Sometimes the bottleneck is not the diagnosis: it’s access.
- mauricio41494
- 3 abr
- 1 Min. de lectura
It is not always about “they won’t see me.” Very often it is: “they will see me, but access keeps getting delayed” (authorizations, treatments, care pathways). For non-urgent cases, that wait feels like constant friction.
In Canada and the U.S., the conversation around wait times includes not only “seeing the specialist,” but also access to treatment pathways (availability, authorizations, scheduling, and continuity of care).
· How to regain control (without giving clinical advice):Align with your physician on the objective: diagnosis, treatment plan, or procedure.
· Have your documentation ready (test results, medical history, meds).
· Define decision criteria: “if X happens, we do Y.”
At CHM, we do not “sell procedures”; we operate as an executive coordination partner to reduce logistical friction:
· Scheduling and logistics with no blind spots.
· Defined clinical objective aligned with your physician.
· Complete and shareable medical record.
· Follow-up plan.
Three practices that increase clarity:
· Defined objective for each stage (diagnosis → plan → execution)
· Consolidated medical record to avoid duplication.
· Decision criteria agreed upon with your medical team.
CHM does not provide medical advice. Consult your physician / seek a second opinion.
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