3/12/2010 5:08:53 PM
I asked my wife about this. She basically said that doctors do not want to get sued for malpractice, so they order a lot of tests to cover their asses.
3/12/2010 5:36:45 PM
^ Nailed it.
3/12/2010 7:03:44 PM
3/12/2010 7:04:17 PM
It's because malpractice lawsuits are out of control in this country. Doctors have to send every patient that comes in with a headache to get a $3,000 MRI (and hospitals over billing is a whole separate issue, $1000 aspirin?) on the one in a million chance that one of those patients might develop a brain tumor down the road and decide to sue them for everything they're worth because they didn't send them for that MRI 2 years ago. If the government really wants to lower the price of healthcare they should start with tort reform.
3/12/2010 7:17:33 PM
my coworker's wife is originally from Mexico and her family is still there. They went back to Mexico to have their baby and paid less for the delivery there then they did for one prenatal visit here.
3/12/2010 7:37:00 PM
thats not surprising
3/12/2010 7:48:34 PM
^^^they order the tests because they have to pay off that million dollar MRI machine, not because they're afraid of getting sued. tort reform won't change the number of tests that get ordered.
3/12/2010 8:51:32 PM
3/12/2010 8:56:14 PM
It's pretty much a business like every other service in this country. How can we make more $$$$$$?
3/12/2010 9:11:05 PM
^well yes and no.
3/12/2010 9:20:06 PM
physicians test to CYA. until there is real malpractice reform this will not change, nor should anyone expect it to change. but patients are just as responsible here though. everyone loves to promote evidence-based rationing, except when they themselves are the patient, that is.
3/12/2010 9:48:37 PM
Any opinions on what you feel should be the "maximum" amount that doctors can be sued for? I know people like to argue that you can't put a price on life. I'd argue it should be 2 million or salary * (65-age), whatever is higher.
3/12/2010 10:13:24 PM
just saw a scare-mongering commercial about women in their 20s getting cervical cancer
3/13/2010 12:11:06 AM
Yeah, it's because of malpractice, even in states like texas that already have medical malpractice reform that every republican is demanding.
3/13/2010 2:56:50 AM
3/13/2010 5:28:01 AM
3/13/2010 5:38:23 AM
3/13/2010 6:22:41 AM
got to get it all in before universal healthcare. After that, the opposite may happen.
3/13/2010 7:32:55 AM
3/13/2010 10:53:15 AM
^x8 - IMHO, I don't think maximum payouts are the answer to malpractice reform. Huge payouts are an issue, but only a small part of the problem. The entire process needs change. Caps are just the only step which to date has been politically feasible. The trial lawyer's lobby has very deep pockets.- I don't have exact figures, and I'm too lazy to find a source, but I've repeatedly heard numbers to the effect of: 9/10 cases brought are thrown out, of that 10%, another 9/10 cases tried are judged in favor of the physician. Settlements, even when no malpractice has occurred, have become less expensive and less time consuming than fighting. However, for every case, the physician has to take time out of his/her day, time that could be spent making money, to meet with attorneys for themselves, the hospital, etc. This situation alone is enough to induce across the board CYA.- Who wins in this situation? Ambulance chasers. Who loses in this situation? EVERYONE else. Physicians, all patients who pay higher overall costs, society at large and especially tax payers, and finally, ESPECIALLY patients who were truly wronged, who far to often fail to get appropriate justice.- Something needs to be done to change this "jackpot justice" situation where there is no penalty for frivolous lawsuits, and in fact, sometimes a reward in the form of a settlement. I would like to see plaintiffs forced to pay court and lawyer fees for the defendant if the case is thrown out or found in favor of the physician.
3/13/2010 1:23:18 PM
3/13/2010 1:30:51 PM
3/13/2010 4:07:05 PM
^ How about doing a visual field? Also very sensitive and much much much less $$
3/13/2010 5:24:28 PM
There is this cool doctor at student health that told it to me straight last time I was in there for a killer sore throat. She was like, you're throat is very red but out of every 100 students that come in here and get tested for strep only about 3 of them actually have it. If it isn't strep there are broad spectrum antibiotics that I can give you, but if its just some virus then chances are they won't do anything to help you. I thought it was nice of her to tell me that so I didn't wind up spending money on tests and drugs that I can't really afford.
3/13/2010 5:44:28 PM
i like how people in here are saying they were ordered to have tests they "didn't need." because clearly if the patient thinks he/she doesn't need a test, then it is unnecessary!
