Take Good Care Season 7 Episode 4 – Meet Our Nurse Practitioner, Mary Corbitt!

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Rosa Gynecology’s Nurse Practitioner, Mary Corbitt, APRN, joins us as a guest on this week’s Take Good Care podcast! 
Mary tells us more about herself, how she got started working with Rosa Gynecology, and more!

Transcript

Dr. Mironda Williams:
Welcome to Take Good Care podcast, an endeavor that grew out of our love for obstetrics and gynecology. Our aim and mission is to serve as a source of vital information for women of all races, ages, and walks in life. I am Dr. Miranda Williams.

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
I am Dr. Deanna Guthrie.

Dr. Karen Greene:
And I’m Dr. Karen Greene.

Group:
Welcome to our show.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
Welcome to another episode of Take Good Care podcast, Mironda Williams.

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
I’m Dr. Deanna Guthrie.

Dr. Karen Greene:
And I’m Dr. Karen Greene.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
On today’s episode, we have one of our just wonderful, marvelous nurse practitioners with us. We have Ms. Mary Corbett, and we’re going to introduce her fully and get her to tell you a little bit more about herself in a second. But then again, just as a review, we now have two nurse practitioners here in our office, but Mary has been with us now five years. It’s her fifth year anniversary at the time of this recording. And as a practice, Peachtree City Obstetrics and Gynecology now, ROSA Gynecology has always utilized and valued having additional providers in the office, not just physician providers, but our advanced practice nurses in the office who have just extended our ability to take great care of patients. We always say that we are a limited resource, we can only see so many patients. So we love having our nurse practitioners here in the office who collaborate with us and help us to see patients and so that we can extend care to an even wider variety and number of women.
So having advanced practice nurses in our office has just been amazing, has always been amazing for several decades. But Karen, why don’t you get us started just introducing Mary a little bit more and finding out some of her backstory.

Dr. Karen Greene:
So Mary, we know your backstory, but we want you to tell who you are, how’d you come to be here, and give us a few things like your likes, your hobbies, your interests outside of ROSA Gynecology.

Mary Corbitt:
Okay. Well, thank you ladies for having me on today. I’m very excited to be a part of this team and here today to talk about being here and my experience. And a little shy when talking about sharing some personal things just because I’m not accustomed to it.

Dr. Karen Greene:
But you talk every day to patients, so you can talk.

Mary Corbitt:
It’s different when you’re just one-on-one versus going back to watch yourself on an episode-

Dr. Karen Greene:
That’s true.

Mary Corbitt:
It feels kind of-

Dr. Karen Greene:
That’s true.

Mary Corbitt:
… weird. But I’m married. I’ve been married, this would be my 28th year in May, which is crazy to think about.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
That’s wonderful.

Mary Corbitt:
How can I’ve been married 28 years when I’m so young.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
[inaudible 00:02:49].

Mary Corbitt:
Yes. But I truly was. So my husband and I were nextdoor neighbors, so I literally married the guy next door.

Group:
Oh wow.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
That’s so cute.

Mary Corbitt:
I got married when I was 19. He was 22. So we literally have grown up with each other. We have two sons, and for a time period we were empty nesters, but now they’re back home.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
[inaudible 00:03:15].

Mary Corbitt:
Yes, which is such a blessing for us to have him back home for a little bit. But one will we be moving out in July and he’s starting med school. So we’re so proud, so excited.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
Yes.

Mary Corbitt:
And then our oldest will probably be moving out before him. We just don’t have a definite date once he gets his job position and relocated. Such a sweet time right now with them home. I think the next question-

Dr. Karen Greene:
Yeah, what else do you like to do outside of being mom and wife?

Mary Corbitt:
Right, and working because I love working. I love to travel. We travel a good bit. We go out of the country, which is very exciting trying new things and seeing new cultures.

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
Where was your last trip?

Mary Corbitt:
We went to Ireland. We went to Scotland. We went to Germany and we went to Paris.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
Wonderful.

