Filed under medicine, News, Research by on May 18th, 2017. Comment.
One of the themes that keeps coming up in those little “newslets” for 15 minutes of Continuing Medical Education each is that systematic screening for several serious diseases, like cancers, is simply not as efficient as one wishes it were. At the very least, in terms of cost, it rarely pays. Sometimes people try to identify a subset of people who should be screened; but all too often, even that is a daunting task.
Some stalwart and doubtless realistic physicians sometimes suggest–screen patients who ask for it. This seems strikingly similar to the young doctor in Amiens who told me, that if he wanted to build a practice and feed his family, he had to give everyone antibiotics. It is that ancient trend of anti-intellectualism, patients who second-guess the doctor, people who are worried about their health– And yet, these people could argue that (they have paid their health insurance and earned what they think is good care), and they are individuals and not statistics. Read more on When To Screen For Things Medical That Could Kill…
I remember the first time I saw a young patient with older person’s diseases. I was in a public clinic, not far from the industrial waterfront in California. She was 24 years old, weighed 380 pounds, had already had what she claimed was a “slight” heart attack. She had type 2 diabetes which I thought was virtually impossible to get at such a tender age. She was able to do little other than to shrug her shoulders. She said something about health problems having been in her family. Me, the only thing I could think of was that I was only through 3 years of so of a seven year medical school at her age. I was quite overweight, but if I had been struck with her degree of obesity or her medical problems, I don’t think I would have had the stamina to get by. Sure enough, she was neither working nor going to school. When you are an adolescent, you think you are going to be strong and healthy forever. I remember looking at patients and never thinking I would be as ill as they were. I remember seeing patients in intensive care in comas, never thinking for a moment that I would have three of them in my life before I was able to figure out the hereditary metabolic that had caused them. Read more on Patients Avoiding Hospitals and Doctors…
By every measure, America is hanging onto its first world status by a thread. And even that is arguable. We have been in slow decline toward third world status for the last 30 years. And nothing speaks to this reality more than this country’s poverty rates. It is sad that poverty is measured in percentages and indices that are debatable at best. As in many news stories, an effort is made to personalize — to render concrete — these elusive numbers. The happiness of the person who found free fruit but could not afford it at Walmart, cited at the end of the article, is a touching story. These are the stories of real poor folks, who have seen me as patients, in rural northern California. Folks like the married couple, both of whom were on active army duty in both Iraq and Afghanistan. They left their kids with their parents while they served. They wanted to continue serving, but were informed they could not because of “military cutbacks.” They asked for job direction from VA counselors who were no help, and finally both found minimum wage jobs. Their new wages combined total less than 1/4 of their military salaries, but they still make too much to qualify for insurance. They own some land — from the family – where they are living with their children in their parents’ houses. They are wondering how they are going to pay for their children’s medical care. Like the young man who has impacted wisdom teeth and back pain from a serious accident at a saw mill. Something ran amok and tons of wood fell on his back. He cannot pay for either dental care or an operation on his back. His family has chipped in for medical marijuana. He has no idea of how to do anything except stay home, in pain, depressed, and stoned. Or there’s the older woman on oxygen who cannot lift her tank and has a bag of pills she cannot lift either. She needs me to hold her hand while she limps with great pain into my office. She has a broken hip but until she is old enough for Medicare — a year or so — mostly her friends shop for her and bring her everything she needs. What she really needs is an operation on her hip but has no idea how to pay for it. I tell her to ask her doctor for some kind of a device to assist ambulation. She says a cane is not enough and nobody will pay for a walker; certainly not for a wheelchair. Some people think Obamacare might help but have no idea what to do until then. I have seen unemployed young people who are glad they are still on their parents’ health insurance. The kinds of things I am seeing are the kind of things that missionaries see in third world counties. I know some physicians who have been discouraged from that kind of work, simply because people need basic food and shelter before they can be cured or managed. From what the people above tell me, they do not seem to have these things, either. Hanging on by a thread to our first world status? No. The thread has broken and we are third world. Now.
Filed under Family, Healthcare reform, medicine, News, Public Health System by on Oct 16th, 2012. Comment.
Sure, the malpractice system is broken. And there are lots of suboptimal doctors out there.
I have told some what the correct diagnosis is and they have ignored me. Some are too busy to take phone calls from me. Institutions have refused to order tests that I’ve requested.
On the other hand, I have been lectured about the necessity for “cover your ass” medicine. I could not practice it if I wanted to. Nobody would pay for it. In my specialty, I am always told to look for ways to cut costs while some patients cry to me they cannot afford their medicine. We do our best. Read more on Capping Malpractice Damage Awards…
Filed under Diagnosis, medicine by on Jul 2nd, 2012. Comment.