3/13/2010 6:38:09 PM
^ The problem is people judge physician decisions based on outcomes. A negative result means a test was unnecessary. A missed rare diagnosis means the same test was necessary. Until our society decides what level of risk it is willing to accept, the charade will continue.
3/13/2010 6:52:17 PM
3/13/2010 8:19:11 PM
^ haha i think she's a nurse on a neuro unit or something
3/13/2010 8:44:07 PM
That's pretty much what I was saying. A result confirming a diagnosis is often just as informative as a result refuting a diagnosis - hardly unnecessary. That doesn't stop people from forming those opinions though.
3/13/2010 8:58:12 PM
nope not a doctor, i am really glad i am not a doctor.....im not the first person to be sued.
3/13/2010 11:50:11 PM
3/14/2010 12:05:41 AM
^ my unsolicited advice to you and others in your situation is that you are your own best advocate. There is a commercial on TV that talks about the importance of asking your doctor questions while you have his attention. If you dont know what questions to ask do a bit of reading about your concerns.Im not chastising at all here, my advice really is to ask tons of questions and dont stop until you feel like you understand your options.if the doc wants to do a test.........ask him what exactly is he looking to find with it etc
3/14/2010 12:15:37 AM
Like I said though, the problem is the expectation (and to be honest, what should happen) is that the doctor should be the expert here. Yes it never hurts to ask questions and to be informed, but ultimately, if a doctor is suggesting I get a test, it should damn well be for a reason other than I might get mauled by a bear today, and the doctor wants to cover his ass. I should be asking questions for my own information, not so that I can attempt to decipher whether my doctor is actually recommending a proper course of treatment; that is after all, what I pay him so much money to do.
3/14/2010 12:27:01 AM
my point is:
3/14/2010 1:03:57 AM
3/14/2010 1:37:06 AM
wolfpAAcki get it you are what 2nd 3rd year student?
3/14/2010 3:15:28 AM
Agreed that it would be a better convo face to face. I'm finishing up 3rd year right now which is why I qualified my statements in my last post. I know nothing, although certianly more than the non-healthcare workers posting here. A lot of this is based on opinion and you can find evidence to back up either side of the argument. I'm giving the "i've seen this in clinic before and gotten the shit pimped out of me over it" perspective, where its always conservative treatment first. I do think that your friend was treated properly. Those aren't run of the mill migranes. They're refractory to treatment, and debilitating past just a day or 2 out of work. Thats the point where you start getting concerned. My whole thing is that you do the conservative management first (which was done), then move onto more tests/scans when the first options don't work. Your attending asked if she was scanned because thats what you do for atypical presentations /refractory headaches. I'm under the impression that you were arguing that more people with typical headaches should be scanned earlier in the thread. I think you deleted a few sentences or words from your last post after the edit. I'm actually giving the perspective more from an office visit perspective, even maybe an ED...although in the ED you're a hell of a lot more likely to get an unnecessary scan than anywhere else. Primary care physicians see headaches every day and rarely send their patients to get scanned, because thats the standard of care unless there are concerning symptoms or an atypical course.and just to add, someone correct me if I'm wrong, I think CT scans are on the order of $700-1500 and MRIs are around 4000 depending on what kind of scanner and what sequences are running. [Edited on March 14, 2010 at 4:21 AM. Reason : ]
3/14/2010 4:18:59 AM
well no matter the necessity of these tests, at the end of the day if your problem isn't surgical - you're fucked
3/14/2010 7:46:29 AM
hell no i dont think a person with a typical headache should have a CT scan.Then again typical headaches respond to medication.the majority of headaches are dehydration and or tension related. Those i am well aware of. After picking someone elses patient off of the floor, ive got one hell of a tension headache.However, i know my body and i know that even my worst headache complete with photophobia responded to ibuprofen. If i ever had a headache that didnt get better with a big glass of water, 800mg of ibuprofen, and a nap.........i would be calling my PCP or hitching a ride to the urgent care. I feel very fortunate to have never suffered from a migraine.maybe my perspective is a bit skewed i do see the worst of the worst. Some of the most unfortunate shit ever. jane doe has a mild MVC a week later complains of headaches. A scan was prudent because she could have had a slow leaking subdural hematoma. That scan was a stroke of luck or maybe bad luck.......there was something "suspicious" in the region of the thalamus. It warranted an MRI.......it was a damn tumor, relatively small...it was followed up with periodic MRIs to measure its progress. A future scan showed growth, no intervention needed at that time. THEN her optho found papiledema......no bueno, she shortly thereafter developed gait/balance issues. was biopsied and thought