Health
Related: About this forumWith few MDs practicing in rural areas, a different type of doctor is filling the gap
For 35 years, this town's residents have brought all manner of illnesses, aches, and worries to Kevin de Regnier's storefront clinic on the courthouse square and he loves them for it.
De Regnier is an osteopathic physician who chose to run a family practice in a small community. Many of his patients have been with him for years. Many have chronic health problems, such as diabetes, high blood pressure, or mental health struggles, which he helps manage before they become critical.
"I just decided I'd rather prevent fires than put them out," he said between appointments on a recent afternoon.
Broad swaths of rural America don't have enough primary care physicians, partly because many medical doctors prefer to work in highly paid specialty positions in cities. In many small towns, osteopathic doctors like de Regnier are helping fill the gap.
Osteopathic physicians, commonly known as DOs, go to separate medical schools from medical doctors, known as MDs. Their courses include lessons on how to physically manipulate the body to ease discomfort. But their training is otherwise comparable, leaders in both wings of the profession say.
Both types of doctors are licensed to practice the full range of medicine, and many patients would find little difference between them aside from the initials listed after their names.
https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2023/06/05/1179738395/with-few-mds-practicing-in-rural-areas-a-different-type-of-doctor-is-filling-the
I've worked with a lot of DOs and gone to more than one, and honestly prefer a good one to an MD as a PCP. They tend not to rush you, and are likely to listen the way nurse practitioners do. It's in the training.
badhair77
(4,645 posts)competent than some MDs in town. Hes reaching retirement age and his son is planning to join him then replace him as he retires, just as he did with his father. I have a lot of confidence in him.
marble falls
(62,394 posts)...
Joking aside,
I have a DO for my primary physician at VA. She actually listens to me and she's very thorough. No 'just in case' prescriptions. I'm in very good hands.
Chainfire
(17,757 posts)No Vested Interest
(5,201 posts)according to local newspapers.