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COVID vaccines and neuropathy

Neuropathy | Last Active: Jan 6 9:12am | Replies (2241)

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@dbeshears1

I used to feel the same way re: PA vs MD to see me; if I was given a choice, I picked MD because I feel my total health picture is too complicated and needs MD. However, I’ve come to accept that I will (and do) have many PA’s, and they’ve become front line expectation in these parts anymore. I’m happy to report I’ve had great experience with them, often better than MD! Yes, I do have waits after my appointments because there are things they need to followup with the MDs on before getting back with me, but c’est la vie. I had an MD Cardiologist appointment 2 weeks ago and he coached me to get used to PA’s, that he was sad to report that “Corporate Medical Care” has the cost cutting strategy of recruiting and employing more PAs now vs MDs and PAs will be frontline, MDs further removed. Being former corporate, I know how it was done to accountants, engineers, and many other disciplines. So now it’s in medicine in some parts; some believe that PAs are as good as doctors, just paid less. I’m thinking positive since I’ve had great PAs, trust the MDs are in the background and available for emergencies, and hoping they might even be being freed up to help with research and cures for mystery illnesses like our own!

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Replies to "I used to feel the same way re: PA vs MD to see me; if I..."

Yes, you are correct. This is the way medicine is going now. Some of the practices have had the same PA for years and they are great, but many, like the cardiologists in my town, have rotating PAs that are not familiar with the speciality at all. It's the luck of the draw around here. And even the PAs have month long waiting lists. They also utilize alot of nurse practitioners in my area and in New Mexico and Colorado they are independent practitioners who do not report back or collaborate with anyone.