Why are doctors so hands off and unhelpful in the USA?
from Buttflapper@lemmy.world to nostupidquestions@lemmy.world on 05 Sep 18:48
https://lemmy.world/post/19444421

I remember when I was a kid, doctors were so interactive and really took time to get to know you and talk to you, learn about what you’re going through and explain things. Now as an adult, it’s been nearly impossible to find a doctor who is willing to take any amount of time to sit down, explain things, show any sort of compassion or empathy at all.

I suffer from acid reflux, and in order to diagnose that, they basically put a tube down your throat, it’s called an endoscopy. You have to be fully sedated with anesthesia and take nearly an entire day off of work because the way the anesthesia affects you, you can’t drive and someone has to drive you. Well for many years now we’ve had this other procedure which is a tube, but they put it through your nose instead. There’s been lots of research papers about the use of it, it’s used in other countries as a procedure regularly. So I asked several gastroenterologists if they offer the procedure and every single one of them said no, and would not provide any additional information or insight as to why you have to be completely sedated and pay thousands upon thousands of dollars for expensive anesthesia. I am simply blown away. It makes no sense. A research tested method that has been written about for about a decade now in actual research studies by board certified medical physicians, and no one offers it. Literally no one, and they won’t even consider it.

I’ve also been through at least several primary care physicians because the ones I have seen are so short and don’t really take time to get to know you at all. They just pop in, ask you a handful of questions and leave, if your test results come back with anything abnormal, they say it’s nothing to worry about, they don’t want to take any extra time to help look into anything or diagnose you… like wtf?

It just seems like doctors these days are out to get you to spend as much money as possible and do the absolute bare minimum for you in return. And now we have direct primary care options where you can circumvent insurance entirely, pay your doctor thousands upon thousands of dollars a year for the same level of care that we had in the '90s. But now you have to pay out of pocket for that in addition to your insurance. Wtfffff

#nostupidquestions

threaded - newest

originalucifer@moist.catsweat.com on 05 Sep 18:58 next collapse

the united states is addicted to litigation. something that goes wrong is always someone elses responsibility and they will pay.

if a kid breaks their arm at school way too many humans decide 'that school was negligent, no matter what the circumstances' and they sue instead of collectively realizing kids do stupid things, and get hurt sometimes. this leaves school districts banning things like 'tag'. banning being children

its the same nonsense with doctors. theyve been sued into seclusion of anything they arent explicitly required to do.

the insurance industry has a hand in managing doctors time also... theyre basically given zero time to work with patients or they cant make enough money to stay in business.

health insurance companies only profit when human beings suffer

pearsaltchocolatebar@discuss.online on 05 Sep 19:34 next collapse

Nah, it’s about cramming as many patients as possible into each day. If it was about litigation, being more personable and attentive would decrease the risk.

originalucifer@moist.catsweat.com on 05 Sep 19:45 next collapse

Cramming is due to insurance reimbursement t

reddit_sux@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 04:11 collapse

it’s about cramming as many patients as possible into each day.

Using general anaesthsia and controlling everything reduces risk as compared to doing it with local anaesthesia which might cause discomfort, vomiting. These can get you sued. You never know who will be the person who will screw you just because you tried to save a few bucks.

General anaesthsia might save a few minutes during the procedure but along with the time for giving anaesthsia, recovery from anaesthsia, after care. It is both more time consuming and costly.

being more personable and attentive would decrease the risk.

You would think so but in real world the more you speak more material you would give if you get sued. Hence the doctrine be professional and cover your ass.

pearsaltchocolatebar@discuss.online on 06 Sep 05:48 collapse

I’m not sure why you’re talking about anesthesia.

reddit_sux@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 06:58 collapse

OP’s post was about anaesthesia.

pearsaltchocolatebar@discuss.online on 06 Sep 14:52 collapse

No, they used anesthesia as an example. Their post was about doctors not spending time and communicating with patients.

reddit_sux@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 17:03 collapse

I gave an explanation for both the points talking less n anaesthesia from the point of view of preventing litigation.

New doctors are drilled by seniors n lawyers to speak less, be professional n only answer to the point.