to be low grade. a month later during the resection..........oh fuck its a damn GBM.......prognosis..........one year. In the end that headache probably had nothing to do with that car crash. But that headache has forever changed her life she had her whole life ahead of her, and those 2 shifts depressed the shit out of me. 2 years ago i had to have one of those not terribly cheap VQ scans.I had an acute severe sinus infection and couldnt breathe through my nose..... at work while trying to eat, chew and breathe through my mouth i became very short of breath. I stopped eating obviously, but after the better part of an hour i still couldnt "catch my breath" developed chest pains, did a spot check with the pulse ox............my sats were fine but i was tachy into the mid 140s not quite SVT but still creates a really uncomfortable sensation in ones chest. My pulse was thready. I didnt want to go to the ED, but my coworkers convinced me to go. get there and get triaged.......12 lead doesnt show ischemic changes........yay im not having a heart attack! ok so now what? waited a couple of hours had some labs drawn and a chest xray..........standard chest pain protocol. few hours later a bed opens up in one of the pods.....so they start some fluids........heartrate is slowing down by now o2 sats are back to my baseline. The attending takes my history does his physical and says his first concern is for a PE due to the sudden onset of symptoms. my only risk factor was i was on the pill at the time. sent a d-dimer to the lab.they were about to discharge me..........when it came back slightly elevated. So to confirm or disprove a PE they needed to scan me. He opted to not expose me to the higher radiation from a spiral CTA. So i had my VQ scan, i am so glad it was negative. in the end it was probably the solumedrol kicking my ass with some help from sudafed. So even tho the scan was negative, it wasnt a waste. Without it i would have unknowingly been throwing clots. and a person can throw many many clots in their lungs before the big one hits. And i was dreading the thought of being an in patient bored out of my mind for days on a heparin drip micromanaging my nurses cuz ive seen what happens when the heparin protocols arent followed correctly. And a massive PE is a painful scary way to die. These patients before they lose consciousness are gasping for air with looks of sheer terror on their faces. Its hard to reassure them.......especially if they are blue from the nipple line upwards, cuz its not going to be a good outcome for them.[Edited on March 14, 2010 at 9:02 AM. Reason : more anecdotal evidence]
3/14/2010 8:40:21 AM
Once again, you're giving evidence for testing where there is sufficient evidence to do so...for the most part. I also assume that you're paying into the healthcare system being a young person with a job, so when you go to the doctor freaking out with a differential of a PE, Panic attack, drug reaction, heart attack you pay for the tests you get. That said, your insurance company is paying for a lot of it and to a certain extent they should pay without screwing other customers over....they just don't unfortunately. Regarding the patient with the GBM, thats how a lot of them are discovered honestly. That person with some wierd symptoms a week after an MVA needs to be scanned because you're at a higher risk for a bleed after trauma. Your GBM was a death sentence for sure, and once discovered we're talking about a completely different situation.
3/14/2010 1:37:07 PM
I'm beginning to see doctors more as highly trained automotive dealership technicians.
3/14/2010 5:03:56 PM
except for the fact that they save lives
3/14/2010 5:28:31 PM
Say whatever you want about too many tests to prevent malpractice. I'll go along with that.But what about cesarean sections? In some areas, close to 50% of births are c-sections. The national rate is about 30%. We're talking about a completely natural process that the body needs zero assistance to complete (in the large majority of cases). And 1 out of 3 women are having surgery (often scheduled) to deliver.
3/14/2010 5:51:05 PM
it's called an electrive C-section. And in a lot of cases (not always), it's a waste of healthcare resources--simply a matter of convenience.
3/14/2010 6:44:10 PM
Because when its your baby who may or may not be in danger from a delayed natural birth and it comes out fucked up when the OB could have delivered quicker/more safely with a c-section you will be pissed and sue them into the ground. At least thats what they will have you believe. OB/GYNs pay the highest insurance of any specialty because they're on he hook basically for every birth for 18 years, even though some defect may no have been prevenable by managing the delivery differently. Its a totally fucked up system.
3/14/2010 6:48:03 PM
Everyone wants a perfect baby - and they will sue if they don't receive one. From the OB/GYN standpoint it is simple: avoid potential lawsuits, perform a service which earns more money, maybe go home earlier. Yes, child labor is natural. So is occassional death during labor, for both mother and baby.
3/14/2010 8:18:50 PM
Yeah OB/GYNs definitely have it the worst when it comes to this sort of stuff. Who do you figure is 2nd for completely pointless lawsuits? Maybe oncologists?
3/14/2010 8:26:42 PM
3/14/2010 8:29:09 PM
set em up
3/14/2010 8:43:04 PM