Dr. Wissman continues, “As an independent practice, I was not confined to see just one type of patient or restricted to take only private insurance. I also have more flexibility to plan services and find resources that help make an impact on the community, and meet the needs of my patient population on a larger scale—and I don’t have to ask for anyone’s permission.”
Within the scope of his private practice, Dr. Wissman is also dedicated to best serving underprivileged communities, particularly Latinx communities. “Our population is almost 80% Spanish-speaking. There’s the language part of my job that’s essential, but also cultural competency,” he explains. “In our population we’re also looking at Latinx roots, things like home remedies. When we say Latinx that’s a huge diaspora of folks—a Peruvian, Puerto Rican, or El Salvadorian family will have hugely different relationships with the medical world and culture around health. There are cultures embedded with a rightful distrust of the U.S. medical system. We simply can’t think of everyone in one big group.”
Dr. Wissman also experienced some push factors in the form of burnout and lack of independence. “Before Covid, I was in a place in my career where I was seeing 30 or more patients a day, and it felt like a grind. I didn’t have enough time with each patient, and was getting tired. I sometimes felt I was missing some kind of challenge or spark in my work.”
He continues, “It was during that time that I realized if I was going to open an independent practice, this would be the moment.” Dr. Wissman isn’t an outlier in reporting the phenomenon of “the grind.” Burnout is defined as chronic stress leading to emotional exhaustion, cynicism, feelings of ineffectiveness and lack of accomplishment, or detachment from patients, work, and family, according to the AAP. In 2019, 41% of pediatricians reported feeling burned out, with these numbers coming in even higher for female physicians.1
For Dr. Wissman, pursuing independent practice offered an inroad to managing burnout on his own terms. “I kept finding myself thinking: ‘If I had my own practice, I would do x, y or z,’” Dr. Wissman explains. So he capitalized on this motivation and began to lay the groundwork for opening his independent practice. But Wissman quickly realized that opening his own practice would be, in his words, a “leap of faith, because I didn’t have any sort of business background.”
“It was this moment where I’d said, okay I’m starting my own practice, I’m taking this leap—so now what do I do?”