Crazy Busy
Crazy Busy
Crazy Busy
Busy
Doctor
By John Wyatt Crosby MD
Assistant Professor of Medicine, University
of Toronto and Family Medicine, McMaster
and Queens Universities
2
Copyright © 2022 by John Crosby BSc., MD, FRCP (C)
Emergency Medicine and MCFP (EM)
Family Physician, 11 George St. South,
Cambridge, Ontario, Canada, N1S 2N3
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be
reproduced or transmitted in any form, by any means, without
prior permission of the publisher.
Audiobook, mentorship and videos available for free at
drjohncrosby@rogers.com
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I dedicate this book to my wife Jill. To my three sons;
Andrew, Stephen and James. To my daughter-in-law Kristy.
To my mother and father; Doris & Jack Crosby. And to my
mother and father-in-law; Clara and Sparky Copeland.
Also to my grandson Max.
With special thanks to my Medical Post editors Colin Leslie
and Louise Leger.
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Table of Contents
Delegation 7
Paperwork 12
Templates 13
Interruptions 22
Seniors 28
Outside responsibilities 29
No Competition 32
Counselling 34
A year in my life 43
Bibliography 54
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Introduction
Is your waiting room standing room only? Are you always late and
multitasking?
Do your staff, spouse, kids, family and friends complain that you
work too hard?
Do you go to bed at midnight and then can’t get to sleep and then
wake up at 3 am with your brain churning?
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You need to find time (40 minutes) to read this short book. If you
don’t have time email me for a free audiobook so you can listen to it
while driving or jogging or are collapsed on the couch.
drjohncrosby@rogers.com
Their biggest problem is that they are too busy and are
burning out. The cure to being crazy busy is good time
management.
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them by text or email. Copy them on all emails you
you and your staff crazy busy. It also helps patients get
8
Nurses can help you stay on time. If you can’t afford a
full time nurse, hire one for one afternoon a week and
STAT.
coordinated.
9
With pharmacists, communicate by fax or secure text or
them better than you. This saves the patents and you
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The Patient: get them to take an active part in their
You can also hire a physician assistant to help you with the load.
Barriers to Change
Many doctors are afraid their income will drop if they hire more
staff and have to pay them. However, you will find that you become
more efficient and will make more money. Plus you won’t be crazy
busy.
without exception. Even if ‘Aunt Mabel’ calls you and begs you.
Tell her you are overloaded and this will decrease care for all and
stress you out. Offer to get her in to see another doctor. Also if a
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physician in town quits and there are a lot of orphan patients don’t
get guilted into taking them. It will diminish care for your existing
patients. You did not cause the problems and don’t have to solve it.
MAILS.
Do not do them after hours. Guard this time with your life. Turn
off your iphone, landline, texts and emails. Tell your staff to not
interrupt you. If you are in a room with other people try to get an
sign on your forehead to not interrupt you. Bring in patients for big
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Put the money in a fun fund so paperwork and admin time is happy
not sad. Come back a day early from vacations to get caught up and
Train your nurse to triage lab and imaging results and send
K of 6. Signed Nurse Y.
more thorough.
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Type in the stamp or cut and paste the following, one at a time.
Click Done
Assessment •
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• (Left or right) ankle injury • days ago.
Ligaments • Assessment •
Plan rest, ice, elevate, tensor, physio, Advil 2 tabs every 4 hours,
better.
Assessment:•
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BP: Subjective: Feels• No chest pain or shortness of breath no
swelling of ankles
Objective: BP is • Cardiovascular system, rate • rhythm • heart
sounds S1 and S2 are normal, no murmurs.
