If you have string of issues with 10 last doctors though, then issue is, most probably, you...
My wife is a GP, and easily 1/3 of her patients have also some minor-but-visible mental issue. 1-2 out of 10 scale. Makes them still functional in society but... often very hard to be around with.
That doesn't mean I don't trust your words, there are tons of people with either rare issues or even fairly common ones but manifesting in non-standard way (or mixed with some other issue). These folks suffer a lot to find a doctor who doesn't bunch them up in some general state with generic treatment. There are those, but not that often.
It helps both sides tremendously if patient is not above or arrogant know-it-all waving with chatgpt into doctor's face and basically just coming for prescription after self-diagnosis. Then, help is sometimes proportional to situation and lawful obligations.
I admittedly I have a bunch of medical issues and these gems are my favourites from the GPs.
1. I cannot see the tonsil on the left side, so it is OK. (there was a 6cm!!! cyst in front of it)
2. After missing sky high TSH measures consistently for 2 years (4 testst) : "It must have been a few one offs" (no it wasn't and it is not even possible)
3. "Blood pressure has nothing to do with weight"
These %#£&* so called medical professionals are still working and most likely killing people legally.
These days I research and read studies, arm myself with knowledge, cross check with multiple LLMs and go in with a diagnosis and request a specific prescription. After 5 years with my health in the gutter I had my first comprehensive private blood test coming back with no issues.
So no, do not try to call me arrogant. I am not arrogant, I am defending myself from these "GPs" so they won't put me in an early grave by making fatal mistakes.
Doctors thinking patients are arrogant is an age old problem.
The thing you’re describing about bunching patients into general states with generic treatment - that’s the majority of GPs I’ve seen over the years, sadly. I don’t think it’s because of incompetence as much as economics. They have to see a certain number of patients and make things work.