Johns Hopkins Obesity Surgery Center Bariatric Center
He was very kind and pleasant. Very understanding and caring of your situation.
It hasn't
very friendly and pleasant
nothing
he really cares about his patients
he does
yes
head on. He told me the risks but he also explained the risk of not having the surgery. But he told me that it is a decision you don't just enter into without being knowlegable.
150%
Both
I would recommend Dr. Schweitzer to everyone. His office and surgical staff are all wonderful. My recovery has even surprised me, 7 days post op I felt as if nothing had even happened. I had been looking into having the surgery done by several doctors over several states. I happened to change PCP in 9/03 who was returning to work from having had the surgery herself. She was very supportive of the surgery but strongly recommended I find a surgeon in MD. She referred me to Dr. Schweitzer and suggested I visit his website. She also said not to expect an appointment for several weeks. I went online to the site, sent an email of my interest in the surgery, had a call from Merry the next day and had a consult with Dr. Schweitzer the next Monday (3/1/04). I also was taken aback by his youthful appearance but was quickly impressed with his professionalism (and surgical history). He told me at the consult that there was a support group mtg the following tuesday where I could meet the psychiatrist, dietician and nurse practioner. I attended, was impressed by everyone and was able to get the phone #'s I needed that night for my dietician and psych eval. I met with the dietician on 4/8/04, Merry sent all of my paperwork on 4/15/04 to the insurance comapany and I got a letter in the mail 4/17/04 that I had 45 days to complete the few things they wanted. I had to change psychiatrists due to the 45 day time limit. My psychiatrist saw me twice and gave me a release on 5/25/04. I faxed the psych eval on 5/25 to the ins. co and Merry called me 2 days later with an approval, but I had to have the surgery within a 60 day period of approval. We scheduled a date of 7/30/04 but Merry called me on 6/26/04 and asked if I could move the date up. So, on 7/23/04 I had the lap RNY surgery. The whole time Merry answered every question I had emailed or phoned her with. Even Dr. Schweitzer responded to an email I sent him the next day.
I liked him a lot. I have only met
with him once. It took over 6 months to get the appointment and when I didn't hear back from his office for almost 3 months I thought i was not going to be accepted. Since I had contacted several other doctors and they wouldn't even give me a first appointment since I would be over 54 by the time their next appointment was available I was really depressed for a while. Then in Janyary the letter arrived with a surgery date and the names of staff I needed to see to get this rolling. the nutritionist, psychologist and the admitting staff have all been very helpful. I guess I was a little surprised that I haven't had to see Dr. Magnuson again, and that setting up appointments for other necessary evaluations was left up to me, but then, it has to be something I am willing to carry through on.
After care was stressed. Living as far from the hospital as I do, I have re;ied on my GP for contacts with several of his other patients and also my local hospital nurse educator for information.
He did tell me that there is a chance of death which probably is about 1% or less. As far as weight loss and rate of recovery, it will depend on my determination and this is not some magic bullet.
I liked him and have heard good things about him. As my surgeon, I want someone I feel is surgically competent first, a pleasant bedside manner is an asset but is secondary.
1st impression-Confident; comfortable
My impression didn't change over time.
Office staff is busy. The patient needs to keep on the ball with the process and respectfully question things.
There was nothing that I liked least about him.
Trust him.
Aftercare is emphasized.
Yes, a structured aftercare program is implemented.
Upfront about the risks of surgery.
Rate of 1-10....a 10
Both his surgical competence and besided manner are equally great.
My first impression of Dr. Schweitzer was that he is a bit brusk and to-the-point, but not unpleasant. Dr. Schweitzer only does bariatric surgery and has so many patients in various stages of the process,initially I felt he sometimes distanced himself a little too much from me. In hindsight though, he has gatekeepers who do a good job of answering routine questions and will take more difficult questions to him. He expects that you visit his webite www.smallscar.com before you consult with him and that you have done your homework about the surgery and about the required aftercare, which is spelled out in his website. In fact, the forms you need for surgery are in the website and must be filled out prior to your consultation. Pat is his Physician's Assistant (PA) and Merry Doss is his secretary. They are the "gatekeepers" of his time and attention, which any surgeon as busy as he is would have to have. Both are pleasant and warm people, and Pat is good at taking care of you too. They both have e-mail and I never had an issue with not getting a reply either on the phone or by e-mail. He's not a real hand-holder type and makes no apologies for it. In fact, the closest he came to being "tender" with me was a post-op visit the day after surgery, but that might have been the morphine too.( LOL) As for my surgery, I have no complaints. I came sailing through with no leaks, no complications, minimal discomfort, etc. He operates out of Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical in Baltimore and has a complete program of pre-surgery visits with psychologist and nutritionist. I did not have any co-morbidities so I did not require any pre-surgery treatments. He has an aftercare program including a regular group meeting, Tuesdays, I believe, but I am 3 hours away from the hospital and so do not attend. I am scheduled to meet with him every three months for one year. And with the nutritionist, Ashli, three times as well.
I asked him point-blank if he had ever lost a patient and he said yes, but added that he was trying to undo another surgery that was botched on a weakened patient. He didn't sweep it aside, he was straightforward, but you could see it bothered him. I think it was the loss of the patient, not the question that troubled him. We then discussed that poor outcomes do happen, even death, but they were often related to co-morbities (extreme diabetes, previous heart attacks, previous poor medical conditions) and extreme morbid obesity (BMI's in the 60's and above) but even so any surgery is a risk.
Let me stop here and say that I believe with all my heart if you are not using a surgeon who does only bariatric surgery, you are shortchanging yourself. Too many docs are trying to do this surgery who don't have the bariatric background and specialization like Dr. Schweitzer and others like him have. And if you do your homework, you will find that many "poor outcomes" are tied to those generalized docs trying to pull off this very technically challenging surgery. Okay. Down off the soapbox.
Overall, I think you cannot top Dr. Schweitzer's technical competence, but touchy-feely he is not and demands his patients be as educated about the WLS choice as is possible. If you are not willing to do the work to educate yourself, I think you will find him very off-putting. But when I literally put my life in his hands he was no-nonsense -- just what I want in a surgeon. Just don't expect Patch Adams.