16
Depression for • days. Why? •
Subjective: Fatigue • Sleep • Crying • Blaming yourself or feeling
worthless • Lack of concentration• Lack of joy •
Weight change • Faster or slower than others • Suicidal •
Bipolar: Has there ever been a period of time when you were not
your usual self and
you felt so good or so hyper that other people thought you were not
your normal self or you were so hyper that you got into trouble? •
You were so irritable that you shouted at people or started fights or
arguments? •
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Spending money got you or your family in trouble? •
Objective: On exam: affect • grooming • alertness • Hallucinations •
Delusions • Pressure speech • Tangential thoughts •
Assessment •
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Neurological •
Wt: Ht: BMI•
General Appearance •
Ears Nose Throat •
Skin • Breasts -
Cardiovascular system - Blood Pressure • Pulse • Heart sounds •
Jugular venous pressure • murmurs • peripheral pulses •
Respiratory •
Central nervous system• - Pupils & Fundi • cranial nerves. tone •
power • Sensation • reflexes •
Vaginal exam •
Assessment •
Plan •
Headache
Subjective for • days. Cause • Where on head• Feels like •
Have tried •
Objective fever • neck stiff • Cranial nerves • Reflexes • Pupils •
Pain rating out of 10 •
Assessment •
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Plan. Side effects of medications explained. Return in • months or
call or go to the ER if worse.
Plan • Physio, Advil 2 tabs every 4 hours. Side effects like gastric
upset explained
Plan • Weight loss. Advil 2 caps every 4 hours. Side effects like
gastric upset explained.
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Cardiovascular system • Digestive system • Genitourinary system •
Musculoskeletal system • Central nervous system • General
appearance • Wt: Ht: BMI•
Assessment •
Plan •
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Cough for • days (Covid 19 negative). Sore throat • . Cough • .
Earache • . Sputum • . Shortness of breath • Chest pain •
On Examination: Neck supple Temp • . ENT • . Nodes • . Chest •
Assessment •
Plan: Advil liquigels 2, q4h prn, Koffex, 5 cc's q4h prn, Cool mist
vaporizer.
side effects of medications explained such as allergic reactions,
diarrhoea or yeast vaginitis in women.
Assessment •
4. INTERRUPTIONS
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office. I speak only to specialists. You have to really back up your
to you and your secretary wouldn’t put them through try this script:
‘I’m sorry you are upset that my secretary wouldn’t let you speak to
your time and want to be on time for you. We want to offer same
If you don’t back up your staff they will open the floodgates and let
Workload can be predicted for the most part. Because Mondays are
usually the busiest (because they also have the burden of illness for
Saturday and Sunday) we leave them wide open for same day call in
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other. For example each patient has an appointment starting at 9 am
and then 9:10 am then 9:20 and I get to go home at 3 pm when the
counselling or well baby exams. Just short little snappers like a skin
lesions, UTI’s and minor injuries. This is great for the patient
them.
You have just changed a crazy busy Monday into a restful one.
I knew a family doctor who took every Monday off for 41 years.
doctors’s Fridays.
Book your last appointments at 11:30 and and 4:30 pm. Put your
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You can enjoy a nice leisurely lunch instead of bolting a sandwich
between patients.
and care giver burnout) have your staff set up a family meeting.
feel guilty and can take it out on you). Or have a Zoom meeting.
outline in simple terms what the diseases are, what the future may
your waiting room if you are a solo GP or a meeting room if you are
in a clinic.
I tell the families that hospitals will not be able to keep the patient
for long if they are sick or injured or not coping and nursing homes
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communicate with your one staff spokesperson. This takes more
effort up front but can really save you time later on and is good care.
This keeps you from being crazy busy talking to every family
5. MULTI-PROBLEM PATIENTS
lists of things for him to fix on their cars. He said ‘hell yeah, I can
bill them for each thing and have them leave their vehicle for the
your wall saying only one problem per visit and so does the college
problem might be lethal. At the same time it isn’t fair to our other
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A nice compromise that has always worked for me is to reach over
and ask permission to take the list or ask to look at their iphone list
and ask the patient to pick their top two concerns. Tell them to
rebook to do the rest of the list later and assure them you will check
everything.
