This shouldn't need stating, but do note that the reason your expectations differ with a doctor and a waiter is because the stakes are so much higher with a doctor's office visit than with dinner in a restaurant.
Assuming they don't give you food poisoning, the worst a restaurant can do to you is provide food you don't like to eat, or move too slowly, or be rude to you, with the result that you don't come back. I believe this lack of gravity translates one-to-one into the basic lack of patience on the customer's part. My presence in a restaurant is (usually) entirely voluntary, there is a lot of competition, and the stakes are low, meaning I therefore, right or wrong, expect a lot from the staff -- as do others.
The restaurant needs me a lot more than I need the restaurant.
One can be more or less obnoxious about it, of course, and there is no excuse for being rude or combative or expecting a "big payoff" in the form of comps for minor inconveniences, but I think it is clear that expectations for service, including prompt service, can reasonably be set fairly high in a restaurant. That is, in proportion to the cost of the service -- I might be more inclined to seek a comp at Alinea for the same sleight I would ignore at
Bojangles.
A doctor or nurse, by contrast to a member of a restaurant's staff, very often has your life in his or her hands. A doctor or nurse can, quite literally,
kill you through negligence or incompetence. Accordingly, I don't go to negligent or incompetent healthcare providers. However, even though I am not sweating bullets in the waiting room from the fear that my doctor is going to kill me, by the same token, I do not want my doctor to hurry through my appointment just to make sure he or she is not 10 minutes late for the next patient in line. That is also why I don't complain or ask for a discount or whatever if the doctor is taking a little extra time with the patient ahead of me. The gravity of the possible negative outcomes dictates a more relaxed and accepting attitude on our parts regarding the timing of the service or other non-substantive parts of the doctor's office experience.
I need the doctor a lot more than the doctor needs me.
On the one hand, I demand
less from the doctor with regard to the
non-substantive parts of the service (
e.g., timing for non-emergency care), simply because the doctor is providing a necessary, non-elective service that ultimately may be a matter of life and death (or at least my long term health and happiness). On the other hand, I demand
more with regard to the non-substantive parts of a restaurant dining experience
just because the value of the service is lower, the impacts are less (and of limited duration) and I can take it or leave it as I wish.
In fact, I could probably argue that features of a doctor's service that are non-substantive, such as timing for non-emergency health care,
are substantive in a dining room context. Or at least I could argue there is a continuum between the two ends of the substantive/non-substantive distinction, with much more at a restaurant falling toward the substantive end of that spectrum. But that would take more brain power than I can muster right now.
Last edited by
JimInLoganSquare on May 26th, 2006, 10:04 am, edited 1 time in total.
JiLS