Please tell your doctor everything…at your actual visit and while you are still in the room if you could.

Hello everyone. This is just a quick public service announcement on behalf of physicians everywhere. Everyone knows that it is our sacred responsibility to care for other human beings to the best of our ability. OK great. What seems to elude everyone is that our ability to be able to care for someone is highly dependent upon the information that we receive from the patient….at the time of their actual visit. I am always talking about the doctor patient team relationship and the communication between the patient and the physician is the absolute pillar and foundation of that relationship. There is no way that I can do my best to take care of you without knowing EVERYTHING there is to know about your health history and the details of the concern that you have. You are master and commander of your own ship. I am just the first mate. I help steer but I am not actually in charge of the course. I cannot act on anything that I don’t actually know about. I need you to tell me all of your symptoms and all of your history in order to help you. Every detail is potentially life or death important. Something you may think is trivial could be the absolute key to your health and survival. It is not safe to think of all the physicians that care for you as separate individuals. We are all on one team and we all need to be on the same page with the same knowledge base so that we don’t do anything that could cause you harm. We may be several different physicians, but we are all working with the same individual and everything that we recommend affects you. You can’t assume that everyone has access to the same information. Most of the time, we are getting our information from you so you need to be an active participant in letting all your team members know what is going on with you. The bottom line is: there is no such thing as too much information. Leave it to me to filter out what I need and what I don’t. Don’t self censor. It could cost you your health. And please, try to mention it while we are still talking in the room if you could. Have a great day.

Dr. Katz

Why in the hell is my obgyn doing aesthetics? Stick to delivering babies man.

First off, I want to impress upon you that what I am about to say applies only to me and my personal situation, although I suspect that similar motivations are in play with this trend toward incorporating aesthetics that seems to be popping up in practices all over the country.

Let me start off by saying that I do not have one ounce of regret about becoming an obgyn. I have loved my job from day one. The sheer variety of intellectual stimulation astounds me. I get to take care of women from birth to death and help with everything from their pregnancies, to general health to surgical treatment and even cancer management. I can still remember like yesterday my somewhat circuitous path from music school to pre law and eventually medical school and then the next fork in the road trying to decide on a specialty. I can remember the day I cried with overwhelming happiness at my very first delivery, much to the snickering delight of the other residents in the room. Fortunately the new mother was gracious enough to hug me and ask me to sign her baby book. I remember the sudden lightning bolt of realization that I had found a specialty with infinite possibilities that could potentially provide me with emotional and intellectual satisfaction for the rest of my career. That was a great day.

I finished residency and jumped right into a group practice that I knew was potentially fraught with issues. In my own characteristically undaunted optimistic way, I was sure that I could transform the whole practice myself and bring everyone harmoniously into the future. Yup. Let’s suffice it to say that that did NOT happen! I ended up leaving the practice, taking a hiatus and then starting off all over again on my own, all while trying to raise a toddler. I am just not into the easy way . It’s not enough of a challenge factor…lol

I started my own practice and have been working away for the last 20 years. I am an independent, solo-practicing obgyn. There are not many of us left. The majority of all physicians, much less obgyns, are either part of a group practice or employed nowadays. This scenario helps with a lot with quality of life, less call, less worry about overhead and management decisions and often results in a steady salary. The trade off is that you end up tacitly de-participating in almost all decisions that matter like the makeup of your staff, how your office runs, who you are allowed to partner with and refer to if necessary and your billing process. As a solo independent practitioner, you are free to make all the decisions you want. You have decisions coming out your ass regarding overhead, management, paying bills, hiring and firing and how to carry your practice forward. This give you the illusion that you are in control of all aspects of your practice and your business. This sounds good at first, but you quickly realize that there are many factors that are out of your control. You wonder what the hell you were thinking. You stay up at night worrying and wondering how to strike a compromise between keeping your practice afloat despite ever-decreasing reimbursements without working so hard that you never see your family. Yes, it’s a real mental load on any given day. Still, I don’t regret the decision to have my own practice. I truly feel that it is what I was meant to do. I am able to “keep my finger on the pulse” of the quality of care that my patients get every day. That is a good feeling. I am 100% invested in what I do. It is not just a job. My employees and my patients are like my extended family. That is how much I care and how far I would go.

Having said that, worrying gets old and physicians all over the country have had to get creative in order to maintain their practices and their lifestyle and still stay in business. I am planning to keep going for another 20 years and I realized that I could not do it without changing something or reinventing myself. Here is where aesthetics comes in. I currently practice the full scope of obgyn care( delivering babies, doing gyn surgeries, adolescent gynecology, etc) and I practice aesthetics. I perform Coolsculpting, laser hair removal, head to toe laser services, photo facials, sun spot removal, vaginal rejuvenations, pelvic reconstructions, labiaplasty, morpheus8 radiofrequency micro-needling, etc and I am trying to keep learning new things all the time. Why take all this on you ask? First, my ultimate Wonder Woman goal is to become a “one-stop shopping area” for women of all ages. Aesthetics fits into that niche because it helps to allow me to take care of their health and beauty needs all in one place. That increase in service convenience for multiple issues will ultimately help me keep them healthy and beautiful. In addition to that, those ever-decreasing insurance reimbursement rates aren’t due to improve any time soon. As it stands now I get about 30 to 35 % reimbursement about three months after I do something for a patient. This means that I have to work at least three times as hard as I used to to make anywhere near the same income as I used to 10 years ago. That makes it tough to keep the proverbial lights on and be anything but a distant memory to my kids and family. So, my choices narrow down to working so hard that I never see my family and see so many patients a day that I risk missing important diagnoses and compromise care………..or………find some cash-based alternatives that I feel are effective and worthwhile and allow me to better pay the bills at the same time. I decided to go with option B. Having said that, it is not just about the money. I find aesthetics very intellectually stimulating as well. I love learning and participating in the trend toward minimally-invasive options for a variety of conditions that formerly required extensive surgery. It also appeals to the artist in me that had to somewhat go the way of the dodo when I veered away from the path to music school. I get it that treating wrinkles, hair, fat deposits and laugh lines is not the same as playing a concerto, but there is an art to it just the same. There were a lot of practitioners out there offering aesthetics so why not me? I kept seeing patients come in suffering from complications from procedures performed by unqualified individuals under unsafe conditions. I felt like I had to get involved. I am a board-certified physician that knows a lot about female anatomy. I invested the money to properly certify myself and my employees . I only purchased the best equipment and I am always there whenever any procedures are being performed and my office is prepared for any possible emergency. As I see it, this is a potentially better, more qualified set up than a lot of spas out there. Now before you get your feathers ruffled, please keep in mind that I am well aware that there are some excellent facilities out there that operate safely and with great results. However, my personal experience has taught me that that is not the norm unfortunately. So, when patients start asking why I started practicing aesthetics. I find myself asking, why not? Have a fantastic day!

Dr. Katz