Blog

Dr. A Show 157 Tonight: Autism Awareness


BlogTalkRadio Listen Live

Thursday, April 8, 2010 at 9pm ET (0100 UTC)

After taking a little break from the show, I hope that you're able to join me for Doctor Anonymous Show 157 where I will be talking about April being National Autism Awareness Month. There is definitely still a lot of controversy surrounding this topic, and I hope to steer clear of most of that. I did an interview on the topic - on local TV news - earlier this week. I invite you to check it out in the video below.


I also wanted to share with you a podcast that was done a year ago by our friends Annie and Burl talking about two parents journey. You can check out the show by listening to the player above. Or, if you like, you can click here, download the show, and listen to it anytime. What I hope to do with my show tonight is to bring you some information about the Autism Spectrum and what that means.

If you are new to the show, I encourage you to catch us live. There is a great chat room that also goes on. You can even see my shining face on the webcam. In addition, you can call into the show to say hello. Can't catch us live? That's ok. You can listen anytime after the show as it is saved as a podcast so you can listen anytime!

For first time Blog Talk Radio listeners:
*Although it is not required to listen to the show, I encourage you to register on the BlogTalkRadio site prior to the show. I think it will make the process easier.

*To get to my show site, click here. As show time gets closer, keep hitting "refresh" on your browser until you see the "Play/Chat" button. Then, of course, press the "Play/Chat" button.

The Doctor Anonymous Interview


Thanks so much to Gregg Masters for inviting me on his live podcast last night to talk about Physicians & Social Media. I told a little bit about how I got started in social media and some of the things that I'm doing now - like last month's coverage of the HIMSS conference helping out Dr. Val and Better Health.


There are a couple of ways that you can listen to the show. First, you can listen on the player above right here on the website. Or, if you click here, you can download the show and listen anytime. Don't forget to become a Facebook Fan of The Doctor Anonymous Show by clicking here. Thanks again to Gregg! I had a great time!

Dr. A Interviewed Tonight!


Curious to see what it's like for me to be in the interview chair? Well, that will happen tonight at 8pm Eastern Time (Midnight UTC) when I will be a guest of Gregg Masters (pictured above) on his BlogTalkRadio show called "Perspectives in Health System Transformation."

In addition to asking about some background information about me (which is also on my LinkedIn page), our discussion will be about physicians in social media. So, this should be a lot of fun tonight. He also told me that he'll ask me about the social media coverage at HIMSS by Better Health (check out the snapshot video above from HIMSS - including cameo appearance by EpatientDave). Hope to see you tonight for the show!

Happy Doctor's Day!


If you didn't already know, March 30th is National Doctor's Day. (But isn't every day - Doctor's Day? hehe) Last year, I shared a little bit about the story behind Doctor's Day - and I encourage you to take a read of that post as well.

This year, the hospital got the docs snuggies - yes, snuggies. Now, don't get me wrong, I like it - it's good stuff. And, yes, I'll be wearing this all day today. So, wish your favorite doctor (other than me - hehe) a Happy Doctor's Day. And, if they don't have a snuggie, then go ahead and get them one today!

Join me in San Francisco in June!


You probably heard me talk on Twitter about a conference I was invited to be a part of. I'm happy to share with you that I will be attending Digital Pharma West in San Francisco in late June 2010. The dates for the meeting are June 28-30 at the Le Meridien San Francisco hotel.

I have never been to this meeting before, but according to the promotional materials, "This conference is designed for professionals from the pharmaceutical, biotechnology, and medical device industries whose responsibilities include marketing, emarketing, ebusiness, advertising/promotions, brand management, product management, information technology, and regulatory affairs."


As you can see from the image above, I will be on a panel with Dr. Rob Lamberts and Dr. Bryan Vartabedian. As you may remember, we also shared a panel last fall at BlogWorldExpo 2009. I guess the organizers liked our work - hehe.

We are the featured session on Wednesday, June 30, 2010. The title of the panel is "Listen to a Unique Conversation between leading HCP Marketers and Three Top MDs/Social Media Activists." The panel is lead by Jason Appel, Director Relationship Marketing, Amgen. And, as you can see in the image above there are a lot of questions for me to think about going into this session.

Exclusive to friends of Doctor Anonymous (this means you!), you get a 15% discount by giving my promo code P622DRA during the registration process. How cool is that? So, if you want to see me, Doc_Rob, and Doctor_V chat about medicine and social media - in addition to an excellent rest of the program, join us at Digital Pharma West in June!

Dr. A Show Tonight!


BlogTalkRadio Listen Live

Thursday, March 25, 2010 at 9pm ET (0100 UTC)

I invite you to join me tonight for Doctor Anonymous Show 156 where our guest will be a friend of mine whom I haven't spoken to in a long time. Dr. Gerry Tolbert is his name and he is currently a resident physician in Family Medicine in Greenwood, South Carolina. I met Gerry when we were heavily involved with the American Academy of Family Physicians - I believe when I was a resident and when he was a student.

