Personal Data
Current
Mailing Address
Ronald
DeVere
607
Eagle
Email
Address: rdevere@autin.rr.com
Present
Activity Status: Working
Tell
us about your community activities:
My wife and I are in a golf Club play once a week. We are in a wine
tasting Group once a month; I have a 26 foot sail boat and sail regularly on a
local lake. I ride a road bike, 4-5 times a week for exercise.
Family
Status: Married with children and
grandchildren.
Professional Experience
What
path has your career taken since your residency? Include military
service, private practice, academic career, teaching and research
accomplishments.
I
have been in private practice since 1974, in
Other
accomplishments:
President of the
Board
of Director Southeast Texas Chapter of the Alzheimer Association from 1996-2002
Elected to Governor of Texas council on Alzheimers
Disease –just appointed for a 3 year term.
Fellow of the American
Diplomat American Academy Electrodiagnostic medicine
1998
Fellow of
Residency Recollections
We
are interested in anecdotes and experiences from your residency years.
Include interactions among fellow residents and teaching staff.
What
I liked best was the great academic environment of the residency program, it was very friendly among the staff and
residents. Dr. Bakers medical student lectures
and his Saturday morning rounds were a highlight.
Looking
back, would you do it again? What would you change?
I
would do it the same without hesitation. I would place more emphasis on
outpatient neurology disorders because of health insurance rules and the
difference in hospital usage at this time we have seen a flip were neurology
use to be 80% hospital and 20% outpatient it is not the opposite.
Additional Thoughts
Share
your thoughts regarding the changes in medicine since your residency. In
your opinion, is Neurology positioned well for the future?
Neurology
has shifted to the outpatient manly because of health insurance payment structures
and managed care medicine which is much more cost efficient. Neurology
has had to continue to fight it and to get appropriate testing and treatment of
patients. From 1990 to 2002 the fight was very difficult. It
appears in the last 2-3 years the fight is much less. The reimbursement
issue has been a real problem for neurology over the last 10 years worse in the
last 3 to 4. Because of the rising office expense (more help to run the
office) and lower reimbursement Neurologist have become “Family Practice
Doctors.” That is they are seeing 20 to 40 patients a day to make a
living. That result in shorter neuroevalutations,
and because of this rushing more errors and mistakes are produced. One
neurologist told me that he would rather see 4 headache patients than one
dementia case; he was referring to the lack of time and reimbursement.
Neurologists like other specialists are freely using Nurse Practitioners and
physician’s assistants to speed up the office practice and see more
patients. The one to one patient relationship is slowly being
eroded. The Neurology Expertise will not be changed but the Neurologist
may be doomed to see many more patients. Do more procedures and spend
less time with patients to make a living.