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“Just One More” Appointment: How Tiny Yeses Break Clinics

It starts innocently enough. 

“Can we just squeeze one more in?”
“It’ll be quick.”
“They’re already here.”
“We don’t want to upset them.”

One extra appointment doesn’t feel like a big deal. In isolation, it isn’t…

But in vet med, tiny yeses stack – and eventually, they break clinics

The Myth of the Harmless Yes

That single add-on doesn’t exist in a vacuum. 

It:

  • Pushes the schedule back
  • Compresses appointment times
  • Removes buffer for emergencies
  • Increases stress for staff
  • Delays callbacks and charting
  • Extends the workday

Multiply that by several “just one more” decisions each day, and suddenly the clinic is running behind before noon. 

 

Why Clinics Say Yes (Even When They Shouldn’t)

Most clinics don’t overbook because they’re careless. They do it because they care.

Common reasons include: 

  • Wanting to help loyal clients
  • Fear of bad reviews
  • Pressure to meet production goals
  • Understaffing
  • Compassion for worried pet owners
  • Leadership saying “we’ll make it work”

But compassion without structure turns into chaos. 

 

The Hidden Cost of Overbooking

Over time, those tiny yeses lead to:

  • Rushed appointments
  • Increased medical errors
  • Frustrated clients waiting longer
  • Exhausted staff staying late
  • Higher turnover
  • Declining morale

The cost isn’t just time, it’s trust, energy, and sustainability. 

 

How “Just One More” Impacts Each Role

For CSRs: They take the brunt of frustrated clients, reschedule angry calls, and manage expectations they didn’t set. 

For Techs: They’re asked to move faster, multitask more, and absorb the stress of compressed schedules

For Doctors: Decision fatigue increases. Charting spills into personal time. Quality of care feels compromised and rushed.

For Practice Managers: Firefighting replaces leadership. Small issues escalate. Burnout becomes visible. 

 

Why Boundaries Are Not Bad Customer Service

Saying no isn’t the same as not caring. 

High-functioning clinics: 

  • Set clear scheduling rules
  • Define what qualifies as urgent
  • Protect buffer slots
  • Empower CSRs to hold boundaries
  • Support staff when boundaries are enforced

Clients may not love hearing no – but they do value consistency and professionalism. 

 

What to Say Instead of “Yes”

Boundaries need language.

Examples: 

  • “We want to make sure your pet gets the time they deserve, our next available appointment is…”
  • “To keep our patients safe, we’re unable to add appointments beyond our capacity today.”
  • “We can offer an urgent care slot tomorrow or provide emergency referral options.”

Clear communication prevents escalation. 

 

How Practice Managers Can Break the Cycle

  1. Audit when and why add-ons happen
  2. Create written guidelines for add-on appointments
  3. Protect buffer time intentionally
  4. Back staff when they say no
  5. Align leadership messaging across the clinic

Consistency matters more than perfection. 

 

Final Thoughts

Clinics don’t break because of one bad day. 
They break from thousands of tiny decisions that prioritize short-term relief over long-term health.

“Just one more appointment” may feel generous – but when it comes to routine, it costs more than it gives. 

Healthy clinics aren’t built on endless yeses. 
They’re built on thoughtful boundaries that protect care, staff, and sustainability. 

Sometimes the most responsible decision is not to squeeze one more in – but to protect the clinic that’s already full.

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