My script is: ‘I see you have five problems today. In order to be fair
to you and give us lots of time to solve them all please choose your
top two concerns. Let’s get some lab work now and set up another
three years.
fresh, rested and not when I am crazy busy at the end of the day.
Some patients keep reeling off new complaints as soon as they are
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stand up and walk them out to my secretary.
6. SENIORS
Seniors have all the time in the world and you have none. They
practice is over the age of 65. I ask them what has changed. We
book them in for the middle of the day, which tends to be quieter as
most young workers and students want to see us after 3 pm. Ask
If they don’t know their meds don’t guess. Leave the room and
delegate to your secretary to call the pharmacy and you go and see
another patient.
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If you have patients scattered across town in nursing homes, give
them up to the house doctor who can offer them more frequent care.
for home care to go out to assess and have the pharmacist do blister
packs.
House calls are great for you and the patient but are hard to fit in.
you can’t make house calls because you can see 6 patients in the
time one is made and this allows you to be more available. (always
doctor who has given up her office practice and overhead and does
free house calls for every complicated patient who can’t get to their
family doctor.
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Then you won’t be crazy busy trying to rush off to a house call at
lunch or afterwork.
If you are a solo family physician, meet regularly with your staff. If
you are in a clinic, make sure you have a paid office manager and
paid MD manager who can make sure each doctor follows the same
rules with regard to billing for third party fees, hours of operation,
phone advice (try not to ever use the phone yourself) and scheduling
two groups. There are two doctors on call every night, one for
surgical assists and one for critical office lab results and nursing
homes. This was formed by me by taking the old call groups and
29 years ago. We are only on call once a month and can take the day
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off afterwards. You can grandmother or grandfather off call at age
of being on call. This is good for the patients, staff and us and helps
You can break up weekends and holidays into one day chunks.
Reward yourself on the day off after call with something you like
doing like a spa day, skiing, museum or art gallery so you will look
after in- patients you can combine hospital ward rounds by having
one member of the group do the whole group’s rounds for a week.
Committee Work
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Limit yourself to one committee per year and ask for it to meet at
on first then leave. You can also do this with family meetings at
every month. Make sure there is an agenda and start on time and end
early. Try to keep committees to seven or less people and have them
8. NO COMPETITION
With the doctor shortage, patients can rarely leave one doctor for
time other than pride in giving good service to patients. This can
also benefit the doctor. If patients have to wait they often think up
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new problems or complain to you about how hard it is to get in to
7:30 pm
Having patients complain about wait times also sucks the joy out of
your day.
Competition Is Coming
pharmacists are doing more of our work and governments see them
all over and patients love them. If you adopt my strategies your
office can have open phone lines and same day service on time and
Emailing patients
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If you decide to do this make sure you have a secure system and get
emergency. Set hours of operation and call back intervals (I will get
the time. Turn off your devices at 5 pm and also on weekends and
holidays.
Never give out your private phone number or email address it will
make you crazy busy. If a patient is sick enough to need you in the
9. PSYCHOLOGICAL COUNSELLING
Can take up a huge amount of your time and energy. Patients often
can’t afford the high cost of a psychologist (up to $250 per hour) or
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Patients also often want to come to see only you because they are
comfortable with you and trust you and there is no stigma in sitting
Make sure your patients check with their employer to see if they
check with your local mental health clinic. I tell patients that if they
There are also fast, free substance use disorder clinics available
I also tell patients that a counsellor can spend an hour with them but
I can’t due to patient demands. They can also meet after business
hours.
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Empathy Addicts
A lot of doctors get into counselling patients who dump all their
an expensive social worker and enables the patient. The patient feels
great and the doctor feels terrible and gets behind in their schedule.