Mary Corbitt:
It was so neat to see because we got to Paris right after the Olympics stopped, so that was neat to see. All the memorabilia was still up and a lot of people were still there.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
[inaudible 00:04:15].

Mary Corbitt:
And that was our first time going to Paris. So that was neat to see.

Dr. Karen Greene:
Was that the best part going to Paris or was all of it just so great that you can’t even compare them?

Mary Corbitt:
Well, it was all great because it was so many different fields in the sense of cultures, but I would say that probably my favorite was going to Ireland. That’s just where my family is from and it was a neat-

Dr. Mironda Williams:
I know it’s beautiful. They say it’s just gorgeous.

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
Green.

Mary Corbitt:
Beautiful. Beautiful and green and lush, and really the coastline looks like the coast of California. So you’re like, “Wait a minute, where exactly am I because I feel like I’m back in the States.” But yeah, it was really neat to see.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
That’s nice.

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
Well, how did you come to ROSA Gynecology?

Mary Corbitt:
Well, it’s a really interesting story. I’ve been a patient for a really long time and my mom was actually a patient at the practice, so that’s how I got started here. The most exciting time I have to say that I remember is I would always come for my GYN visits, but then when my husband and I got pregnant with our first, I was so excited to move over to the OB side.

Group:
OB side.

Mary Corbitt:
I felt like I was just graduating throughout the practice. It was neat. And of course you ladies took care of me during that pregnancy and delivered my son, my oldest son. Sadly, insurance had changed and I had to visit another practice with my second one, but once I could I came right back and have been here ever since. I did my clinical rotation through graduate school here and absolutely loved it. I shadowed Dr. Guthrie and Dr. Williams and just had the best experience. Previously worked in oncology, which was very trying at times. So coming here was a breath of fresh air in taking care of well patience and giving good news, versus delivering sad things and talking about sad things and patients not always doing well. It was just a breath of fresh air. So when I actually graduated from my graduate program, I just happened to see, because of course I was looking for a job, that you guys had posted that you were hiring. So I text Dr. Guthrie. “I see you’re hiring. I graduated.” That’s just how it happened.

Dr. Karen Greene:
And that was in-

Mary Corbitt:
2019.

Dr. Karen Greene:
Yeah, ’19.

Mary Corbitt:
When I finished my-

Dr. Karen Greene:
Yeah, 2019.

Mary Corbitt:
Yeah. And started during COVID.

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
Yeah, that.

Dr. Karen Greene:
Yes.

Mary Corbitt:
Which was crazy times.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
Yes. And it was so funny, I remember, because we had gone through the process and you’re doing the interviews and all the things. We knew that we were going to hire Mary, but we were just saying, “We’re still going through the process.” And so she was like, “Do we know anything yet? Do we know anything yet?” Because we were trying to just do what we needed to do in terms of our due diligence. And so then we finally said, “Yes, Mary, you’re hired,” and then it’s like COVID.

Mary Corbitt:
Right.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
She’s like, “Am I still hired?” It’s like, “Yes.”

Mary Corbitt:
I was so worried about that.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
Yes.

Mary Corbitt:
Yes.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
It was a different time.

Mary Corbitt:
It was.

Dr. Karen Greene:
Yeah.

Mary Corbitt:
It was definitely different.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
It was hard to think it’s just five years ago, which is not that long, but it seemed so far long ago at this point. So tell the people a little bit more about just how you become a nurse practitioner. I think that’s important for people to know, because again, we understand and value your wealth of knowledge just as a nurse, but also the kinds of things that you go through as you’re going from being a registered nurse into being a nurse practitioner.

Mary Corbitt:
Right. So for me, nursing is my second career, and I knew that when I started nursing school at University of West Georgia I would want to go past just being a nurse. I say that in the most loving and respectful way because I love being a nurse, but I wanted to have more autonomy and caring for my patients and making decisions versus just doing something that somebody else has decided for me to do and how to care for my patients. So I knew that getting my bachelor’s in nursing was important in order to do the next step. So I had to work in critical care for two years, which I did and worked in ICU in the step down unit and loved that part of it. ICU is very, very demanding. You only have two patients at a time, but those two patients probably feel like eight-

Dr. Karen Greene:
Yeah, yeah.