Asifall@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 17:28 collapse

Is there evidence that this is true? Ive read that the US is actually not more litigious than some European nations and the idea that it is has been boosted by corporations that want to shift public opinion against plaintiffs (an example being the infamous McDonald’s coffee lawsuit)

harsh3466@lemmy.ml on 05 Sep 19:02 next collapse

Capitalism.

Healthcare and insurance are for profit industries and the corporations running the healthcare and insurance business don’t give a fuck about the health of the patients. They want all the monies and want to move patients through as quickly and cheaply as possible to maximize their profits.

placatedmayhem@lemmy.world on 05 Sep 19:16 next collapse

It’s exactly this. The policies put in place by “healthcare administrators” (MBAs and such with healthcare flavoring, not people that actually know how to care for people’s health like doctors and nurses) are designed to process the most patience in the least amount of face time possible, so that each doctor and nurse can see more patients per day, meaning more office visit fees, meaning higher profit. My dad calls it the “cattle shoot” and I feel that’s a pretty apt analogy. It’s the same general reason that fast food restaurants and pharmacies and department stores are perpetually understaffed: fewer staff members means lower “overhead” costs.

EleventhHour@lemmy.world on 05 Sep 19:32 next collapse

This combined with liability. If the patient gets anything even resembling an unsatisfactory result, they’re likely to sue the doctor.

Buttflapper@lemmy.world on 05 Sep 21:32 collapse

Honestly, I think this is not true, in my experience at least. I think suing doctors was a feature of the '90s and early 2000s, but now people are so poor they can’t afford lawyers to sue a doctor for them, and medical malpractice runs so rampant that doctors don’t even seem to care at all. Everyone has had a bad running with a doctor, yet you’re very unlikely to hear of someone who has sued a doctor and gotten away with it.

bluGill@fedia.io on 05 Sep 20:16 next collapse

What the US has isn't free market capitalism. It is capitalism but with government imposed rules that are harmful to the common person. Your insurance depends your employer and you don't get a reasonable choice - they put in $1000/month that if you go elsewhere you lose that. Of course what your employer wants and what you want are different. Your employer wants the lowest costs for something expensive, and they want you to not quit until they are ready to get rid of you. You want some service with that insurance, but you are not a player with power so you don't get that.

harsh3466@lemmy.ml on 05 Sep 20:18 next collapse

It’s not pure capitalism, but it’s definitely crony capitalism. Us plebs get fucked either way.

bluGill@fedia.io on 05 Sep 20:22 collapse

I feel compelled to point that out though as government provided health care is not the only possible solution, and I'm in the group that would oppose that. However I have provided a better alternative: eliminate the deductions for employer provided insurance. (I think the above about other benefits jobs provide - I should be comparing paycheck not "fringe benefits".

harsh3466@lemmy.ml on 05 Sep 20:35 next collapse

The profit motive needs to be removed from healthcare, or patients will continue to get fucked.

Healthcare needs to be separated from employment, and the profit motive needs to be removed from healthcare.

Should the government run it? Maybe not, but what’s the alternative? It’s like every election. Choosing one of two bad choices and hoping you choose the less bad.

And in the case of healthcare, I’ll take government run, profit free, tax funded healthcare over what we have now.

Edit: autocorrect error.

nilloc@discuss.tchncs.de on 06 Sep 12:36 collapse

Non profit, non vertically integrated healthcare. Letting the insurance companies “partner” with the pharmacies and hospitals is monopolistic or at best duopolistic in some markets. And it lets them charge whatever or threaten to leave a community. Which has happened repeatedly in my area. Then the biggest hospital in the area buys up another small one and the costs go up again.

harsh3466@lemmy.ml on 05 Sep 20:38 next collapse

Also, I don’t see how eliminating the deductions helps. And I don’t mean that in a snarky way. I’m genuinely asking how that would make the situation better.

bluGill@fedia.io on 05 Sep 21:26 collapse

When companies pay me more if I don't take their insurance I have an option to choose something better. Right now I have no optioniso nobody cares to serve me.

