Feature

Primary care physicians reshuffle their work, lives in a pandemic


 

Hopes for the Future of Telemedicine

When the practice of medicine enters a post–COVID-19 era, Dr. Jobbins hopes that telemedicine will be incorporated more into the delivery of patient care. “I’ve found that many of my patients who often are no-shows to the inpatient version of their visits have had a higher success rate of follow-through when we do the telephone visits,” she said. “It’s been very successful. I hope that the insurance companies and [Centers for Medicare & Medicaid] will continue to reimburse this as they see this is a benefit to our patients.

director, division of general internal medicine, the University of Arkansas Medical Sciences College of Medicine Courtesy Dr. Robert Hopkins, Jr.

Dr. Robert Hopkins, Jr.

Dr. Hopkins is also hopeful that physicians will be able to successfully see patients via telemedicine in the postpandemic world.

“For the ups and downs we’ve had with telemedicine, I’d love for us to be able to enhance the positives and incorporate that into our practice going forward. If we can reach our patients and help treat them where they are, rather than them having to come to us, that may be a plus,” he said.

In the meantime, Dr. Jobbins presses on as the curve of COVID-19 cases flattens in Western Massachusetts and remains grateful that she chose to practice medicine.

“The commitment I have to being an educator in addition to being a physician is part of why I keep doing this,” Dr. Jobbins said. “I find this to be one of the most fulfilling jobs and careers you could ever have: being there for people when they need you the most. That’s really what a physician’s job is: being there for people when a family member has passed away or when they just need to talk because they’re having anxiety. At the end of the day, if we can impart that to those we work with and bring in a positive attitude, it’s infectious and it makes people see this is a reason we keep doing what we’re doing.”

She’s also been heartened by the kindness of strangers during this pandemic, from those who made and donated face shields when they were in short supply, to those who delivered food to the hospital as a gesture of thanks.

“I had a patient who made homemade masks and sent them to my office,” she said. “There’s obviously good and bad during this time, but I get hope from seeing all of the good things that are coming out of this, the whole idea of finding the light in the darkness.”

Pages

Recommended Reading

POPCoRN network mobilizes pediatric capacity during pandemic
MDedge ObGyn
Yale’s COVID-19 inpatient protocol: Hydroxychloroquine plus/minus tocilizumab
MDedge ObGyn
Antitumor treatment may increase risk of severe events in COVID-19 patients
MDedge ObGyn
COVID-19 and pregnancy: Is miscarriage a risk?
MDedge ObGyn
Case series suggests biologics, JAK inhibitors safe during pandemic
MDedge ObGyn
New study of diabetes drug for COVID-19 raises eyebrows
MDedge ObGyn
COVID-19: A ‘marathon, not a sprint’ for psychiatry
MDedge ObGyn
Excess cancer deaths predicted as care is disrupted by COVID-19
MDedge ObGyn
COVID-19: Addressing the mental health needs of clinicians
MDedge ObGyn
Out-of-hospital cardiac arrests soar during COVID-19 in Italy
MDedge ObGyn