Mary Corbitt:
… because you’re in every 5, 10 minutes-

Dr. Mironda Williams:
Doing something.

Mary Corbitt:
… doing something and caring for those patients. So absolutely loved it, but I just knew that I couldn’t always do that forever with aging, since I was older going into nursing, because it’s very demanding with just moving patients and caring for them and pushing those beds and all the things that go with it. So I started looking for a graduate school that I wanted to go to and decided that it was going to be University of Alabama at Birmingham because I loved the hybrid part of it. Still a brick and mortar school, which was really important to me to make sure that the education I was getting was going to be beneficial and serve me and able to care for my patients and that advanced role. So did that. And my first rotation was here, which was, like I said, a great experience.
And then I did pediatrics and I also did internal medicine. Fun experiences just completely different between all of them. But you do have to have your bachelor’s in nursing. Most schools do require two years of critical care. And then if you’re accepted into the program, then it could either be a two-year or a three-year program depending on full-time/part-time. I still worked the whole time through graduate school.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
Wow.

Mary Corbitt:
I did the three-year, which was challenging because I was working full-time. I was a mom. A wife.

Dr. Karen Greene:
How old were the kids at this point? Trying to calculate the math here.

Mary Corbitt:
I know it was a struggle. So that was, gosh, Houston, my oldest, he graduated in 2016, so when I started the program, he was in high school.

Dr. Karen Greene:
Okay.

Mary Corbitt:
And then my youngest was going into high school.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
So busy year.

Mary Corbitt:
It was a busy year. Yes. Yeah, busy times.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
Yes.

Mary Corbitt:
It helped that my oldest was driving and he could help with my youngest with getting him to places. And husband was a huge help and very supportive. And through that program-

Dr. Mironda Williams:
That’s important. Yeah.

Mary Corbitt:
It’s very important. It’s just as stressful as nursing school, highs and lows, but you get through it, but it does definitely serve you well.

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
Now you mentioned that was your second, what was your first career?

Mary Corbitt:
I was in real estate.

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
Okay.

Mary Corbitt:
Yes. And I loved it because I love homes, I love beautiful things. It was so fun to go in and see what the new trends are and working with people, which that’s one of the things that’s great about being in medicine because you are always working and spending time with people, and I love that too. But the housing market, when it crashed, I said, “I have got to go back to school, I cannot do this.” My parents both have their graduate degrees. My dad has this doctorate. My mom had her master’s and my two sisters had graduated from college and I just did not finish that. And I said, “This is my time to go back.” I want my degree just because I was the only one in my family who did not. So it was really important. I was like, “And nursing is what I’m going to do.”

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
Wow, that’s great.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
Wow, that’s great.

Dr. Karen Greene:
Well, [inaudible 00:11:33].

Dr. Mironda Williams:
Our patients definitely love you, and I think that background in real estate, being a people person, having that interaction with people has definitely carried over in terms of your being with us as a nurse practitioner. I know patients really just they love their Dr. Mary. But what has been some of your biggest challenges as you’ve become a well-respected practitioner here at our practice and also what have been the greatest rewards that you think you’ve seen from a clinical standpoint?

Mary Corbitt:
I think the greatest challenge is, even though I worked in medicine and patient and was around some sad situations, I didn’t always have to deliver that information. So when there are moments where I have to talk about difficult things or deliver sad news, that’s the most challenging to me. Because I’m just an emotional person too, so it’s always trying to hold back how I don’t want to be upset because I don’t want them to be upset or make them feel worse or take away from the moment that it’s really about them and what they’re going through, not about me. I think that’s a hard thing. You guys have been such great resources because there’s been times where I think initially when I started doing that, I was like, “I don’t think I can do it. I don’t think I can say it.” So one of you would always be like, “It’s okay, I’ll go in with you,” or, “I’ll do it.” And I’m like, “Okay, thank you.” It’s getting easier to do it, but it doesn’t get any easier with delivering the information.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
Absolutely. Absolutely. Biggest reward?

