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Addressing doctors by their first names



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  #11  
Old Sep 29, 2004, 06:46 PM
Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2004

I always address the doc by Dr. last name. I work night shift and we have no connections to docs in private activities during the days and feel that they deserve respect in the working enviornment. BUT maybe some docs REALLY like to be called by first name.

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  #12  
Old Sep 29, 2004, 06:50 PM
Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2003

How silly! I agree...I'm a professional also so perhaps all the docs should address me professionally - i.e. Mrs. Smith? Or maybe I need a title? Wizardress PJ?

I wonder....if I should get a Ph.D. in something like horticulture - would they have to address me as Doctor?

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  #13  
Old Sep 29, 2004, 07:01 PM
ktwlpn's Avatar
ktwlpn (Female)
Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2000

Yeah,well-The chief of staff in our LTC expects us to open every chart and hold out each verbal order for him to sign...Whenever we get lab results,etc that are not within normal limits we call him but he signs the slips when he makes his rounds.He readily admits that he does NOT read the stuff-he says we are responsible for pointing out any borderline results to him...I don't do it...some of the staff will lay the charts out open on the desk-I am certain that is a privacy violation.I make sure I am busy with meds or treatments-I let him know I am available if he needs me and if I need him to see a resident I let him know but I think he is quite capable of picking UP a chart and OPENING it.....bozo....

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  #14  
Old Sep 29, 2004, 08:21 PM
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Join Date: Mar 2003

Micromanagement at it's finest...sheesh!

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  #15  
Old Sep 29, 2004, 08:37 PM
traumaRUs's Avatar
Administrator
Join Date: Apr 2000

At our ER - I usually call docs by their first name and they address me that way too. I certainly don't call them by their first name (usually) when I'm in a room with them but I've been known to do that too. I have an unusual and hard to prounounce last name so if they addressed me as Mrs. XYZ I probably wouldn't understand them anyway - lol.

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  #16  
Old Sep 29, 2004, 09:23 PM
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2000

I don't call them by their first names in the presence of patients, but do the rest of the time if we are familiar. If we don't know eachother well, I use dr. I only knew one doc who didn't want nurses to use his first name, so I insisted he call me Nurse _____ (insert last name here). And he did

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  #17  
Old Sep 29, 2004, 10:03 PM
Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2004

I think that a formal policy of requiring nurses to address their physician colleagues in the formal Dr. ______ is outrageous and insulting. We are all human beings with dignity and self-worth. It is even more insulting if the hospital does not require the physicians to address their nurse colleagues as Nurse_____ or Mr./Ms.________.
I simply could never work for such an institution.

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  #18  
Old Sep 29, 2004, 10:07 PM
cheerfuldoer's Avatar
cheerfuldoer (Female)
John 3:16
Join Date: Sep 2001

I see nothing wrong with addressing anyone by their first name AS LONG AS that particular person is okay with it. I've called doctors by their first name. Heck...if the hospital you work at wants to be THAT particular, then insist the doctors call you Nurse So-and-So. They became doctors that is why they are referred to as Dr. So-and-So. WE became nurses, so we deserve a professional title of respect as well.


I swear....women in the work force think of such stupid things to further
demoralize one another. Why have the power to vote for women's rights if all we are going to do is turn around and abolish them with slave mentality as this? I rest my humble opinion.

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  #19  
Old Sep 29, 2004, 10:36 PM
P_RN's Avatar
Super Moderator
Join Date: May 2000

Have any of you looked into what lead to this policy. Is there a new CEO throwing his weight around? Or perhaps a staff physician got his knickers in a twist? Have the doctors you know offered any opinions about drafting a letter to the powers that be (TPTB) about how silly they feel this is?

I have seen silly things that fell by the wayside when the truth came out. One was the nurses couldn't sit on one side of the desk for the 1st 4 hours of their shift. DUH.....so I could sit there 11a-3p but the 2nd shifters had to wait til 7p before they could sit? Then there was the no calling the hospital operator for extensions. That fell apart when TPTB were informed that a phone book hadn't been issued in nearly 10 years.

See if you can get a letter, petition or whatever started. If you get written up.....fight it. Make them show that the doc in discussion objected to first name calling. Sheesh.....

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  #20  
Old Sep 29, 2004, 11:03 PM
talaxandra's Avatar
Eternal student
Join Date: May 2002

Originally Posted by zenman
Make sure that management does not hear you then. Once a supervisor told me that she did not want to catch any of us reading on the night shift. I asked her if she would always call first before coming on the unit and she said, "Ok!"
A salutory reminder that those who enforce stupid policies don't necessarily agree with said policies!
With the exception of consultants (and not even always then) all our docs are referred to by their first names. I might say to a patient "I've just called the doctor" or "the doctor's here to see you", but they then say "Hi Mrs Brown, I'm Donna, the doctor on call tonight."
I'm with P_RN - I wonder where this bizarre policy came from.

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