Waiting Room Tops Patient Complaints
Survey Says Patients Are Generally Satisfied With Doctor-Patient Relationship, But Both Sides Have Gripes
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Having to spend too long in the waiting room was the top grip among respondents in a Consumer Reports survey. (CBS/The Early Show)
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The survey of about 39,000 patients and 335 primary care doctors appears in the February edition of Consumer Reports.
Consumer Reports conducted the survey in three phases last year. The "overwhelming majority of patients said they were highly satisfied with their doctors," the magazine reports. But the doctor-patient relationship wasn't completely rosy.
Patients' top complaint about doctors was time spent in the waiting room. Nearly one in four patients (24%) said they waited 30 minutes or longer.
Other complaints from patents were:
Doctors' major annoyance with patients was about not following prescribed treatment — almost six in 10 doctors (59%) voiced that complaint.
Doctors' other complaints about patients were:
Heading to the doctor's office? These tips from Consumer Reports might get you better care:
Nearly a quarter of doctors said they often get requests from patients for drugs they saw on TV. More than half say they sometimes decline such requests.
However, few patients — only 7% —said they asked doctors for advertised prescription drugs. (The patients surveyed weren't necessarily treated by doctors who took the survey.)
Because they were subscribers to Consumer Reports, the patients included in the survey may not be typical patients, the magazine notes.
SOURCES: Consumer Reports, February 2007; pp. 32-36. News release, Consumer Reports.
By Miranda Hitti
Reviewed by Louise Chang
Copyright 2007, WebMD Inc. All rights reserved.
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