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Mrs. Stevens has migraines. Fortunately, they’re well controlled on nortriptyline, and she’s never had side effects from it. She’s taken it for more than 20 years now.

In that time she and I have had a strange, slow-motion, waltz.

Dr. Allan M. Block, a neurologist in Scottsdale, Arizona.
Dr. Allan M. Block

In spite of the medicine helping her, she stops it on her own roughly twice a year, never calling my office in advance. Sometimes it’s to see if the headaches come back (they always do). Other times it’s because of something she read online, or a friend told her, or she overheard in the grocery checkout line.

Whatever the reason, her migraines always come back within a week, and then she calls my office for an urgent appointment.

I’ve never really understood this, as I know her history and am happy to just tell her to restart the medication and call it in. But, for whatever reason, the return of her migraines is something that she wants to discuss with me in person. Since it’s usually a pretty brief visit, my secretary puts her on the schedule and I get paid to tell her what could have been handled by phone. I’m not complaining. I have to make a living, too.

But still, it makes me wonder. She can’t be the only patient out there who does this. Multiply that by the number of doctors, the cost of visits, the time she takes off from work to come in ... it adds up.

The consequences of noncompliance in migraineurs certainly aren’t as bad – or as expensive – as those for seizure patients, but they aren’t minor either.

So why does this happen?

Believe me, for the past 20 years I’ve spent these occasional visits reminding Mrs. Stevens about the importance of sticking with her medication and calling my office if she has questions. She agrees to, but when she’s thinking about stopping nortriptyline ... she still does it and only tells me after the fact.

I can’t change human nature, or at least not hers. And when multiplied by many like her, it creates entirely unnecessary costs on our health care system. I wish there were a way to stop it.

Dr. Block has a solo neurology practice in Scottsdale, Ariz.

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Mrs. Stevens has migraines. Fortunately, they’re well controlled on nortriptyline, and she’s never had side effects from it. She’s taken it for more than 20 years now.

In that time she and I have had a strange, slow-motion, waltz.

Dr. Allan M. Block, a neurologist in Scottsdale, Arizona.
Dr. Allan M. Block

In spite of the medicine helping her, she stops it on her own roughly twice a year, never calling my office in advance. Sometimes it’s to see if the headaches come back (they always do). Other times it’s because of something she read online, or a friend told her, or she overheard in the grocery checkout line.

Whatever the reason, her migraines always come back within a week, and then she calls my office for an urgent appointment.

I’ve never really understood this, as I know her history and am happy to just tell her to restart the medication and call it in. But, for whatever reason, the return of her migraines is something that she wants to discuss with me in person. Since it’s usually a pretty brief visit, my secretary puts her on the schedule and I get paid to tell her what could have been handled by phone. I’m not complaining. I have to make a living, too.

But still, it makes me wonder. She can’t be the only patient out there who does this. Multiply that by the number of doctors, the cost of visits, the time she takes off from work to come in ... it adds up.

The consequences of noncompliance in migraineurs certainly aren’t as bad – or as expensive – as those for seizure patients, but they aren’t minor either.

So why does this happen?

Believe me, for the past 20 years I’ve spent these occasional visits reminding Mrs. Stevens about the importance of sticking with her medication and calling my office if she has questions. She agrees to, but when she’s thinking about stopping nortriptyline ... she still does it and only tells me after the fact.

I can’t change human nature, or at least not hers. And when multiplied by many like her, it creates entirely unnecessary costs on our health care system. I wish there were a way to stop it.

Dr. Block has a solo neurology practice in Scottsdale, Ariz.

Mrs. Stevens has migraines. Fortunately, they’re well controlled on nortriptyline, and she’s never had side effects from it. She’s taken it for more than 20 years now.

In that time she and I have had a strange, slow-motion, waltz.

Dr. Allan M. Block, a neurologist in Scottsdale, Arizona.
Dr. Allan M. Block

In spite of the medicine helping her, she stops it on her own roughly twice a year, never calling my office in advance. Sometimes it’s to see if the headaches come back (they always do). Other times it’s because of something she read online, or a friend told her, or she overheard in the grocery checkout line.

Whatever the reason, her migraines always come back within a week, and then she calls my office for an urgent appointment.

I’ve never really understood this, as I know her history and am happy to just tell her to restart the medication and call it in. But, for whatever reason, the return of her migraines is something that she wants to discuss with me in person. Since it’s usually a pretty brief visit, my secretary puts her on the schedule and I get paid to tell her what could have been handled by phone. I’m not complaining. I have to make a living, too.

But still, it makes me wonder. She can’t be the only patient out there who does this. Multiply that by the number of doctors, the cost of visits, the time she takes off from work to come in ... it adds up.

The consequences of noncompliance in migraineurs certainly aren’t as bad – or as expensive – as those for seizure patients, but they aren’t minor either.

So why does this happen?

Believe me, for the past 20 years I’ve spent these occasional visits reminding Mrs. Stevens about the importance of sticking with her medication and calling my office if she has questions. She agrees to, but when she’s thinking about stopping nortriptyline ... she still does it and only tells me after the fact.

I can’t change human nature, or at least not hers. And when multiplied by many like her, it creates entirely unnecessary costs on our health care system. I wish there were a way to stop it.

Dr. Block has a solo neurology practice in Scottsdale, Ariz.

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