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Showing Original Post only (View all)People Have Stopped Going to the Doctor. Most Seem Just Fine. [View all]
People Have Stopped Going to the Doctor. Most Seem Just Fine.Do Americans really need the amount of treatment that our health care system is used to providing?
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/22/opinion/coronavirus-reopen-hospitals.html?action=click&module=Opinion&pgtype=Homepage
As stay-at-home orders ease and cities reopen for business, many doctors and hospital administrators are calling for a quick return of health care to pre-pandemic levels. For months now, routine care has been postponed. Elective procedures big moneymakers were halted so that hospitals could divert resources to treating Covid-19 patients. Routine clinic visits were canceled or replaced by online sessions. This has resulted in grievous financial losses for hospitals and clinics. Medical practices have closed. Hospitals have been forced to furlough employees or cut pay.
Most patients, on the other hand, at least those with stable chronic conditions, seem to have done OK. In a recent survey, only one in 10 respondents said their health or a family members health had worsened as a result of delayed care. Eighty-six percent said their health had stayed about the same.
Admittedly, postponing health care had terrible health consequences for some patients with non-Covid-19 illnesses, such as those with newly diagnosed cancers that went untreated because outpatient visits were canceled, or because patients avoided going to the hospital out of fear of contracting the coronavirus. The spike in deaths in major cities like New York during the crisis almost certainly includes such patients.
Still, a vast majority of patients seem to have fared better than what most doctors expected. It will probably take years to understand why. Perhaps patients mitigated the harm of delayed care by adopting healthful behaviors, such as smoking less and exercising more. Perhaps the huge increases in stress were balanced out by other things, such as spending more time with loved ones.
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The 3rd leading cause of death in this country, behind cancer and heart disease, is medical error.
sop
Jun 2020
#1
There's an old axiom that 70 - 80% of medical problems are self-limited and will resolve themselves.
Hoyt
Jun 2020
#2
No. That's about right. In fact, my Adult Medicine instructor in PA School said it was closer to 90%
Aristus
Jun 2020
#3
Chronic problems are completely baffling to medicine. They treat a number and create other problems
lagomorph777
Jun 2020
#8
Certainly makes life easier, but for things like strep, etc., vast majority will survive.
Hoyt
Jun 2020
#13
So is kidney failure, which is how Emily Dickinson died--it's called Bright's Disease.
tblue37
Jun 2020
#25
The consequences of poor preventive care are not going to be seen in 3 to 4 months.
unitedwethrive
Jun 2020
#15
Pediatricians are very worried about the consequences of delayed vaccinations
unitedwethrive
Jun 2020
#16
If the kids are socially isolating, it's unlikely that there will be a problem.
Crunchy Frog
Jun 2020
#30
This assumes strict, long-term social isolation, which I agree would work, but even having a parent
unitedwethrive
Jun 2020
#31