-
20 votes
-
AI eroded doctors’ ability to spot cancer within months in study
41 votes -
The man who ran a carnival attraction that saved thousands of premature babies wasn’t a doctor at all
33 votes -
Google’s healthcare AI made up a body part — what happens when doctors don’t notice?
30 votes -
Care, not controversy
12 votes -
New Legal Gender Recognition Act comes into force in Sweden today – law makes it easier for trans people to change their legal gender
19 votes -
The surgeon who used F1 pitstop techniques to save lives of babies
24 votes -
US Veterans Affairs mental health therapists’ script: ‘I cannot guarantee complete confidentiality’
24 votes -
Secret Ink - South Korea's underground tattoo scene: The women defying the law | BBC 100 Women
14 votes -
The American physicians are healing themselves with Ozempic
31 votes -
Why some doctors are reassessing hypnosis
11 votes -
How best to get a thorough inspection after avoiding doctors for a decade?
The last time I ran off to see a doctor was about 10 years ago when I got a concussion shortly after graduating college. After that, I have visited optometrists and dentists, but not an MD. I had...
The last time I ran off to see a doctor was about 10 years ago when I got a concussion shortly after graduating college. After that, I have visited optometrists and dentists, but not an MD. I had my own insurance at my first big boy job after school, but I didn't schedule any appointments [early 20s with plenty of other priorities] before I got fired after a couple years and lost employer coverage (ain't nobody got money for COBRA nonsense).
After that, I've been rather chronically underemployed and thus avoided the medical system entirely (with the above exceptions of my eyes & teeth) to avoid being told to go fix expensive problems [and not wanting the monthly drain of premiums].
Anyway, I (for better and worse) had an hours cut that got me eligible for Medicaid. I'd like to know what to say to get a head-to-toe physical (including mental health) with minimal hassle and needing to re-clarify what I want. Mental health-wise, I can state a suspected primary complaint: undiagnosed ADD due to lacking the H as a child as well as seasonal depression [the chronic depression was entirely downstream from the abovementioned ADD].
However, I have no idea what to tell the doctor to look for physically. Probably should get some kind of comprehensive blood screening done. Make sure my hormones, iron, etc… are all within normal bounds. Perhaps I have some conditions that should've spooked me into seeing a doctor five years ago, but I'm still alive and well, so they're no longer causes for alarm [even if they should be].
32 votes -
My doctor emailed me back - Abigail Thorn
52 votes -
Doctor fired after running emergency department warns about effect of for-profit firms on US health care (2022)
40 votes -
How to deal with high conflict people - Bill Eddy
5 votes -
US study on puberty blockers goes unpublished because of politics, doctor says
18 votes -
Why surgeons are wearing the Apple Vision Pro in operating rooms
28 votes -
A peek inside doctors’ notes reveals symptoms of burnout
14 votes -
Spotify co-founder Daniel Ek hopes his latest brainchild, the Neko Body Scan, will revolutionise healthcare
20 votes -
Death threats, legal risk and backlogs weigh on US clinicians treating trans minors
13 votes -
IUD insertion is painful. For the first time, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued guidance for US physicians.
58 votes -
More than seventy per cent of dentists now accepting patients through Canadian Dental Care Plan
21 votes -
I was an MIT educated neurosurgeon. Now I'm unemployed and alone in the mountains. How did I get here?
34 votes -
Doctors try a controversial technique to reduce the US transplant organ shortage
30 votes -
Buoyed by regulatory vacuums, Silicon Valley is building a booming online wellness market that aims to leave the doctor’s office behind
17 votes -
Ontario family doctor says new AI notetaking saved her job
18 votes -
Health care workers say 'moral injury ' is more accurate than burnout in the face of severe cost cutting
16 votes -
Swedish parliament passed a law Wednesday lowering the age required for people to legally change their gender from 18 to 16
34 votes -
'I was born intersex and doctors tried to erase me. It's important to speak out' - an interview with Raven van Dorst of the Dutch rock-metal band Dool
40 votes -
Concussion treatment: the insidious myth about resting protocols that even doctors still believe
22 votes -
Deciding whether to continue with chemotherapy and immunotherapy
I have stage four colo-rectal cancer. It's not curable. It's not particularly treatable. I'm getting palliative care, but I'm not yet end of life. They're not offering surgery or radiotherapy...
