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FORMER VA DOCTOR REVIVES OLD TRADITION IN
PRIVATE
PRACTICE: THE HOUSE CALL -- "What has been
amazing is
the tremendous amount of interest. This is a
huge need."

Dr. Gary Oberlender talks with Del
Low at his home in Roanoke County. Oberlender is providing a new
service for the elderly in the community by offering holistic
medical care. (photo: Jeanna Duerscherl / The Roanoke Times) |
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http://www.roanoke
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Story below:
-------------------------
Meta medicine
Dr. Gary Oberlender's new service tries to
offer a unified view of older patients' many medical concerns.
By Jessica Marcy
981-3340
Dr. Gary Oberlender talks with Del Low at his
home in Roanoke County. Oberlender is providing a new service for the
elderly in the community by offering holistic medical care.
Dr. Gary Oberlender heard a repeated complaint when he worked as a
geriatrician and internist at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in
Salem.
"I like my doctor; he just doesn't have the time."
Or, "I have several doctors, but I just get the feeling that no one is
bringing it all together."
When he retired in September 2006, Oberlender decided to create a unique
service to respond to senior citizens' needs. He made it even more
unusual by basing it exclusively on a venerable medical tradition: the
house call.
He started his own practice providing in-home comprehensive geriatric
evaluations. He also performs independent medical evaluations for estate
planning as well as other medical and legal procedures.
"What has been amazing is the tremendous amount of interest," Oberlender
said. "This is a huge need."
As the elderly population has grown, so has the need to care for this
group's special medical issues. Many seniors see various specialists to
manage a combination of chronic illnesses such as diabetes and dementia.
They often take a confusing array of medications and struggle with both
physical and psychological ailments.
Despite the need, geriatricians are few and far between.
In the Roanoke Valley there are fewer than a dozen, according to Martha
Anderson of Carilion's Center for Healthy Aging. Anderson said the
number of doctors who make house calls is probably the same as the
number of geriatricians.
"Geriatrics as a field is in its baby stages," Oberlender said, adding
that the specialty only became board certified in 1988.
Providing medical care to the elderly offers its own unique challenges
and rewards.
Oberlender knows that firsthand after working 21 years at the VA
hospital, where he served as both director of the Geriatric Evaluation
Unit and medical director of the Extended Care Rehabilitation Center.
Modern medicine's acute-care model has trouble dealing with seniors, he
said. The model seeks to find a diagnosis quickly, but seniors often
deal with combinations of cognitive and affective disorders that require
time to assess.
Oberlender described how primary care doctors are locked into a
production model that has them seeing patients for an average of 15
minutes. After that amount of time in his own practice, he said, he's
just finished with introductions.
Oberlender said Medicare will reimburse approximately 50 percent of the
$1,250 fee for his comprehensive evaluation.
Oberlender emphasizes the need to focus on the caregivers of elderly
patients as well. Because he makes house calls, he can see firsthand how
patients and caregivers interact. He often makes recommendations on
support groups or health care sitters who can come into the home.
Oberlender sees himself as an adjunct to a primary care doctor. He sees
one or two patients a month, and before a visit, he asks for the
patient's medical history from the past 12 to 18 months. He typically
spends two to three hours on his first visit, then writes up the case
after he gets home. Then he takes a couple of days to a week to make an
assessment.
When he finishes, he gives one report to the caregiver or patient and
another one to the doctor.
"I sleep on it. I think about it," Oberlender said. "I'm going to take
as long as it takes."
One of Oberlender's patients, Del Low, 87, described what he enjoys
about Oberlender's care. "Good, open, clean communication and active
interest in my needs unfettered by time constraints," he said.
Oberlender said he enjoys having enough time to really listen to his
patients' stories.
It was an interest he developed when he first moved to Southwestern
Virginia in his 20s and worked in a rural community for two years, at
Bland County Medical Clinic. As the only doctor in a region with 6,000
people, he often got to listen to the stories of older patients.
Later, at the VA hospital, he cared for a 101-year-old man whose parents
were both freed slaves. "For me to feel history like that was so
amazing," he said.
His parents, Betty and Martin Oberlender, are both Holocaust survivors
who had their stories recorded and videotaped for Steven Spielberg's
Shoah Foundation.
"I love talking to older people who can give you firsthand accounts of
lives years ago."
-------------------------
Larry Scott --