One of the most gratifying experiences Dr. Matthew Denti has encountered is a patient exclaiming to a friend while out shopping: “That’s my Doctor!” It is a statement of both constancy and relationship, and for many patients, it’s the first time they have ever felt cared for and connected to a physician. And that’s exactly what Dr. Denti wants.
Dr. Denti is the sole OB/GYN at Johnson Health Center in Lynchburg. He began with them in March of 2011. No aspect of his work is what he had foreseen for himself as a child or teenager, but it is what he considers to be “the perfect fit.”
Dr. Matthew Denti was born and raised in Delmont PA, a small farming town of less than 1000, not far from Pittsburgh. He had lots of family in Pittsburgh as well, and so enjoyed the best of both worlds – growing up in both a small town and a big city. He loved horses and considered being a veterinarian. Initially he attended college to pursue an Equestrian Education program. Partially through his studies, the school was sold and the new owners dropped his major from their program. He changed his focus to pre-vet and planned to go on to vet school. He soon learned that veterinarian programs were much harder to get into than medical schools. Then West Virginia School of Osteopathic Medicine (WVSOM) contacted him during his third year of undergrad work, and he was accepted into their DO program. His first year of med school credits completed his BS degree, and he went on to complete his medical education. As a DO, he was always Family Medicine focused and thought he would pursue Family Practice. But he worked very closely at WVSOM with an OB who became his mentor and a great source of support; ultimately Dr. Denti moved into OB/GYN because of that relationship.
After WVSOM, Dr. Denti completed his residency in OB/GYN at Lancaster Community Hospital in PA. He was also fortunate to be awarded, through a lottery system, three paid clerkships: one with an Indian Hospital in ND, focused on rural health and public health; one at Johns Hopkins focused on high risk OB; and one with Pinnacle Health Systems in PA, which gave him the surgery experience. These clerkships influenced both his career and his life. In particular, the month-long clerkship at Fort Yates Indian Hospital in ND was a defining experience that sparked his passion for work in public health.
Post-residency, Dr. Denti was recruited to serve in the same town in WV as his mentor, which was hugely attractive. Also, by serving the underserved in the community, WV forgave some of his medical school debt. He built a solid private practice in OB/GYN in WV until the cost of malpractice tripled in a single year (with no claims). At that time, 1100 doctors left WV; practicing there just wasn’t economically feasible.
Dr. Denti joined an OB practice in NC with the understanding that he would take over the practice for a physician who was about to retire – only the retirement had not happened after 2 years and was not on the horizon. So he returned to private practice, initially in NC and later in Wytheville VA. During that time he delivered 201 babies to indigent patients in a single year. After a few years, he realized the medical economic model of private practice was no longer viable. He closed the practice and served as a locums OB/GYN with Indian Health Services in NM. While he loved public health work and was deeply committed to his patients and the community, his family was back in Wytheville. It was a great job but in the wrong place. Virginia Community Healthcare Association contacted him and recruited him to Johnson Health Center (JHC) in Lynchburg.
Dr. Denti knew he wanted two things: to work in a public health capacity, and to be close to home. He has a large family (9 kids, ranging in age from 26 to 4), and he wanted and needed to be with them. JHC already had an OB practice running so he would not be starting from ground zero. He had an opportunity to grow the practice with a foundation already in place. The key to success was in the relationships – with the patient population and with the local hospital. And Dr. Denti has excelled at improving both.
Dr. Denti now works and lives in Lynchburg during the week and on the one weekend per month he is on call, and spends the rest of his time with his family in Wytheville. Ultimately they will move the family to Lynchburg; meanwhile he waits for the economy to improve to sell his house. And his wife and oldest daughter have a bakery business (“Cinnamon Sage Baking Company”); they’d like to have that a little more firmly established before they move.
The Johnson Health Center OB patient population is predominantly underserved – mostly Medicaid or sliding scale paying patients. Dr. Denti also serves the Liberty University student population, many of whom are missionary students. Most are young - typically 16-25 years old. JHC serves two large ethnic communities – Hispanic and Korean. While they have good translator assistance with the Hispanic community, there is very little in the way of a translator or cultural liaison with the Korean patients. This has been a challenging issue JHC continues to address.
There is a very seasonal cycle to OB. Patients seem to get less care during colder winter months, and the natural birth cycle is that more babies are delivered during warmer months. So during May-October Dr. Denti is swamped, sometimes seeing as many as 28-45 patients per day. November-April are much quieter months. Taking the seasonal cycle into account, he averages about 20 patients a day. A typical day for Dr. Denti begins with rounding at the hospital, if needed. Each morning at the Center begins with a “huddle,” including everyone from the front desk through the providers, to go over what’s coming in the day ahead. He may have incarcerated pregnant patients to attend. He follows up on any pregnancy complications with hospitalized patients; those with major complications are sometimes sent to Charlottesville overnight and he will provide continuity of care with providers there. Dr. Denti had not been seeing as many GYN patients initially, but that is now increasing. Their focus is on family planning and STD education, areas of critical need. He is scheduled with patients 24 hours a week, and in addition has rounds, surgeries and is on call 5 days per month. He delivers 5-12 babies a month, and schedules/attends the higher risk OB/complicated births while he is on call. He sees a significant number of diabetic, hypertensive pregnant patients, and about half of his patients have had no prior medical care. The Center also provides behavioral health / case management to their OB patients, who are often dealing with other challenges in addition to pregnancy including drug and crime issues. The Center focuses on ensuring the Moms are clean, stay clean, and keep their babies clean.
Dr. Denti’s biggest surprise working in community health has been the culture within Johnson Health Center. The practice is very tight-knit, and the staff, from the front office through the providers and executive leadership, truly care about each other and their patients, and are all fully supportive as a team. Dr. Denti states that he has never experienced this atmosphere in other practices; typically the mentality had always seemed to be “everyone for themselves.” The JHC environment is like a family, and a second home. He couldn’t do what he does without them.
OB as a specialty is hard on family time, and it is often challenging to maintain a good work/family balance. But working in a CHC environment has greatly enhanced that for Dr. Denti. One area that has definitely improved is his time off – when he’s off, he’s usually really off. He doesn’t get called while he’s not on call – like he did once with a prior practice and spent hours on the phone through a difficult delivery while on vacation with his family at Disneyworld.
Dr. Denti sees his biggest greatest contribution thus far as bridging the gap between the Center and commercial medicine: he has been central in strengthening the relationship with the hospital, and has transformed the challenge of women arriving at the hospital 30 weeks pregnant having received no prior pre-natal care and at high risk. The mission to serve and improve access for the OB community has made solid progress, and early pre-natal care benefits the entire community, most of all the babies. And the Center, in partnership with the hospital, has done a tremendous job of providing people improved healthcare and keeping them out of the ER. Until now, most patients have never “had” a doctor before – now they can have a relationship with a physician they see on a regular basis. And it is truly heartwarming to hear a patient tell a friend “That’s my doctor!”
Dr. Denti loves his job and loves coming to work each day. He knows he’s helping people and contributing to the community, taking care of those nobody else really cares for. There is a strong sense of providing for the community but also at the same time providing for himself. “This is a perfect fit,” says Dr. Denti. He believes he is where he was meant to be.