Hey there folks. Dr, Katz here. I have been an Obgyn for the last 28 years. I have delivered thousands of babies. I have performed thousands of surgeries. I have done thousands of paps. All of these things are essential parts of the specialty that I was specifically trained for. I was also fortunate enough to have gone through residency at a time where Obgyn was temporarily reclassified as primary care so I also have training in internal medicine, er, icu, pediatrics, and family medicine. As a result, I know how to diagnose things outside the scope of regular Obgyn practice, but, at the same time, I realize that I am not the expert in those areas so I know when to refer when necessary.
Sometimes, I feel like the same does not apply to obgyn care. There are a lot of family physicians and internists out there that still do the occasional pap when they have to or if the patient does not want to visit an actual obgyn.
Most of the time you get lucky and the pap would have been normal regardless so no harm done. But, then there are those other times when the patient has been getting “normal” paps for years by their family doctor and then they come and see me and actually have an invasive cancer that could have been caught earlier. Thank goodness these times are rare, but they happen nonetheless and are preventable.
To me, this says don’t dabble. You are potentially putting someone’s life at risk, even if unintentionally. I know that a lot of people think that doing a pap is a no brainer and that is the complete story as far as Obyn. I tell ya. It’s not true. There is an art to it from the performing of the procedure without harming the patient and actually knowing what you are looking at and being able to pick up on the subtlest of cues that something is off. Obgyn stuff is that sneaky. You usually don’t get any symptoms until something is already bad. Then, it can be too late. However, if you just stop into the Obgyn once a year, a lot of that is both preventable and/or treatable.
I know how to treat blood pressures and treat a multitude of various diseases, but I know I am not the expert so I refer appropriately. I think that every patient needs a primary care physician and an Obgyn because they both care for different necessary aspects of health. I think that both are necessary to achieve total health and well-being. I think we are different specialties for a reason. All I’m asking is, please leave the vaginas and the pelvises to me. I promise I won’t let you down.
Dr.Katz

