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Primary care doesn’t mean lower pay,
alum says
Addiction medicine a “niche”
subspecialty of family medicine

By Richard Heck
April 22, 2009
Forget
the perception that entering a primary
care specialty means lower pay, Ohio
University Heritage College of Osteopathic
Medicine students learned from a
visiting alumnus during a Minority
Health Month lecture.
“The
whole notion that if you go into primary
care you will not do well financially is
not true,” advised Robert Polite, D.O.
(’99). “No matter the specialty, you
can do as well as you want to, and be
busy as you want to.”
Polite,
who currently has a private practice in
family medicine in Columbus, also
subspecializes in addiction medicine,
which he became interested in after
leaving his family medicine residency at
Mt. Carmel Health Systems in 2002. He
spoke to students Tuesday, April 21.
Besides his private practice, Polite
practices addiction medicine at two
Columbus-area agencies--Maryhaven Drug
and Rehabilitation Center and CompDrug--and
the Recovery Center in Lancaster, Ohio.
Forgoing a formal lecture format, Polite
told the students to keep an open mind
and to learn as much as possible about
themselves and many specialties while on
rotations. “I learned a lot about myself
during rotations, and medical school
will challenge you to find out about
yourself,” he said.
Set
upon becoming a surgeon after
graduation, Polite described how, during
his third and fourth years and his
internship at St. Vincent Mercy Medical
Center in Toledo, he discovered that
life as a surgeon was not suited to
either his personality or his life as he
had envisioned it.
“I love
to talk to people and am a family
physician in my heart,” Polite said. “I
reluctantly went into a family medicine
residency, but it grew on me. I figured
out late who I was.”
Encouraged to subspecialize in addiction
medicine, Polite found his calling.
“I’ve helped people get off drugs,
managed to keep people out of jail and
saved a lot of lives,” he said.
Addiction is a serious problem today,
Polite said. “It is a huge problem, a
secret that America has--and is swept
under the rug,” he said, noting that a
lot of the patients he treats are using
prescription medicines often prescribed
by fellow doctors.
He
estimated that more than 85 percent of
his patients are Caucasian males, many
in high powered positions such as chief
executive officers, lawyers and business
owners who have become addicted on
prescription drugs. “You are going to
see a lot of addiction,” he said,
advising the future physicians to look
for the warning signs of addiction in
not only their patients, but their
colleagues as well.
Polite
also advised students to learn as much
about the business of medicine as
possible, which can contribute to making
a good living even in primary care
specialties. “But you have to have a
good business mind,” he said.
In his
own case, Polite’s private practice is
based upon “fee for service,” meaning he
does not accept private insurance and
instead maintains a sliding scale flat
fee for services. Patients then can seek
reimbursement from their insurance
providers. As such, Polite said, he can
take time to get to know and talk with
his patients, who in turn help generate
additional business.
“I call
it the ‘Marcus Welby, M.D.’ approach,
and people love it,” Polite said,
referring to the popular 1970s
television show of the same name about a
folksy family physician. “When you have
the time to take care of people right,
word gets around fast. If you talk to
your patients, they love it.”
The
business model also contributes to a
quality lifestyle, Polite noted. “I
enjoy my life.”
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