Dear Annie: I wanted to share my response to the column in which the reader had called the doctor by her first name.
I am a female physician myself and was surprised not only by the content of the original column but also, to a lesser degree, by your response.
In all my years (nearly 20) of medical school, residency, fellowship, teaching residents as an attending physician, and my personal practice of medicine, I have never known of patients addressing their doctors as anything but “Dr. Last Name.”
When I was a physician in training (i.e., resident or fellow), we always addressed our attending physicians as “Dr. Last Name,” and I never assumed that it was ever acceptable to use their first name.
Female physicians are in a unique and particularly frustrating -- sexist? -- position in which we are more likely to be addressed without our proper title by almost anyone.
In my particular specialty, I interact frequently with law enforcement, attorneys, family members of my patients, laboratory personnel, etc.
Quite frequently, my female colleagues and I are addressed by our first name only (gathered only through it being in our email address or part of our full names in the email signature, followed by “M.D.”) or “Ms. Last Name” at work.
Our male colleagues rarely, if ever, experience this, as they are always addressed with their title.
Sadly, this is a common experience for female physicians in general, which has been previously studied and documented. We worked just as hard, if not harder, to earn that title, and when we are interacting with someone in our professional capacity as a physician, it’s simply disrespectful, unprofessional and very dismissive to ignore that title.
Being friends or neighbors with a physician doesn’t change the etiquette and consideration to any other doctor who is treating you in their professional capacity as a physician. -- Dr. With a Last Name
Dear Doctor: Thank you for taking the time to share your views with our readers.
We will all profit from reading your letter and understanding your perspective, which is based on many years of dedication to helping patients.
We salute you and agree that you should never be addressed by your first name by a patient unless you ask them to use your first name.
You have earned the title of Doctor.
Stories by Annie Lane
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