I have stage four colo-rectal cancer. It's not curable. It's not particularly treatable. I'm getting palliative care, but I'm not yet end of life. They're not offering surgery or radiotherapy (yet, that may change). They are giving me chemotherapy (capecitabine and irinotecan) and immunotherapy (cetuximab).
Prognosis is difficult, but if everything goes well I have about 18 months.
I've had 6 cycles of treatment. I had a re-staging PET CT scan and the results were very good.
But, here's the thing: chemo & immuno therapy suck. I don't just mean "I feel a bit bad sometimes", I mean "I feel awful most of the time."
We've just about got nausea under control, but those meds cause constipation and that's causing problems with my stoma. And because the nausea meds are only used for the first week it means the second week I have problems with fast output, and that's causing other problems with my stoma. My stoma team and my oncology team are not particularly joined up. In theory I can build in laxido for the first week and loperamide for the second week but that's complicated because side effects are so variable. And that's just stoma output -- there's a bunch of other stuff around pain, fatigue, skin toxicity (I'm not allowed in the sun, even on bright but overcast days. I have to use three different creams, but not too much of any of them, and they're not compatible with each other), loss of appetite, etc.
One example of how healthcare isn't joined up and I'm getting conflicting advice (there are lots of these): My stoma team want me to wear a hernia support belt to prevent my hernia getting worse, and to help my stoma work properly. But this is a tight broad elastic belt going round my lower abdomen, right where my diaphragm is, and so it makes it harder for me to breath. My physio doesn't want me to wear the belt because it's interfering with fatigue treatment (which is "do more stuff, but do it slowly, and build in breaks, and FOCUS ON YOUR BREATHING"). My oncology team have no opinion and are leaving it to the other teams.
I know some people just want more life, and they don't care about side effects. "Do anything you can to give me more life". But that's not me. I'd much rather have 3 months of mostly feeling okay and then a month of active death over a year of mostly feeling fucking lousy and then a few months of active death.
I don't know how to talk to my family about this. I have spoken to my care team and they're giving me all the options - (1) continue chemo and immuno therapy on 2 week cycles until I die or until it stops working, and try to buidl in better support meds. (2) continue chemo & immuno on 2 week cycles, but build in breaks (3) stop chemo & immuno and focus on pain relief.
Some tricky decisions to be made.
77 votes -
Idaho needs doctors: But many don't want to come
34 votes -
Canadian father asks court to stop 27-year-old daughter's MAID death, review doctors' sign-off
32 votes -
Doctors receptive to AI collaboration in simulated clinical case without introducing bias
6 votes -
South Korea health alert raised to ‘severe’ over doctors walkout
25 votes -
Can doctors in England detain you under the Mental Health Act if they've only met you in MS Teams? (No, not any more)
14 votes -
AI was asked to create images of Black African docs treating white kids. How'd it go?
31 votes -
New book by doctor licensed in the UK and Brazil: poorer countries have useful knowledge and methods they could teach about frugal health care
18 votes -
The medical reason a doctor might put sugar on your anus
21 votes -
Woman denied medication for being of childbearing age
59 votes -
Health care has a massive carbon footprint. These doctors are trying to change that.
18 votes -
Rare 1885 photo captures the first licensed women doctors of India, Japan, and Syria
9 votes -
US police blame some deaths on ‘excited delirium.’ Emergency physicians consider formally disavowing the diagnosis
19 votes -
The villa where doctors experimented on children
8 votes -
US surgeons perform the second ever pig-to-human heart transplant
21 votes -
The long, hard fight over the first cosmetic penis implant
17 votes -
Tired, overworked and underpaid: Why doctors in Europe are going on strike
16 votes -
How Columbia ignored women, undermined prosecutors and protected a predator for more than twenty years
15 votes -
Many people think cannabis smoke is harmless − a physician explains how that belief can put people at risk
35 votes -
What physicians get wrong about the risks of being overweight
8 votes