Average rating of the most matched results:
Dr Bobb, Moore hosp, Moore, OK
Waited a month for torn shoulder. Arrived 1 hr. Prior to time. Waited two hours to be seen but dr. never showed. Nurse said he had a late lunch. I left without treatment. Was rated a 2 on internet. Should have checked.
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Charles Moore, Hattiesburg, MS
I went in for A prostatectomy and to stay overnight in hospital. I woke up in recovery and was told I'm going home. Dr. Moore decided to cut A hole in my bladder instead because he had A hard time putting in A catheter. I've been in A diaper ever since because he left me incontinent.
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Dr Moore, OH
Dr Moore was professional yet personable. Very knowledgeable. Explained things well and answered questions. I would highly recommend him if you have neck problems
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Efrin Moore, Hospital Drive, Canton, GA
Dr Moore gave me a script for years. He knew I was a service tech we spoke in detail about t. I needed to have a form signed stating I could perform my job. He said I couldn't. He would not talk to me or make an appt. To work it out. I was out of work for 6 days until my family doctor could help. He does not care. Just another PILL MILL this is very sad.
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Erin Moore, Hospital Drive, Canton, GA
Dr Moore gave me a script for pain. He knew I was a service tech, we spoke in detail about it. I needed to have a paper signed by him to confirm I could perform my job. He said I could not. He would not talk to me or make an appt to work it out. I was off 6 days until my employer could help me. He don't care just "A PILL MILL"
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C. Robert Johnson, 1601 Clint Moore Road, Boca Raton, FL
Dr. Johnson an adequate physician with an incompetent office operation. Practice has grown past it's ability to handle day to day operations. has
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Dr Ari Wirtschafter, 1901 Clint moore Road, Boca Raton, FL
I spent 2.5 years with 3 different ENT specialists who kept telling me I would be fine.Dr. Ari W. told me after the second visit I need surgery. It turned out that I had 2 cancerous polyps that he removed. Thanks to him I am still alive and I have a voice. He is great.
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Dr Klinker, Fort Wayne, IN
The Dr was dismissive, cruel & unprofessional. She retraumatized myself and my family. She lacked professionalism yelling and verbal threatened my mother at hospital in front of my 14 year old daughter. She laughed off the thought I was worried she was mad/agitated with me going into the tests. I will never know but by body feels like she took it out on me. I was left with severe pain inside and outside of my body after tests for days she never addressed. She never checked on me THE PATIENT before being released. She never called or had any call me THE PATIENT to see if I was ok. She dismissed directives from my psychiatrist in spite of the ENTIRE other medical staff following directives. I am completely disappointed that she does not exemplify Parkviews standards of being trauma informed and trauma responsive.
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Marwan Dib, Weston, WI
Dr. Dib may very well be a good doctor. It’s hard to tell because he will only show you the “stage” version of his professional demeanor. From the minute he walks into a room, he’s in entertainment mode, and that is all you will ever see… unless you criticize him. Well, in a minute... My wife, Donna, developed an atrial fibrillation, which is what brought us to Dr. Dib. To be fair, he was very thorough in making sure that she had no parallel conditions that might lead to stroke during the electrical cardioconversion procedure he planned to perform. However, when I asked him (at least a couple of times) what happens if this procedure fails, all we ever got was, “You will be fine, we don’t need to worry about what comes next, we will fix your heart for you,” with a tone like a parent annoyed with a child asking too many questions. As a result of this “I will take care of you,” fog, we were taken completely by surprise when Donna had to be admitted to the hospital, after three attempts failed to shock her heart back into a proper rhythm. The next step, it now became known to us, was to administer a drug through IV for 24 hours, to accomplish what the shocking couldn’t. Had Dr. Dib answered our questions, we would have been ready for this. Instead, we were totally unprepared and I had to make an extra trip (100 miles, round-trip). Hospital admission after this procedure is not common, but not rare, either. Dr. Dib should have explained this possibility to us before the procedure. Dr. Dib likes to play practical jokes, at your expense, as part of his presentation. Some people like this, I hear. We didn’t. For example, at our first office visit, he spent a few minutes talking perfunctorily about the procedure, then grabbed a pair of rubber gloves and told Donna to get on the table for her “rectal exam.” Huh? After we fumbled a few confused words about this, he smiled and told us it was just a joke. We were trying to listen carefully to what he was saying, trying not to miss anything, when he tossed in this ridiculous “humor,” knocking us completely off-balance, just to satisfy his sense of showmanship. This left us squirming in our chairs, wondering how we should respond to anything he was saying. Joke? Medical information? Hard to tell. Clearly, though, the jokes were more important than offering substantial answers to serious questions, several of which were still hanging when he walked out of the room. Time, and time again, he would respond to technical questions with deflecting, condescending “reassurances,” failing to offer any information. The final insult came at discharge. The intravenous procedure ended at noon, the next day, and we were told that Dr. Dib would be in thereafter to finalize the discharge. Even though we were told, repeatedly, that he was “on the floor” and would be in to see us “shortly,” it was 3 ½ hours later that he finally walked in the room, said in the most off-hand way, “Oh, I see that you are fine; you can go,” and started walking out. At this point, I lost my temper, a bit, and asked him if there were some medical reason that required us to wait over three hours, at the end of a completely unexpected hospital stay, for this 5-second proclamation, and why weren’t we told about the possibility of hospitalization before hand? He did not take this criticism well. After a few more words, he told me that “You (meaning me) needed to find a new cardiologist,” and stormed out of the room. The problem with this is that I didn’t need a cardiologist, Donna did. She had nothing to do with the discussion that Dr. Dib and I had about his behavior. In fact, she did not approve of my interference (rightly so; it was her procedure). Yet Dr. Dib dismissed her without the slightest recognition that she was a different person, his patient, and had made no verbal quarrel with him. Subsequent attempts to bring this logical fallacy to his attention elicited no response. His sense of pride turned out to be much more important to him than fidelity to the Hippocratic Oath. In my opinion, Dr. Dib failed to provide good medical care for us. He repeatedly failed to answer technical questions, substituting his version of humor and condescending dismissal, all of which left us confused about what to expect, and unprepared for the hospital stay. When confronted with this inadequacy, he displayed childish arrogance, which is unacceptable anywhere, but much more so when it comes from someone you hope you can trust with you r life. He refused to follow through his obligation to provide medical care to his patient, all because he didn’t like the patient’s spouse. I recommend that prospective patients look elsewhere for a cardiologist, unless you enjoy being the butt of crude jokes, are ok with inadequate information about the treatment you seek, and don’t mind a capricious attitude toward your needs as a patient.
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