Gerry found me on Facebook recently and we've been chatting. One day he was like, "I'd like to come on the show sometime and chat." I think this was around the time of the Apple iPad announcement. As of yet, Gerry has no blog or podcast - but I'm hoping to change that a little bit - hehe. So, this should be a fun show tonight! (also check out the video post below)

If you are new to the show, I encourage you to catch us live. There is a great chat room that also goes on. You can even see my shining face on the webcam. In addition, you can call into the show to say hello. Can't catch us live? That's ok. You can listen anytime after the show as it is saved as a podcast so you can listen anytime!

For first time Blog Talk Radio listeners:
*Although it is not required to listen to the show, I encourage you to register on the BlogTalkRadio site prior to the show. I think it will make the process easier.

*To get to my show site, click here. As show time gets closer, keep hitting "refresh" on your browser until you see the "Play/Chat" button. Then, of course, press the "Play/Chat" button.

Dr. A Show Tonight!


BlogTalkRadio Listen Live

Thursday, March 18, 2010 at 9pm ET

I hope that you can join me tonight for Doctor Anonymous Show 155 where our guest will be Dr. Lucy Hornstein who is a family physician and author of the book, "Declarations Of A Dinosaur: 10 Laws I've Learned As A Family Doctor." What are the 10 laws, you ask? Well, check out yesterday's post and that will give you more information. She is also creator of the blog "Musings Of A Dinosaur."

If you are new to the show, I encourage you to catch us live. There is a great chat room that also goes on. You can even see my shining face on the webcam. In addition, you can call into the show to say hello. Can't catch us live? That's ok. You can listen anytime after the show as it is saved as a podcast so you can listen anytime!

For first time Blog Talk Radio listeners:
*Although it is not required to listen to the show, I encourage you to register on the BlogTalkRadio site prior to the show. I think it will make the process easier.

*To get to my show site, click here. As show time gets closer, keep hitting "refresh" on your browser until you see the "Play/Chat" button. Then, of course, press the "Play/Chat" button.

Dr. A Show 155 Preview: Dr. Lucy Hornstein


Hope you're able to join me this week for Doctor Anonymous Show 155 where our guest with be author Dr. Lucy Hornstein who wrote the book, "Declarations Of A Dinosaur: 10 Laws I've Learned As A Family Doctor." As you may or may not know, I am also a family medicine physician. So this should be a good interview. In case you're not familiar with the 10 laws here they are:

Laws of the Dinosaur

First Law: The art of medicine consists of amusing the patient while nature takes its course.
Second Law: It is impossible to make an asymptomatic patient feel better.
Third Law: The urgency of the test is inversely proportional to the IQ of the insurance company preauthorization clerk.
Fourth Law: There is no cure for stupid.
Fifth Law: Bad things really do happen to good people.
Sixth Law: The better the surgeon, the more reluctant s/he is to operate.
Seventh Law:
Part A: It has to be fun.
Part B: If it isn't fun, see Part A.
Eighth Law: Half of what is taught in medical school is wrong, but no one knows which half.
Ninth Law: Poor planning on your part does not constitute an emergency on my part.
Tenth Law: A bad idea held by many people for a long time is still a bad idea.
You may know Dr. Hornstein better by her blog called "Musings Of A Dinosaur." Dr. Dino has no problem telling it like it is - even taking on me - really! In October 2009, during the height of the H1N1 panic, I wrote a post called "My Take On H1N1." A few days later, Dr. Dino wrote a post entitled, "More on H1N1 Flu; In Which I Call Dr. Anonymous onto the Carpet for Being a Wimp."
Here's where I call WIMP*. Dr. A, you've just done an excellent job of explaining that the risks of vaccination are downright trivial, compared to the documented substantial risk of pandemic H1N1 influenza, especially to children. Why wuss out now and call on the patient to make the final determination of the balance of risk vs. benefit? You've just laid it all out for them. You need to take a stand and say that vaccination is the responsible course of action.

Patients are looking for our recommendations. When the issue is this clear cut -- and make no mistake, despite the pseudoscientific fear mongerers lurking around every corner, this is indeed one of the most straightforward decisions our patients are called upon to make -- we do them a disservice by wimping out and calling it a "personal decision".

Edited to add: Every patient has the right to make "personal decisions" about whether or not to follow the doctors' recommendations. It is still our responsibility to come out and make those recommendations.

Man up, Dude.

Now, before you thought I got all upset about this, think again. I really encourage you to read over the comment sections of both of these posts. I think both of these posts really encapsulates the discussion that was going on at the height of the H1N1 hype (at least in this part of the country). Now, on balance, Dr. Dino has also given me a good share of props, including in the post called "New Look" (although she did call me an "oxymoron" hehe)

So, I encourage you to join me on Thursday, March 18, 2010 at 9pm Eastern Time for Doctor Anonymous Show 155 on BlogTalkRadio. Don't forget to become a Facebook Fan of my show and to check out my iTunes page. Hope you're having a great week!

AAFP is "Pawn" In Health Care Reform?


