- Local time
- 5:38 PM
- Joined
- Aug 9, 2020
- Messages
- 2,801
- Reaction score
- 9,385
- Location
- State College, Pennsylvania
My dad had elective heart surgery at 82. Medical professions gets compensated with fees for service, creates an inherent conflict of interest. Dad had great insurance coverage. Result was he lived long enough to need three years of full time nursing care at the end. When I came out of the closet with my polio history, current doctor asked me if I wanted testing to see if it was something else. I said no, the only way to get a definitive diagnosis is a black hole of testing, huge costs, and lots of discomfort at a minimum. I washed out of pre-med, and wrote for a medical newspaper, first job out of college. I know at bit more about the situation than most present day physicians.We like to experiment on our elderly with different ways of extending their life through a process I call, better living through chemistry. Why does this bother me so much, I go in for surgery this coming Wednesday to repair the mistake left by a doctor 6 or 7 years ago. It's not about the mistake, it's the fact that they talk in circles hoping to lose you along the way. I had a talk with this doctor some time back and was made to feel like she was smarter than me. I told her I was 52 when I retired, keep it up and you'll never retire. She just stared at me, like, how dare you talk to me that way. She shut up and was smart enough to walk away. No I didn't sue her, but I got a bigger kick out of watching her squirm. 50,000 a year for malpractice insurance is a problem. 700 to 15,000 a month, depending on their field. That's why many join a medical group.
Told her, no thanks, with no sensory nerve symptoms, only other thing it could be would be ALS, and this is not it. She got my respect, when she agreed, and said she just wanted to give me options in case I was trying to get insurance to pay for my equipment. I fired the doctor before her. Talk in circles, CYA type. When I was in private law practice, I was told not to see the local medical talent for anything serious. Low jury verdicts provide a haven for lower tier providers in my area.