LibertyLizard@slrpnk.net on 05 Sep 20:43 collapse

This might be better for wealthy people but it’s hard to see how this would benefit the very poorest who are in most need of health care. What does this solution do for them?

bluGill@fedia.io on 05 Sep 21:27 collapse

Only a tiny minority who mostly don't have jobs and thus no insurance and so we already need to do something different. For the middle class this is better.

Random123@fedia.io on 05 Sep 22:02 next collapse

Thats BS theres plenty of lower class who have jobs and get shit insurance. I shouldnt have to say this…

But sure the middle class is more important

bluGill@fedia.io on 06 Sep 00:11 collapse

The middle class is much larger. Not ignoring the plight of them, but don't force something subpar on me just for a small percetage. With several hundred americans there are a lot of poor but still a tiny percentage

Random123@fedia.io on 06 Sep 19:33 collapse

Please tell me your sources because a quick google search will indicate that the lower class is not considered a “small percentage”

bluGill@fedia.io on 07 Sep 12:47 collapse

What is lower class? most people consider themselves middle class and have employer health insurance, but a large number meet the common definition of lower class so I consider the common definition wrong.

piccolo@ani.social on 07 Sep 15:24 next collapse

Who is considering themselves middle class?

Random123@fedia.io on 07 Sep 21:07 collapse

Lower class would be working class and under

Grunt4019@lemm.ee on 05 Sep 23:44 collapse

What about contracting a terminal illness like cancer where you might not be able to work. You need a job to keep your healthcare but if an illness or disability that you have or get at some point stops you from working and you need to pay for that healthcare, what do you do?

bluGill@fedia.io on 06 Sep 00:08 collapse

I think insurance should cover you for all current conditions for life even if you otherwise switch insurance for new issues

piccolo@ani.social on 07 Sep 15:22 collapse

How to pay for insurance if you have no job?

Random123@fedia.io on 05 Sep 21:59 collapse

The policies out in place by healthcare and hospitals arent forced by government.. these policies are by the companies so its not even about “but da gubnent is ebil!”

bluGill@fedia.io on 06 Sep 00:10 collapse

They are the naturatual concequense of the policies put into place. They are not required but they are still the result that should be expected.

Random123@fedia.io on 06 Sep 19:38 collapse

If its to be expected then something should be done about it even if we all have to make a contribution either by tax or by putting your due diligence and voting for the right person for everyone, not for yourself

TimewornTraveler@lemm.ee on 06 Sep 03:28 collapse

this is such a cliché, short-sighted oversimplification that doesn’t address the root of how individual physicians end up caught in these systems of apathy.

like yes capitalism is part of the problem but that’s about as useful as saying, why is there climate change? capitalism! like sure, yes, but isn’t there so much more to the story that can inform us on why the systems are the way they are, so that maybe we can address it? or i guess .ml users already have that answer, just start a global revolution and hope the winners care enough to fix it before all the survivors die of heat stroke dysentery and starvation, easy. capitalism. upvotes to the left.

tee900@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 15:14 next collapse

How do people not get so sick of this meme of an answer?

Its like how every opinion teenagers have is the antithesis of their parents ideology.

What if a communist doctor withholds execllent care to preserve resources for the motherland?

PapaStevesy@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 16:39 collapse

We do get sick of it, but only because it’s always true.

tee900@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 16:53 collapse

Im not convinced alturism seeps from our pores when currency is taken away. I would say its more human nature to claim and horde anything of value, and those who are generous will slowly give up their equity to those who arent generous.

If the system is changed to force people to be generous or outlaw hording then you would see people with power continuing to do it, as they do now.

Maybe captialism is just what fits because this is what we are.

piccolo@ani.social on 07 Sep 15:26 collapse

Or its just the system that benefits the minority.

tee900@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 17:49 collapse

That doesnt address my perspective. I dont think you understood what i said.

harsh3466@lemmy.ml on 07 Sep 03:40 collapse

Capitalism/the profit motive is how physicians get caught in these systems of apathy. My comment isn’t an over simplification, it is the root cause.