I just read this very interesting point/counterpoint piece over on the website of the American Academy of Family Physicians. As you may or may not know, I am a proud Family Medicine Physician. And, yes, I am (still) a dues paying member of the AAFP. I owe a lot to the Academy including introduction to organizational medicine as well as leadership training as a medical student, family medicine resident, and now.

The post I read was in their letter to the editor section and it was called "AAFP Is 'Pawn' In Health Care Reform; Academy Says 'Not So'. The first letter is from former AAFP president Michael Fleming, MD. I first met Dr. Fleming when I was a medical student and I have always respected his opinion - especially on policy issues. Here's what he says:

As someone who has been involved with advocacy for many years, I'm writing to express my brutal disappointment in the AAFP's positioning and effectiveness in the recent health care debate. Although family physicians are in critical need of advocacy for their issues -- payment reform, a repeal and permanent fix for the sustainable growth rate, liability reform, recognition of the value of family medicine, graduate medical education reform, etc. -- the AAFP seems to have become more enamored of photo opportunities at the White House than the needs of members.

In my opinion, the AAFP has been used by most of Washington as a pawn in a $2 trillion chess game -- and the pawn can never win. The AAFP could have taken the high road of quality care for patients and fair payment for the most valuable health care providers. Instead, the organization has gone "all in" for one highly partisan bill that will have absolutely no effect on the issues I listed above. The organization and its leaders need to take a close look at themselves and be reminded of the reason the AAFP actually exists: to meet the needs of its dues-paying members.

The counterpoint to this letter is from current AAFP President Lori Heim, MD. This is also someone I have known for a long time and whose opinion I have always respected. The AAFP Board, to their credit, whether you agree with them or not, has been clear in their position. Here's what she said:
I appreciate Dr. Fleming's point of view. But when it comes to health care reform, we have to remain true to the path the AAFP Congress of Delegates approved. We must hold on to the AAFP’s long-standing principles of health care for all, a system founded on appropriately paid primary medical care, and a replenished pipeline of family physicians.

Although not the end game, the health care legislation currently in Congress takes important steps in that direction. It expands coverage to more than 30 million Americans. With its 10 percent Medicare bonus for primary care physicians and pilot testing of the patient-centered primary care medical home, it embarks on reshaping our health delivery system based on primary medical care. And it invests in primary care training by expanding scholarships and student loan forgiveness programs for medical students entering primary care.

Certainly, the legislation misses the mark in some areas. But the AAFP's work in shaping health care reform has put family medicine in good stead for future legislation that will address, for example, the flawed sustainable growth rate formula and potential reform to the medical liability system. Far from being a pawn, the AAFP has been able to shape the legislation, which shows the first recognition of the value of primary care. Nothing is perfect. But we must make a start. The best start we've had in 16 years is the legislation now before Congress.

Now, before you predict some kind of wishy-washy "on the fence" opinion post from me, this may surprise you. It's no secret that I am disenchanted with organized medicine these days - whether it be AAFP or the AMA - or whatever. I wrote about it in October 2009. I think a lot of physician organizations are having debates like this one.

What do I think? Well, in my book, tort reform (ie - liability reform) and having a fix to the flawed sustainable growth rate are important to me and, I think, important to a lot of dues paying members of physician organizations - not to mention the potential negative impact the proposed legislation would have to physician small business owners (those who have not been swallowed up yet by corporate health care systems - or those physicians who already work for government agencies).

Whatever finally happens, if anything happens with this legislation, I believe that these national physician membership organizations will have used a lot of political capital that will be very difficult to get back. In my opinion, it has already been kind of showing itself in a decreasing number of practicing physicians joining professional organizations, and even some leaving these professional membership organizations.

In other instances, state chapters are distancing themselves from their national organizations. For example, the Ohio State Medical Association (which is the state chapter of the American Medical Association), has all but come out against the current AMA position on the known health care reform drafts. When it is all said and done, will it have been worth it for these national organizations? Well see....

Dr. A Show Tonight!


BlogTalkRadio Listen Live

Thursday, March 11, 2010 at 9pm ET

Join me tonight for Doctor Anonymous Show 153 with our guest Greg Friese who is an EMS podcaster and educator. Greg is involved in a number of projects like the EverydayEMSTips blog and the EMSEduCast podcast.

Greg has recently written for JEMS.com, Wilderness Medical Associates, JEMS Magazine, EMSResponder.com and EMS Magazine, the NAEMSE Educator Newsletter, and EMSLive.com. One of the many topics that we may also be talking about is the recent EMSToday Expo in Baltimore last week.

If you are new to the show, I encourage you to catch us live. There is a great chat room that also goes on. You can even see my shining face on the webcam. In addition, you can call into the show to say hello. Can't catch us live? That's ok. You can listen anytime after the show as it is saved as a podcast so you can listen anytime!

For first time Blog Talk Radio listeners:
*Although it is not required to listen to the show, I encourage you to register on the BlogTalkRadio site prior to the show. I think it will make the process easier.

*To get to my show site, click here. As show time gets closer, keep hitting "refresh" on your browser until you see the "Play/Chat" button. Then, of course, press the "Play/Chat" button.