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January 29, 2020

Maine doctors worst in the US, patient study says

Mainers rate their doctors as the worst in the country, according to a new study.

The state’s physicians received the lowest average score across the nation in the 2020 Patient Sentiment Report, an analysis of feedback from 8.4 million health care consumers by the Medical Group Management Association and provider rating website Healthgrades.

Released Tuesday, the study examined quantitative and qualitative data from the ratings patients gave their doctors, and then scored them on six attributes: bedside manner, communication, skill and care quality, staff, length of office visits, and waiting time for office visits.

The study didn’t reveal specific scores, but provided a ranking of how physicians fared in each state and the District of Columbia. Overall, Maine ranked No. 51. Among the six attributes, the state ranked No. 50 for three: bedside manner, communication and skill and care quality.

The report cautioned that the ratings are based only on patients’ impressions.

“It’s important to note that any patient assessment of a doctor’s skill or care quality is based on personal perception, and that the doctor may have provided expert, high-quality care that did not, for whatever reason, match up with the patient’s individual expectation,” the report said.

Doctors in some other New England states also received poor scores. Massachusetts ranked No. 44; New Hampshire, No. 39; Rhode Island, No. 48; and Vermont, No. 45. But Connecticut physicians got a more positive diagnosis, ranking No. 11.  

New Jersey was the state where physicians received the highest average rating.

In a news release, MGMA President and CEO Halee Fischer-Wright said, “A healthier world is achievable when we in health care understand how to build healthier relationships among physicians, patients and staff. This data demystifies the factors that will elevate patient experience: High-quality care, operational excellence and meaningful communication together build the foundation for the way we want health care to work."

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5 Comments

Anonymous
January 29, 2020

It could be a reflection on the pressure that physicians face to reduce the time spent directly in front of patients. Hospital management everywhere is driving the trend of assembly line healthcare.

Anonymous
January 29, 2020

I think there are not enough doctors and too many patients so frustration becomes high. Maine is the oldest state in the country and with that population, medical care is more apart of one's life. When my primary care doctor was sick on the day I was supposed to have my physical, my rescheduled appointment was FOUR months out. Needing a dermatology appointment, I was told that would be 4-6 months out. That's pretty frustrating.

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