Is the entirety of the healthcare system incredibly complex? Absolutely, and within that complex system there are all sorts of problems that could be teased out to study and address. None of that will dramatically change the outcome of a system that is designed solely to extract as much profit as it can.

When profit is the primary goal of a healthcare company (and the legally mandated responsibility of that company if it is publicly traded) the end result is the system we have.

SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 05 Sep 19:06 next collapse

Ask the doctors who moved out of their home states instead of risking being jailed for “performing an abortion” when they were doling out life-saving medicine.

paddirn@lemmy.world on 05 Sep 19:11 next collapse

Not a doctor and just talking out my ass, but I’m assuming part of it has to do with patient workloads and dealing with insurance companies, they’re just not incentivized to really take any time with patients, just get 'em through the visit, check whatever boxes they need to, and move on.

But yeah, I very much have had the same experience for the past 10 years or so with my same doctor, it just feels absolutely useless going to them for anything. It takes alot for me to go to the doctor for anything or to bring anything up even with the doctor if it’s not life-threatening. I’m not a hypochondriac by any stretch, I just try to keep an eye out on my health and if I notice my body doing something out of the ordinary, I just ask about it to see if it means anything.

Before my regular check-up though I’ll kind of bank up whatever questions or oddities that I’ve noticed, things that I figure I can bring up and see if maybe it’s a sign of one thing or another. Most of the time when I mention anything though, it just feels like the doctor is blowing me off, or he’ll just give a guess, maybe google it and show some pictures. At best he might tell me something like, “Hmmm, well it’s probably not cancer.” and then just sort of shrug and move on. I’m a guy, so I’m used to no one caring about my health or well-being at all, but I think I had a different image in my head when I was a kid about what it was doctors actually did.

The one regular benefit I see from going to the doctor is getting my blood drawn and being able to track health numbers from that, my job does the same thing too, so I get two sets of numbers from my blood work every year and I track it to see overall condition of my health, which I kind of wish was something my doctor did. He’ll mostly just comment the most obvious thing possible when the test results come in, but there’s never a look at health numbers over time, which is why I started just tracking it on my own.

bradorsomething@ttrpg.network on 05 Sep 19:53 next collapse

The medical industry and the insurance industry are locked in a battle for money, and you don’t have a lot of say in it. I used to run an ambulance service. Let’s discuss.

If I took you to the hospital, and you were on medicare, there was a fixed rate to pick you up and a per mile rate. I got paid part by the government and part by the patient, who I was legally required to bill. If I failed to adequately bill the patient (10% or so), if I lied on the parts and mileage, silver bracelets and court time. We loved billing care/caid, because it was a fixed price, and we knew the payer of 90% paid regularly.

If you have private ambulance transport, you have no idea what you’ll get. The patient can have a $13,000 deductible, a 50% copay, and. $20,000 per-event cap. There’s no rule what a reasonable bill can be. The insurance company is trying to rig the game so the patient pays most of the bill while paying that sweet monthly premium at the same time. The ambulance is trying to be reimbursed for the time and materials. The red states opened the door for the patients to again be uninsured and pay you $0 for everything. So bills have to be high, to ensure some money comes in from insurance, to insure things can keep running. I would have loved to have a country of all care/caid and it be illegal to live there otherwise. They’d be the best cared for poor and old people in the world, getting quality care backed by the “only if you’re poor or old” US single-payer system.

But we have what we have, and it’s been well sold to enough clueless people that it’s here to stay.

Maeve@kbin.earth on 06 Sep 16:56 collapse

It shows how far right both parties have moved, that Richard Nixon championed the idea of a funded EPA and single payer health (the later until Kaiser got his ear).

BananaTrifleViolin@lemmy.world on 05 Sep 20:17 next collapse

The US healthcare system is built around money and profit. A cheaper procedure which does not require general anaesthetic costs less, and reduces profit. That can be beneficial to the providers but bloat is incentivised in the US healthcare system as providers battle with insurance companies for money. Crudely healthcare providers don’t care about saving you money; they want to take as much money as they can get.

