A worried mother phoned, asking me to see her
two year-old who had a fever of 101.
I’d seen the child two days earlier. He had a
101 fever but was not particularly sick, and my exam was normal. I diagnosed a
virus, handed over a bottle of Tylenol, and told the mother he might feel under
the weather for two or three or four days.
Patients often call after a few days to tell
me the illness hasn’t gone away. Sometimes they report a new symptom that gives
me pause, but mostly nothing has changed. That was the case this time, so I
reassured the mother. Another housecall wasn’t necessary.
People rarely argue with a doctor, so the
mother did not disagree with my reassurance. But worry is contagious. No one is
perfect, and there was a tiny chance that something terrible was brewing up.
I could have relieved my mind by sending them
to a clinic. The doctor would find nothing and reassure the mother. If
something terrible happened later, he was the last doctor she had seen, and I
would be off the hook. But I didn’t do that, so I worried.