← Return to Existing Patient Appointment Making
DiscussionExisting Patient Appointment Making
Visiting Mayo Clinic | Last Active: Jun 27 9:33am | Replies (12)Comment receiving replies
Replies to "@colleenyoung, being new to this portal, would you recommend I reach out to @naturegirl5? I'd be..."
@fitnhealthy I understand your frustration. I have been a patient at Mayo Rochester for 12 years, seeing ENT, Oncology, Thoracic Surgery and Audiology. It has always been simple to correspond with my doctors or their secretaries when something comes up or an appointment is needed. If my doctor did not leave instruction for next appointment time, then they must check with him or her for those directions. Staff has been great about accomplishing that.
For 5 years we have been dealing with my husband's cancer via the Urology department. That is a whole different ball game. Staff has been more difficult to deal with and communication in the department was lacking. Finally, the past 6 months, when he had 4 different procedures to get done, and a different collection of surgeons, all things worked smoothly and involved 3 weekly trips to Mayo in May.
So I think that your experience is not atypical for some departments whose case load is very high. Some of the staff are rock stars at getting things done, others occasionally seem to not be able to accomplish what is needed and leave us hanging. Your delay of weeks to be seen is also typical in my experience, especially in these years post Covid. There are only so many appts to be filled, and you learn with time and help from secretarial staff just how many weeks ahead you must call or go to portal for appointment request. This doesn't help your situation, but maybe explains it some. As you already know, the care we receive at Mayo is worth the wait and some hassle to get in. I have been so fortunate to have my hero oncologist who has CALLED ME to see how I am dealing with a new drug. Im afraid there are not many MDs there with the time to do that. They have to rely on their staff, PAs, and nurses for communication. Good luck with everything.
@fitnhealthy I think that @colleenyoung is referring to a different situation that we (my husband and I) were faced with. In our case my husband felt that the provider he was seeing in Urology wasn't responsive to his needs and ordered lab tests that did not help (and actually deterred) from the decision making. What my husband was advised to do was to contact the Nurse Manager in Urology and ask for a different provider - in this case an MD who specializes in prostate. I was present at Mayo Clinic when my husband talked with the Nurse Manager and she listened, was responsive and did help my husband to make an appointment with a new provider.
I'm not sure if what I wrote helps unless you think that contacting the Nurse Manager - the person who manages the practice in Neurology - would be helpful for you in order to get your appointment moved up in time.