Meanwhile, countries with tax funded health care opt for the most cost effective procedures, investigations and treatments. The incentive is to reduce costs and offer the most effective things to the most people possible. That can also sometimes have negative side effects if not carefully regulated but in such systems generally Doctors advocate for the best procedure and best medical practice, as they themselves do not directly benefit financially from which procedure is pushed. The downside is you do get the opposite side of things where patients are dissuaded from things as they’re not deemed cost effective by those who control the spending.

lemmylommy@lemmy.world on 05 Sep 21:23 next collapse

Just fyi, the sedation is usually not medically necessary. I have had it (as well as a colonoscopy) done without, just got a spray to numb the throat for a short while. It’s not pleasant, but I found it bearable and it’s much nicer to just walk out and drive home on your own. If necessary I could still have told/signaled that I want sedation after all during the procedure. Propofol works within less than a minute. In that case they would have called someone to pick me up.

That said, I do live in Germany, so money does not play as big a role as in the US when it comes to healthcare. And the doctors and their staff were exceedingly nice and caring.

Maybe, if you believe you can bear it, and if acid reflux does not make it painful, ask to do it without sedation next time.

Buttflapper@lemmy.world on 05 Sep 21:29 next collapse

I know the sedation is not medically necessary, lots of places outside the USA don’t do it at all. Japan, Europe, etc. There’s research studies that even show non sedated procedures are being used and have been favorably received. Every single doctor I’ve asked about them, they outright refuse to do it without sedation or anesthesia. Guess how much that costs? Thousands of dollars, with insurance. So I have to pay about $5,000 at least out of pocket a year for insurance, then I have to pay $3,500 for this procedure, and the last two that I’ve gotten, they haven’t shown anything. So naturally I’m like okay, can we do a less invasive one without sedation, like they do in other countries? Absolutely not. We won’t do that, and we don’t know anyone else who will ever do it. Like what the hell is this?

crusty_baboon@lemmy.world on 05 Sep 22:49 collapse

This is not medical advice, just some general comments regarding your post.

An upper endoscopy is rarely needed for evaluation for uncomplicated acid reflux. It alone is not even an appropriate indication for an upper endoscopy, except for a specific patient population and that’s to screen for a disorder related to acid reflux.

Unsedated endoscopies are uncomfortable for the patient and the physician. They suck. Many gastroenterologists will do it, but there’s at least some reason for why others won’t. Doctors in countries that do a lot of unsedated upper endoscopies do so because these patients have them much more often (screening for a much higher risk of gastric cancer in, say, Japan). But the way, whether you get anesthesia from an anesthesiologist or no anesthesia doesn’t affect how much insurance pays the endoscopist.

The tube you’re referring to sounds like pH monitoring with an impedance catheter. It stays in your nose for 24 hours, and generally isn’t more convenient than an upper endoscopy. It’s not required for diagnosis of simple acid reflux, and serves a completely different purpose than an endoscopy. It’s used mainly when the diagnosis is in question. Most gastroenterologists aren’t sufficiently trained to read these studies anyway. These patients are usually referred to high volume centers.

Drusas@fedia.io on 06 Sep 01:00 collapse

Sedation for upper endoscopy isn't even necessarily the norm throughout different countries. It is in the US, but I had my first upper endoscopy in Japan, and they just numbed my throat.

litchralee@sh.itjust.works on 05 Sep 22:11 next collapse

To start off, I’m sorry to hear that you’re not receiving the healthcare you need. I recognize that these words on a screen aren’t going to solve any concrete problems, but in the interest of a fuller comprehension of the USA healthcare system, I will try to offer an answer/opinion to your question that goes into further depth than simply “capitalism” or “money and profit” or “greed”.

What are my qualifications? Absolutely none, whatsoever. Although I did previously write a well-received answer in this community about the USA health insurance system, which may provide some background for what follows.

In short, the USA healthcare system is a hodge-podge of disparate insurers and government entities (collectively “payers”), and doctors, hospitals, clinics, ambulances, and more government entities (collectively “providers”), overseen by separate authorities in each of the 50 US States, territories, tribes, and certain federal departments (collectively “regulators”). There is virtually no national-scale vertical integration in any sense, meaning that no single or large entity has the viewpoint necessary to thoroughly review the systemic issues in this “system”, nor is there the visionary leadership from within the system to even begin addressing its problems.