Mary Corbitt:
I think the reward is seeing my patient population growing. Yeah. Because it’s hard when you first start because most people don’t know you and you feel like, during the day, if you’re not as busy as you want to be, you’re constantly looking to have ways to get better, do better. It’s more fun to spend time with patients versus just doing a lot of research because you’re looking at your schedule going, “Oh my gosh, I want my schedule to get really full.”

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
And now? And now?

Mary Corbitt:
And now, yes, I love being busy. I love coming in and seeing my full schedule.

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
And seeing repeat patients.

Mary Corbitt:
And seeing repeat, yeah.

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
Yearlies, right?

Mary Corbitt:
Yearlies, yeah. So I remember when I was shadowing you ladies and I would look at the schedule and your schedule is just crazy busy. Whoever I was working with that day said, “Oh, this is going to be a good one. Yes, she’ll let you do the exam or whatever.” And I was like, “Wow, this is great. But how do you remember all these people?” It’s truly that way now. I think we talked about this the other day, is that, “Oh my gosh, I feel like I just saw her.” And you just pick right up where you left off with caring on those conversations. And because I love speaking and hearing and getting an update, sometimes I roll over in my schedule and sometimes patients have to wait. I hate making people wait, but I’m also so excited to catch up on personal things too [inaudible 00:14:37] what’s going on. So it’s very rewarding that that response is reciprocated and they generally seem happy to see me and I’m happy to see them and see what’s happening.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
Yes, yes, yes. I cut you off with something.

Dr. Karen Greene:
No, I thought it was interesting that you made that pivot. I guess I didn’t realize that, so that’s just-

Dr. Mironda Williams:
Pivot from?

Dr. Karen Greene:
Pivot from being real estate to medicine.

Mary Corbitt:
Oh.

Dr. Karen Greene:
We were talking about earlier that sometimes you realize that within yourself you have to make that change. I think a lot of people, women especially, we’ll stay with the same thing and not make that pivot.

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
It’s very courageous to-

Dr. Karen Greene:
It really is.

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
… make a career change like that.

Dr. Karen Greene:
Yes.

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
Especially being a wife and mother, how are you going to fit that in.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
Going to school-

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
Going to school, yeah.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
… and all of that. [inaudible 00:15:23]. Yeah.

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
Kudos.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
Kudos to you.

Dr. Karen Greene:
Kudos to you.

Mary Corbitt:
Thank you. I definitely could have never done it without my husband, Gabriel. He was so supportive. It makes me tearful. But during that time, you think, “I can’t do this. This is just crazy. It’s overwhelming. I’m trying to do and be all these things.” And I would say, “I can’t do it. I’m going to quit.” And he’s like, “No, you’re not.”

Dr. Karen Greene:
That’s amazing.

Mary Corbitt:
I’m glad that he-

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
Wonderful. Wonderful.

Mary Corbitt:
… supported, yeah.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
Yay, Gabe. Shout out to Gabe.

Mary Corbitt:
Yes.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
So wonderful, wonderful. So as you can see, Mary is just a ball of light and energy and positivity.

Mary Corbitt:
Thank you.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
Which is what we just value so much in her as an individual, but also as someone who is providing just the most excellent care for our patients. We are hoping for a very long tenure of Mary here with ROSA Gynecology. We tell everybody, “You can check in, but you can’t check in.” So once you’re here, we’ve got you for life. So what do you think you’re most looking forward to, both in your professional life and your personal life? What are you looking forward to?

Mary Corbitt:
Wow. I think in my professional life, I think it’s more knowledge with new things that are coming out. That gets me really excited every year with new conferences that are coming up to see what is the latest in women’s healthcare, what is being said, what are we doing now for the same things that you routinely see. It’s always exciting to hear because the sad thing about evidence-based medicine is sometimes it takes a long time to get new information out.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
Right.

