Saturday, February 9, 2008

Do You Receive Adequate Quality Health Care?

If you are a young man or woman, and see your doctor infrequently because you know you are in good health, the insurers want you. The young healthy nonuser of health care is what keeps insurers and HMOs not just solvent, but profitable. So there you are, making money for your health care insurer or HMO, going to see your doctor every few years - probably for a bad cold. When you see your doctor, what is the quality of the care you get? Do you know how to assess quality, other than by the time you have to wait to see the doctor and the age of the magazines in the waiting room?

Does anyone check your skin for melanoma? Does anyone check your neck for a thyroid nodule? Does the doctor (or other health care professional) check a young man's testicles for a mass? Does the doctor check the woman's breasts or instruct her on self examination? How about checking lymph nodes? Does the doctor listen to your heart and lungs through three or four layers of fabric because there isn't enough time (or professional interest) to have you take off your garments. Is the doctor (or other health care professional) sufficiently skilled in physical examination to be able to recognize an abnormality or is his or her professional continuing education dictated by the programs which insurers and pharmaceutical companies offer? Or does the doctor or other health care professional ignore the role of history and physical examination and believe that the only way to find disease is by lots of lab tests?

If no one looks, no one finds treatable pathology. If no one finds treatable pathology, the patient will probably change jobs, move to another insurer, and the first insurer or HMO will not be burdened with the costs of diagnosis and treatment. As the insured, you have fulfilled your duty of providing profit for the insurer or HMO and allowed the health care provider to see his or her allotted number of patients.

You may know a lot about football or baseball. In both sports there are rules and umpires. What are the rules governing the care you should be receiving and who is enforcing the rules? If you don't know the rules, you may be the loser.

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