You have to set goals with the patients so they make progress and
make change in themselves and their lives and not just come to you
session
Virtual Medicine
for rashes and skin lesions and minor injuries. This is a huge time
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Doctors are taught to be slow and methodical and to not miss
anything. Your professor had a few patients a day and you to chart
for her and do her paperwork and admin work and check labs,
Then you came out into the real world and had to see 30 patients a
day to pay back your debts, pay overhead, taxes, buy a house and a
car. You have to save for retirement and put your kids through
university. You have to pay for disability and life insurance and all
benefits.
To end the patient visit, ask the patient what they wanted from the
appointment, then sum up what you have said, stand up and walk
them to the printer in your secretary’s office for lab, imaging, advice
about doing the above things is that they give you more time with
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the patient. You will find yourself refreshed and able to see people
when they need it and spend lots of time really listening to and
CHANGE
First is diagnosis.
Are you always busy and frantic? Do your patients joke about
how you are slammed?
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Secondly you need to want to change. Being less crazy
busy will be wonderful for you, your patients, staff, family and
friends. You will have lots of time to spend clinically instead
of with paper/computer work or on the phone or in meetings.
You will have time for rest, exercise, hobbies, meditation and
spiritual replenishment. You will have time to do nothing,
something you haven’t done since kindergarten. Also your
income will go up.
Dear Secretary,
patient.
Sincerely,
You can start this now; it costs nothing and is very simple to
do. Once you have mastered this first baby step try a new
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item every two weeks so as not to overwhelm your staff or
yourself.
11:30 and 4:30 and put the phone on answering for lunch
hour. Also book 8 weeks off a year and guard them with your
life. You can also send a note to everyone in your life that you
You can transfer all you nursing home patients to the house
doctor.
Miscellaneous:
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Get a nanny. You are only as good as your support systems.
Take a red magic marker and circle them or bold them in your smart
phone calendar.
home(s)
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We then take a week with the kids in March break. In July we send
the kids to camp and have a week alone at the cottage. In August we
Remember to leave your first office day back empty so you can
enjoy it too. Your staff and patients will love it as they can get in to
see you fast. Come back a day early before your clinic opens to
vacation alone with their spouses. One man has not been alone for a
restaurant meal or hotel stay with his wife in 10 years!!. The kids
will leave home at 18 and leave two strangers behind. This is a fast
ticket to divorce. Start small with a date night and then try a
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weekend away alone. Then try a week away with just the two of
Sunday night
I go to sleep at 10 pm after no screen time for 2 hours before so I
can wake up refreshed without an alarm clock on Monday at 6 am. I
brush my teeth, shave and drink a protein shake so I am not hungry
and eating donuts and muffins full of sugar at 10 am. I have a decaf
coffee.
I then drive to the YM/YWCA and swim pool lengths for 30
minutes. I have a whirlpool bath, sauna and shower and then drive
to my office. I practice mindfulness in the sauna.
I do my paper and computer and admin work from 8 am to 8:50 am
(I have made an appointment with myself in my smartphone
calendar). I am all alone with no distractions. No phone, text,
emails, patients, secretary, nurses or patients. NOOOOOObody!
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For family meetings I am on duty for the first 10 minutes then leave.
The nurse tells everyone to stick to medical matters, so my time is
not wasted hearing about the food or plumbing. I am constantly
teaching the nurses how I do things (delegation). I do this too with
my secretary who knows how I think and can advise patients and
text me for confirmation thus shielding me from constant
interruptions = no crazy busy.
I then drive to my next nursing home and do the same until noon.
I take off from noon until 1:30 pm for lunch, which is a nice break. I
can go to meetings at this time and not lose time from my office. My
secretary puts our phone on answering so she gets a break too.
At 1:30 pm I start to see patients. If you have small kids you can do
admin at noon but never after hours.
On Monday the afternoon has been left empty except for same day
call in appointments which my secretary fills into slots one after the
other. Therefore I love Monday’s because it is little, easy cases. The
patients love it because they can get in on the phone line and be seen
on time the same day. If you have long waits the patients will tie up
your secretary by arguing with her to get in early and may
exaggerate their symptoms. They will go to a walk in and you will
pay for it. I get to go home when done which might be as early as 3
pm. Heaven.