Mary Corbitt:
But hearing other women, providers talk about what they’re doing and what they’re finding, it’s exciting to say, “Wow, I didn’t think about it with that approach and let’s try it.” I look forward to that. And of course, having a broader base of that knowledge. And then I think personal, wow, I don’t really know. I would like to start doing more giving back to society. There’s some underprivileged areas in the county that you can work at and then you just provide your time. I haven’t done that yet, and I really want to do that in the sense of providing medicine, but I just haven’t done that yet. I’m going to check a little bit more into that to see what I can do to help at these free clinics.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
Yeah, we were just actually having a conversation in a previous episode and we’re probably going to revisit it in another episode, because work life for you and Karen, momming and wifing can be so encompassing that you almost forget, “Oh, what do I like to do?”

Dr. Karen Greene:
Yeah, what else?

Dr. Mironda Williams:
“What kinds of things do I want to do fun or for the community?” So we are pushing ourselves to really think about that more and be intentional about for ourselves. And of course, we’re going to encourage you to do the same thing for sure. The other thing that we’ve also been doing a series on with this season is looking at the whole concept of how to go from a chaos situation to a calm situation. We’ve been having conversations about how we’ve tried to do that in the work environment and how we’ve re-organized the workplace, the team leadership model where we have a collaborative model as opposed to a single individual model.
We’ve talked about in our own personal lives how we try to make changes, whether it’s in our own personal schedule or the calendar queen down here, to try to organize our personal life so that we feel like we have more calm in that and that we’re not helter skelter. If you think about for yourself, what does going from a chaotic situation to a calm situation, whether it’s in your personal life or professional life, what does that look like for you or how would you describe that?

Mary Corbitt:
I think during the day at work, it’s coming out and taking just a few moments to gather my thoughts of just deep breath and let me just research something quick or even running and making time to actually go get a drink of water or something. But during lunch is my time where I go in and I sit, I close the doors and I chart and I typically turn the light off. I’ve got a nickname around the office, which is really funny because I’m usually turning the lights off. I usually turn on music at that time.

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
Good.

Mary Corbitt:
I’m one of those where I’m flipping through the channels. I don’t have a genre that I stick with, I’m a flipper. It drives my husband insane. So I get in the car and I’m swiping through the radio stations.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
Pick one.

Mary Corbitt:
He’s like, “Can you just leave it on the station?” I like that song.

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
[inaudible 00:20:01].

Dr. Karen Greene:
Guys usually do that.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
That’s funny.

Mary Corbitt:
Yes. But music therapy is just a great thing for me. I love it. During the time of leaving work, sometimes days are chaotic, so chaos to calm, on the way home, I typically won’t call people at all. I turn my radio up really loud, which is probably embarrassing if somebody’s sitting next to me and they can hear it through their car. But I love driving, it’s very therapeutic to me and that radio. I usually get in there and put that air condition down as cold as I can get it and turn the radio open and try to peacefully drive home.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
That’s great. That’s a good lesson.

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
That’s a good lesson.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
That’s a good lesson for all of us.

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
Because a lot of people get in the car and immediately dial somebody and you know.

Dr. Karen Greene:
Multitasking.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
Yeah. Yep. Yep. I think our other nurse practitioner also mentioned, I think she called it taking 10, where you just take 10. We say this all the time, as women, we’re always doing all the things, all the time for everybody. And you get in that mode and it’s hard to sometimes to give yourself that permission to say, “You know what? I’m going to my office at lunchtime. I’m going to create a nice calm environment. I’m going to dim the lights. I’m going to turn my music on. I’m going to do what I need to do.” And the same thing when you’re going home. I think we all need to pick those pockets of time where we can just zen down for a minute, just take it down a notch just to give your body … I think research and science is seeing you just need to reset your clock. If you’re getting all this stimulation-

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
Stimulation.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
… that’s always coming in, it’s hard for your brain and your body to just-

Dr. Karen Greene:
Turn them down.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
… turn them down a little bit. So that’s excellent. Those are excellent.

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
It’s funny, yesterday we were at a luncheon and they had a meditation time.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
I know. And it was so funny. But go ahead, go ahead.

