When the Doctor Needs Your Help - The Life of a Hotel Doctor

Almost every hotel guest is working or taking an expensive vacation, so illness is more inconvenient than usual. Everyone agrees that doctors have no magical powers…. except… maybe… if you really need them…..

Almost every hotel guest is working or taking an expensive vacation, so illness is more inconvenient than usual. Everyone agrees that doctors have no magical powers…. except… maybe… if you really need them…..

What if you're scheduled to deliver an important speech or attend a wedding or visit Disneyland, and you absolutely can't be sick? In that urgent situation, a smart doctor might come up with a cure that he or she keeps in reserve for such situations.

Doctors love to help you, but they also want you to feel helped. If we do our best, but you're unhappy, that hurts more than you realize.

So if you want the doctor to prescribe a placebo make it absolutely clear that you will be disappointed unless you get "something."

This happens so often that many doctors assume every patient yearns for magic. That's why, for example, giving useless antibiotics for respiratory infections is not a sign of incompetence. Sometime good doctors can't resist.

Really, I don't hold anything back for especially deserving patients. It sounds odd, but if you don't want a placebo, let the doctor know. Say something like "I just want to know what's going on. If a prescription won't help, that's fine with me."

That sounds like you're telling the doctor how to do his job, but many need your help.

Operations & Strategy USA & Canada United States

In his regular column "The Life of a Hotel Doctor", Mike Oppenheim shares remarkable stories around visiting hotel guests as a doctor. When he began as a hotel doctor during the 1980s, only luxury hotels had a “house doctor,” usually a local practitioner who did it as a sideline.

In his regular column "The Life of a Hotel Doctor", Mike Oppenheim shares remarkable stories around visiting hotel guests as a doctor. When he began as a hotel doctor during the 1980s, only luxury hotels had a “house doctor,” usually a local practitioner who did it as a sideline. Nowadays, in a large city even the lowliest motel receives blandishments from a dozen individuals plus several agencies that send moonlighting doctors if they can find...

Comments

Comments for this content

0 comments available
Loading comments...