It is my opinion that by bolting-on short-term solutions without a solid long-term basis, the nation was slowly led to the present dysfunction, akin to boiling a frog. And this need not be through malice or incompetence, since it can be shown that even the most well-intentioned entities in this sordid and intricate pantomime cannot overcome the pressures which this system creates. Even when there are apparent winners like filthy-rich plastic surgeons or research hospitals brimming with talented expert doctors of their specialty, know that the toll they paid was heavy and worse than it had to be.

That’s not to say you should have pity on all such players in this machine. Rather, I wish to point to what I’ll call “procedural ossification”, as my field of computer science has a term known as “protocol ossification” that originally borrowed the term from orthopedia, or the study of bone deformities. How very fitting for this discussion.

I define procedural ossification as the loss of flexibility in some existing process, such that rather than performing the process in pursuit of a larger goal, the process itself becomes the goal, a mindless, rote machine where the crank is turned and the results come out, even though this wasn’t what was idealized. To some, this will harken to bureaucracy in government, where pushing papers and forms may seem more important that actually solving real, pressing issues.

I posit to you that the USA healthcare system suffers from procedural ossification, as many/most of the players have no choice but to participate as cogs in the machine, and that we’ve now entirely missed the intended goal of providing for the health of people. To be an altruistic player is to be penalized by the crushing weight of practicalities.

What do I base this on? If we look at a simple doctor’s office, maybe somewhere in middle America, we might find the staff composed of a lead doctor – it’s her private practice, after all – some Registered Nurses, administrative staff, a technician, and an office manager. Each of these people have particular tasks to make just this single doctor’s office work. Whether it’s supervising the medical operations (the doctor) or operating/maintaining the X-ray machine (technician) or cutting the checks to pay the building rent (office manager), you do need all these roles to make a functioning, small doctor’s office.

How is this organization funded? In my prior comment about USA health insurance, there was a slide which showed the convoluted money flows from payers to providers, which I’ve included below. What’s missing from this picture is how even with huge injections of money, bad process will lead to bad outcomes.

<img alt="financial flow in the US healthcare system" src="https://www.ispor.org/images/default-source/heor-solutions-center/snip20210528_5.png"> Source

In an ideal doctor’s office, every patient that walks in would be treated so that their health issues are managed properly, whether that’s fully curing the condition or controlling it to not get any worse. Pa

Asifall@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 17:12 collapse

I’m not qualified to say if this is accurate but thanks for putting in the effort to write it!

Boozilla@lemmy.world on 05 Sep 22:13 next collapse
  • Too many patients, not enough doctors.
  • Private insurance and intrusive controlling software: the doctor is limited in what they are allowed to prescribe, they have to check all sorts of boxes, and they have complex computer forms to fill out. They are too busy with the laptop to have much attention left for patients.
  • Non-compliant patients who “do their own research” on the internet.

Most doctors I know don’t even want to go to a doctor. They know all the providers are shit talking their patients and just doing the best they can in a very broken system.

Late stage capitalism and medical misinformation have made the doctor-patient relationship almost adversarial.

Nougat@fedia.io on 05 Sep 22:15 next collapse

You know enough doctors well enough to know that most of them don't want to go to a doctor?

Boozilla@lemmy.world on 05 Sep 22:18 collapse

Read what I said. Most doctors I know. I know several. I worked for a hospital system, and I currently have a healthcare adjacent job. We talk about these things, yes. I don’t claim to speak for all doctors.

Maeve@kbin.earth on 06 Sep 16:49 next collapse

Non-compliance is often because it's unaffordable, even diet.

Boozilla@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 16:58 collapse

Yes, I would not dispute that. Medication and PT is too expensive for many. And many people live in “food deserts”. Whatever the causes, it’s highly frustrating for doctors.

Asidonhopo@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 18:08 next collapse

Non-compliant patients who “do their own research” on the internet.

In the US they advertise drugs directly to us, we’re expected to do our own marketing-guided research to speed along the transaction.