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
Well, I thought he was going to pray that, but he got up there and he said, “Okay, everybody.” And he introduced himself, but then he said, “Okay, everybody close your eyes.” And I thought, and then he did nothing for two minutes. It’s so funny that, I know for me, and I’ve gotten out of it, I used to do yoga. One of the things when I first started doing yoga-

Dr. Karen Greene:
I used to love that.

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
… was at the end pose-

Dr. Karen Greene:
To just be still.

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
… to just be still. My mind was always racing. It was just so funny. But he got that whole room to just be quiet for two minutes.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
But it was still an example of the fact that we’re like, “Are we supposed to do something?”

Mary Corbitt:
That’s what I thought too. I was like, “Wait.”

Dr. Mironda Williams:
Are we supposed to say something?

Mary Corbitt:
“Am I missing something?”

Dr. Mironda Williams:
It’s just we were doing nothing.

Dr. Karen Greene:
Yeah.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
And the fact that that was odd-

Dr. Karen Greene:
Yes.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
And then he says-

Dr. Karen Greene:
That says a lot.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
.. and then he goes, “That’s it.”

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
That’s it. [inaudible 00:22:38].

Dr. Mironda Williams:
“That’s all I’m here for.” We’re like, “Oh, that was it.” Oh.

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
He’s like, “Thank you very much.”

Dr. Mironda Williams:
You can just [inaudible 00:22:44]. I said, this is bad. I was like, “This is so bad.” I know for myself, before I could even settle into the meditative state, I’m like, “What are we supposed to doing?” I’m tapping-

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
I was trying not to look.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
No, but I’m looking at my friend. I was like, “Are we supposed to be drink?” [inaudible 00:23:02].

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
I was opening one eye at a time going, “What are we supposed to be doing?”

Dr. Karen Greene:
I did that. I looked over at-

Dr. Mironda Williams:
We’ve got to get better people.

Dr. Karen Greene:
I was like, “Okay, no, this is meditation.”

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
[inaudible 00:23:11].

Dr. Karen Greene:
I keyed in, but for me it wasn’t long enough.
[inaudible 00:23:14].

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
It did. It did.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
And I think that was the mood of the room.

Dr. Karen Greene:
Yes. All of us were like, what are we supposed to do-

Dr. Mironda Williams:
There’s something else we should be doing.

Dr. Karen Greene:
… has everybody got your eyes closed?

Dr. Mironda Williams:
We actually can just sit and be still.

Dr. Karen Greene:
And reset.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
Reset. How about that part. A lesson to us all.

Dr. Karen Greene:
Yes.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
So thank you again for tuning in to Take Good Care podcast. We hope that you all have enjoyed our getting silly. As you can see, we are a team. We love what we do, we love who we work with, and one of the reasons why is that we can be silly together. We can support each other clinically, professionally, and even share how we try to achieve some calm moments within our work life and professional lives. We hope you enjoy that. And please, when you’re calling our office at rosaginaecology.com to seek for care, please be open to seeing our wonderful nurse practitioners Mary Corbett is just amazing.

Mary Corbitt:
Thank you.

Dr. Mironda Williams:
And you will not feel any way that you have not been cared for in excellence. As we said with our previous episode where we talked with our other nurse practitioner, we’re always collaborating. They’re collaborating with us. We’re collaborating with them. So you never have to feel at any moment that you’re not getting everything that you need to get. They often will refer patients to see us for additional care when things need to be taken care of surgically or just things that need to be taken to a different mode of treatment, then that’s how we collaborate. That’s how we’re able to extend our reach in terms of the patients that we’re able to see. So please continue to give us a call. Please share this episode with your friends and family on all of your platforms where you get your podcasts. Check us out on our website at rosaginaecology.com. Feel free to call our office, Mary has openings and she’d be happy to see you. So until we meet again, please take good care. I’m Dr. Miranda Williams.

Dr. Deanna Guthrie:
I’m Dr. Deanna Guthrie.

Dr. Karen Greene:
And I’m Dr. Karen Greene. Take good care.

Apr 9, 2025 | Podcast Episodes