ProTruckDriver
đź”¶ Cancer Warrior đź”¶ USN Retired 1969-1992
I trust our Family Doctor. We've been with him for over 40 years now and he has helped our family when needed. Now a days it's hard to find a doctor like we have.
Generally yes, but as employees they are compelled to follow corporate policy. As a patient you always have to advocate for your own benefit.Do you trust your doctor is looking out for you or the medical group they work for to make more money?
Yes, sprays are available. A new ENT is not. And the only other pulmonologist, who was good, left the area. Also, already went the Flonase route. All that did was give me nosebleeds.You can get nasal sprays for sinus trouble. I think you need to request a new ENT. There are OTC sprays too, like Flonase. But don't start using those without medical guidance because who knows? Might cause more irritation?
When a patient sees a doctor the patient's perspective is they hope to be cured of what ails them. As the doctor sees it he is only seeing a patient for treatment not a cure.I find that physicians tend not to listen adequately to the patient’s concerns, but rather pursue their own agenda, and have their own orientations and biases, which are often reductionistic rather than holistic.
By my experience in life I have found that individuals who work in a similar profession or trade treat one another through what is known as 'professional courtesy'. While those they encounter who are outside their profession they treat very differently. For example, a plumber fixes and then charges very differently a fellow plumber's fixture than he does a customer who has chosen him out of the phone book. Medical professionals do the same for one another, but treat patients who are not from within the profession quite differently.My primary care physician is a former R.N. She became an Osteopathic Physician, and we get along famously. She is brilliant and listens to everything you say. She respects the fact that I too was an R.N. and we speak the same language. My Pulmonologist, Orthopedist and Sports Medicine doctors, while allopathic physicians, do listen, and we generally agree on each course of treatment.
Yes, I trust my medical professionals.
I am from the U.S.A. and have never heard this before. What does that mean?chance to het up the seta..
spelling errors, I've corrected them nowI am from the U.S.A. and have never heard this before. What does that mean?
Well said and i genuinely agree. But, brings up the point, I think, that government oversight should not be left to be blindly trusted. Rather the process should be open to view for all with consequences to those who fail their trusted positions. They should not be given untouchable, lifetime secure positions. There should be real penalties on them for failing their duties.There is no perfect way for any system to self-regulate against their inherent pitfalls. We each end up with a core system based on a given philosophy and then hope to moderate the rough edges and traps through government regulation. As soon as politicians get involved though another whole dimension for neglect and abuse can open up, especially when oversight interferes with or advances political agendas.
here you can and often do wait a year or more to see a specialist... then they refer you onto someone else who will have an equally long waiting list....In the States, if someone is on Medicaid (the government insurance plan for lowest income people), they are not allowed to go out of the county of their residence to seek care. E.g., if you live in Alameda County but you want to see doctors in San Mateo County and have your own transportation there, Medicaid will not allow that. WHY? Why is that a policy? IMO, it's a way to take rights away from the poor.
It can take three to four months to see a specialist here, regardless of your insurance, unless it is an E.R. worthy emergency. However, if you are in pain and you have a compassionate doctor, they will get you in for a test pretty quick to see what the pain is. Many pains can mean serious stuff. And of course, serous pain is also a good reason for an ER visit.
Holly, how do you interpret the situation? I mean, in your knowledge, was the situation different 10 or 15 years ago? What factors seem to produce these long lags now?here you can and often do wait a year or more to see a specialist... then they refer you onto someone else who will have an equally long waiting list....
yes very different even 5 years ago... uncontrolled immigration is the major problem..lack of hospitals, schools, ..more and more housing being built but without the infrastructure to support it...Holly, how do you interpret the situation? I mean, in your knowledge, was the situation different 10 or 15 years ago?What factors seem to produce these long lags now?
Just noticed you live in Riverside, CA. We did, too, until my late husband retired in 2001. I bet it's really changedNO. I stopped trusting them when they decided to let big Pharma (pharmaceuticals) run the whole shebang. Don...