Boozilla@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 21:48 collapse

You’re right, it’s a complex issue that my bullet point just kind of touched on (and lacks nuance). In many ways, patients are required to navigate their own health care and be their own champion and advocate It gets messy when we encounter misinformation that tells us what we want to hear, but isn’t based on solid science.

Wrench@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 19:55 next collapse

Also a very litigious society. Even if they mean well, going off the page and trying to figure out a “Haus” solution is just putting themselves at risk.

They have to check all the boxes for your insurance. They have to check all the boxes for their own malpractice insurance. Even if they followed procedure, they might get dragged through the legal system to defend themselves if a client feels wronged.

That turns you, the client, into a number in a dispassionated machine.

And I don’t have a solution to it.

Edit - that was a bit too bleak. There are a lot of doctors trying their best to retain humanity in a system aimed at destroying it. The whole med school journey is aimed at weeding the people out who are just in it for the money. It’s designed to gatekeep the industry to require a massive amount of passion to get your foot in the door. But the realities of the industry do their best to squash that.

Boozilla@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 21:45 collapse

Thank you, you bring up some important points. Malpractice lawsuits and insurance are significant problems, too.

In my limited anecdotal experience as a patient of (and support staff for) doctors I have met some very compassionate and capable doctors and nurses. I don’t see health care providers as being the problem with our system. It’s primarily the private health insurance companies and PBMs. They are the main reasons why we can’t have nice things.

Hazor@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 21:18 collapse

They are too busy with the laptop to have much attention left for patients.

I’m a nurse practitioner, and can confirm this: I spend at least half of my time tapping away at the computer, checking boxes, and completing often-redundant forms for insurance and regulatory compliance and whatnot. It’s really frustrating, and there’s a lot of room for improvement.

Boozilla@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 21:39 next collapse

It’s astonishing (and insane) how private health insurance has taken over the entirety of health care at every operational level.

This is a type of insurance that started out decades ago as an unusual perk for executives. They called “major medical”. Nobody thought that much about it. In those days most working people simply could go see a doctor and just pay with cash or check.

Now, their tendrils have wrapped around everything from the lowest-paid pharmacy tech to most expensive surgeon…and everything and everyone in-between.

The board rooms of private health insurance companies have a gigantic dragon by the tail, and they have no damned clue what to do with it.

Boozilla@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 21:52 collapse

I’ll also add that I very much appreciate nurse practitioners. I have to go in every 6 months for routine “old man maintenance” checkups, and there’s really no need for me to see a doctor for these types of visits. You’re filling a much-needed role. (And I’m sure you do a lot more than just “old man maintenance” consults, LOL).

Rolder@reddthat.com on 05 Sep 22:54 next collapse

Judging from my own doctors experience, they are way overbooked. Can’t get a personal experience when they gotta see a couple dozen more people the same day.

curbstickle@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 05 Sep 23:27 next collapse

My doctors have been incredible, at least those I’ve had for the past 4 years or so. Including my gastro.

They take the time to talk to me, they remember who I am, and my gastro is even a direct recommendation from my primary doctor (my gastro is his gastro).

I’ve been going to gastroenterologists for literally decades, the one I got a couple years ago is the first to finally find the issue, and I’ve been reflux free. I doubt he’d do a transnasal either - its more limited in scope (hah!), you’re only getting part of what an endoscopy can do. That’s why its not transnasal endoscopy, its transnasal esophagoscopy.

And that’s probably why. Why they wouldn’t just say that, I don’t know. There are lots of places that will do transnasal esophagoscopy throughout the US, so it isn’t a procedure that is just “not done here” or anything, its not as popular in general because its just not as thorough of a procedure.

I hope you find a doctor in the future that takes the time to explain things though.

Edit: Forgot to mention, the hospital system by me is a non profit. Only differentiator I am aware of, and its a great hospital system.

kungen@feddit.nu on 05 Sep 23:39 next collapse

you’re only getting part of what an endoscopy can do.

But it’s much less intrusive, no? So should it not be considered to see if a good diagnosis can be made via it?

curbstickle@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 05 Sep 23:55 collapse

If it doesn’t cover the expected area of concern? No

If you dont know the cause of the issue? No

If you know the issue, and just need to check the state of the esophagus or something? Sure.

