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Coverage Gaps and Ownership Mentality
Are unplanned absences quietly straining your practice more than you realize?
In a smaller private practice, even one physician out can create ripple effects across scheduling, workflow, and patient experience. In this episode, Don shares a candid look at what happens when a four-doctor practice temporarily loses one provider to paternity leave—while another is briefly sick. The result? Overloaded schedules, disrupted routines, and subtle but meaningful stress on care delivery.
He breaks down the operational realities: managing overflow follow-ups, compressing 10-minute slots, covering nail care days, and balancing quality with efficiency—even with the support of a scribe. More importantly, he challenges associates and future partners to think beyond “time off policies” and consider the ownership mindset: how reliability, availability, and coverage impact revenue, culture, and long-term opportunity in a smaller group.
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Timestamps
[00:00] Practice Update and Current Strain
A fourth doctor out on paternity leave, another briefly sick—how quickly a four-doctor practice feels stretched thin.
[01:15] The Good: Scribes and Maintaining Quality
How a scribe helps preserve patient interaction and care quality despite increased volume.
[02:05] The Scheduling Squeeze
20-minute visits, added 10-minute slots, and the difficulty of absorbing another doctor’s follow-ups without running behind.
[03:10] Routine Care Disruptions
Covering nail care days and how small workflow changes add stress and reduce perceived quality.
[04:20] Medical Leave vs. Business Reality
The ownership dilemma: respecting leave policies while recognizing daily revenue impact ($4,000–$5,000 per doctor per day).
[05:35] Evaluating Associates and Partners
Why reliability, sick time usage, and time-off patterns matter more in smaller practices than large group or HMO settings.
[06:45] Ownership Mentality in Action
A story from early career: going the extra mile to avoid missing clinic—and how that influenced partnership perception.
[08:00] Final Reflection: Balancing Time Off and Responsibility
The tension between personal time and business sustainability—and why awareness matters.
⸻
Key Takeaway
In a small practice, every physician-day materially impacts revenue, workflow, and patient care—so hiring and partnership decisions should factor in reliability, coverage planning, and true ownership mindset.
⸻
Conclusion
If this resonates with your experience—either as an owner or an associate—consider how your practice handles coverage, leave policies, and expectations around ownership. What systems could reduce strain when someone is out? Share your thoughts or challenges, and let’s continue the discussion.
By Don Pelto, DPM5
1515 ratings
Coverage Gaps and Ownership Mentality
Are unplanned absences quietly straining your practice more than you realize?
In a smaller private practice, even one physician out can create ripple effects across scheduling, workflow, and patient experience. In this episode, Don shares a candid look at what happens when a four-doctor practice temporarily loses one provider to paternity leave—while another is briefly sick. The result? Overloaded schedules, disrupted routines, and subtle but meaningful stress on care delivery.
He breaks down the operational realities: managing overflow follow-ups, compressing 10-minute slots, covering nail care days, and balancing quality with efficiency—even with the support of a scribe. More importantly, he challenges associates and future partners to think beyond “time off policies” and consider the ownership mindset: how reliability, availability, and coverage impact revenue, culture, and long-term opportunity in a smaller group.
⸻
Timestamps
[00:00] Practice Update and Current Strain
A fourth doctor out on paternity leave, another briefly sick—how quickly a four-doctor practice feels stretched thin.
[01:15] The Good: Scribes and Maintaining Quality
How a scribe helps preserve patient interaction and care quality despite increased volume.
[02:05] The Scheduling Squeeze
20-minute visits, added 10-minute slots, and the difficulty of absorbing another doctor’s follow-ups without running behind.
[03:10] Routine Care Disruptions
Covering nail care days and how small workflow changes add stress and reduce perceived quality.
[04:20] Medical Leave vs. Business Reality
The ownership dilemma: respecting leave policies while recognizing daily revenue impact ($4,000–$5,000 per doctor per day).
[05:35] Evaluating Associates and Partners
Why reliability, sick time usage, and time-off patterns matter more in smaller practices than large group or HMO settings.
[06:45] Ownership Mentality in Action
A story from early career: going the extra mile to avoid missing clinic—and how that influenced partnership perception.
[08:00] Final Reflection: Balancing Time Off and Responsibility
The tension between personal time and business sustainability—and why awareness matters.
⸻
Key Takeaway
In a small practice, every physician-day materially impacts revenue, workflow, and patient care—so hiring and partnership decisions should factor in reliability, coverage planning, and true ownership mindset.
⸻
Conclusion
If this resonates with your experience—either as an owner or an associate—consider how your practice handles coverage, leave policies, and expectations around ownership. What systems could reduce strain when someone is out? Share your thoughts or challenges, and let’s continue the discussion.

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