Review by Anonymous on July 06, 2015 -
Piedmont Hospitalist Physicians - 35 Collier Road Northwest Suite 775
Office & Staff Evaluation
Practice Evaluation
- Ease of Getting an Appointment
- Courtesy of Practice Staff
- Appearance & Atmosphere of Office
- Handling of Billing & Insurance
- Average Wait Time 31 minutes or more
Provider Evaluation
- Willingness to Spend Time with You
- Listening Skills Not rated
- Clear explanations Not rated
- Trust in Decision Making Not rated
- Accuracy of Diagnosis
- Post-Visit Follow-Up
“Go to another endocrinologist”
She has the bedside manner of being a tone deaf insincere physician who doesn't care about her patients. Here is an example. Scheduled appointment time was 11 a.m. A drug rep came in without an appointment after I arrived and she allowed the drug rep to come in before the schedule patients, thereby making all of her scheduled appointments to be delayed for more than an hour. Then she lies on her medical notes. And finally changes Rx's without notifying the patient of the change even though the previous Rx dose was the correct level to make thyroid levels be correct. If the patient followed the new Rx it would deliberately make the thyroid levels incorrect again. When the patient called her out for this mistake, she blamed it on the pharmacy even though she was the one that wrote the Rx. I personally think she has too many patients, and she isn't thinking clearly and clearly making mistakes that can be detrimental to the health of her patients. I had to drop her from my medical team.
Comment - “ Go to another endocrinologist ”
She has the bedside manner of being a tone deaf insincere physician who doesn't care about her patients. Here is an example. Scheduled appointment time was 11 a.m. A drug rep came in without an appointment after I arrived and she allowed the drug rep to come in before the schedule patients, thereby making all of her scheduled appointments to be delayed for more than an hour. Then she lies on her medical notes. And finally changes Rx's without notifying the patient of the change even though the previous Rx dose was the correct level to make thyroid levels be correct. If the patient followed the new Rx it would deliberately make the thyroid levels incorrect again. When the patient called her out for this mistake, she blamed it on the pharmacy even though she was the one that wrote the Rx. I personally think she has too many patients, and she isn't thinking clearly and clearly making mistakes that can be detrimental to the health of her patients. I had to drop her from my medical team.