profession that if a medical student develops an ordinary symptom, then he worries that he has a horrible disease.  This is because the student’s experience in the hospital and the required reading are predominantly devoted to serious illnesses.  So, if the student develops some constipation, for example, he may fear that he has a bowel blockage, similar to one of his patients on the ward.. More experienced medical professionals may also bring above average anxiety to the office visit.  Physicians, after all, are members of...

Electronic Medical Records vs Physicians: Not a Fair Fight!

Each work day, I enter the chamber of horrors also known as the electronic medical record (EMR).  I’ve endured several versions of this torture over the years, monstrosities that were designed more to appeal to the needs of billers and coders than physicians. Make sense? I will admit that my current EMR, called Epic, is more physician-friendly than prior competitors, but it remains a formidable adversary.  And it’s not a fair fight.  You might be a great chess player, but odds are that you will not vanquish a computer adversary armed with artificial intelligence. I have a competitive advantage over many other physician contestants in the battle of Man vs Machine.   I can type well and can do so while maintaining eye contact with the patient.   You must think I am a magician or a savant.   While this may be true, the birth of my advanced digital skills started decades ago.   (As an aside, digital competence is essential for gastroenterologists.) Durin...