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O(bjective) A(ssement) and P(lan) format. I ask the patient how
they are doing then shut up and let them talk. I then ask if they
have any ankle swelling, shortness of breath, chest pain, light-
headedness or headaches. I then do their blood pressure, listen
to their chest and heart and check peripheral pulses and ankles
for edema. If normal I remind them why we do blood pressure
(to prevent stroke and heart attacks) and that they can’t feel it
when it is high. If it is normal I see them in six months and give
them a handout (in the computer) to reinforce my teachings. I
print a lab slip on my secretary’s printer (exit strategy) and type
on it ‘back in 6 months’ so I don’t have to interrupt her.
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node enlargement, take their temperature and listen to their chest. If
it is viral I explain that antibiotics are not only useless but also
harmful as they may cause allergies, diarrhea or superbugs.
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counselling. I have them back in a week to go over the handout.
8) Diabetes: I use a stamp and check feet and eyes. The patient has
their shoes and socks off before I see them and they bring their list
of sugars since the last appointment. We go over their lab and how
they are doing then I examine their heart, lungs, peripheral pulses,
skin and blood pressure. I weigh them as I am talking to them.
If stable I bring them back every three months.
My secretary gives them a lab slip signed by me to do blood sugars,
HbA1C, creatinine, urine for protein, lytes, CK, liver profile and
lipids one week before each visit
I send them to Diabetic Day Care with their spouse to learn about
diet and exercise and how to handle their disease. (Delegate to the
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patient and diabetic day care).
9) Urinary Tract Infection. I use a stamp that asks how long they
have had symptoms, do they have frequency and burning, do they
have any temperature or flank pain. I examine their abdomen and
take their temperature and if it is a simple UTI, I do a urinalysis,
routine and micro and culture and sensitivity and if the results can’t
be back in a reasonable time I start an antibiotic.
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12) Hypercholesterolemia. I have a stamp for this too and go over
their labs and meds. I do their BP and examine their heart, lungs and
peripheral pulses. I ask about muscle aches and if stable see them in
12 months and do a lipid profile, creatinine, BS, lytes, CK and liver
profile.
Tuesday
Is the same as Monday but with booked patients like people with
cholesterol, blood pressure and diabetes issues. Also we see well
babies and do prenatal visits.
Wednesday
I do my office in the morning from 9 am to 11:30 am. We put in
physicals and counselling here that I haven’t been able to delegate to
social workers or psychologists. This is a good time to do these
things because I am fresh, not rushed and not tired or crazy busy
like at the end of a busy day. I get my secretary to put my toughest
patients first so I am strong and I get the worst over first and it is all
downhill from then on.
At noon I am off for the rest of the day. I do non-medical stuff. No
paperwork or computer work or emails/texts as I have already done
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them. I sign out to another doctor or nurse practitioner and
reciprocate. I turn off my iPhone.
Thursday
Is like Tuesday. I call it TGIT or thank goodness it is Thursday as
my weekend starts at 5 pm. For you younger doctors that still have
to work harder you can work Friday like a Tuesday. I do errands and
chores on Friday and am really off on Saturday and Sunday and can
do anything. If you are young and overwhelmed hire your kids or a
gardener for weekend grass cutting. Pay them, it teaches them how
to budget.
Get a nanny and a house cleaner to help you avoid being crazy busy.
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About the author
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He is medical director of two nursing homes. He is an
Ontario Medical Association Peer Leader and has
spoken world wide on burnout and efficiency 120
times. He has written 309 blogs in the Medical Post
and this is his third book. He is a supervisor for the
College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario and an
expert witness for the Canadian Medical Protective
Association. He has mentored 123 doctors separately
on time and practice management.
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Bibliography
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Patterson, Kerry, (2002) ‘Crucial Conversations’, McGraw-Hill,
New York, New York.
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