Its done for specific reasons, just like an endoscopy is done for specific reasons. When it comes down to it though, it only does a small part of what an endoscopy can do, and with a generic “acid reflux”, its not going to give enough information to diagnose. Its a way to assess symptoms, not a way to diagnose a gastrointestinal problem.

Buttflapper@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 00:31 collapse

And that’s probably why. Why they wouldn’t just say that, I don’t know. There are lots of places that will do transnasal esophagoscopy throughout the US, so it isn’t a procedure that is just “not done here” or anything, its not as popular in general because its just not as thorough of a procedure.

Here’s the exact wording I got from my Gastro in the USA in a major metro serving millions of people.

I have reached out to our gastroenterology department and have learned that we do not do this procedure. Additionally, we are not aware of anyone in the state of Georgia that offers it.

No one in the ENTIRE state of Georgia… does a Nasal Endoscopy or esophagoscopy, a common procedure all across the world. Truly asinine.

curbstickle@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 06 Sep 00:34 collapse

I can tell you its done in the tristate area.

Maybe its a Georgia thing.

magiccupcake@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 00:22 next collapse

I’ve only tangentially heard about this, but another issue is that doctors in the US don’t have to, and aren’t encouraged to keep up with recent research.

Combine that with a medical education system that hasn’t changed drastically in 70 years to keep up with that new research and most US doctors are just out of date.

Lemmeenym@lemm.ee on 06 Sep 01:42 next collapse

There is some variation by state but in the US almost all licensed medical professionals are required to participate in continuing education to keep their license.

BalooWasWahoo@links.hackliberty.org on 06 Sep 02:22 collapse

Which is hit or miss. I’ve been in those CE courses and seminars, and they range from informative and exciting to literal time-wasting. An example: What doctor needs to care about log-rolling patients and backboarding them? That’s something a firefighter or EMT does.

retrieval4558@mander.xyz on 06 Sep 16:05 collapse

Well yes, the onus is on the healthcare provider to pick CME that’s relevant to them.

Maeve@kbin.earth on 06 Sep 16:47 collapse

Our ICD -10 is about a decade behind WHO, iirc.

Bob_Robertson_IX@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 00:36 next collapse

I find a young doctor in a suburb almost 10 years ago. He’s been great and he listens to me, has no problem taking my suggestions into consideration, and he often admits when he doesn’t know something and will literally Google it right there in the room. It took as while to find someone I like, but it was worth looking.

FridgeReborn@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 00:40 next collapse

I’m lucky to have “inherited” my parents’ doctor. She is extremely compassionate and gets deeply involved in you and your concerns on every visit. So much so that she is infamous for being behind schedule, to the point where we fully expect to wait for an hour to see her after the scheduled appointment time. She makes up for it by talking with you for as long as you want.

She also hasn’t accepted new patients for like 4 years… so yeah, I guess all the good ones are taken.

Drusas@fedia.io on 06 Sep 00:58 next collapse

I'm sorry you've gone through this, but I am also an American suffering from the same issues as you, and I have found no shortage of ENTs willing to shove the camera down my nose. That seems to be what they always recommend straight from the get-go.

Buttflapper@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 01:19 collapse

Seems to be especially bad in Georgia where there’s very poor access to healthcare. More progressive places like NY may have different results I’m not sure. It’s just shocking, no one will even consider helping me

Drusas@fedia.io on 06 Sep 01:23 next collapse

That is difficult. I assume you've tried Atlanta? I would think you would be able to find decent care there. If not, it might be worth traveling a few hours to wherever you can just to get a diagnosis at least.

And make sure the doctor or clinic knows in advance what you are seeking.

Maeve@kbin.earth on 06 Sep 16:46 collapse

It's pretty much the same. Most insurance companies follow CMS policy.

GaMEChld@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 01:53 next collapse

Our Healthcare system is fucked. You really need to be your own advocate and do your own double-checking. Think about how many people are bad at their jobs, and realize that plenty of those people are doctors.

circledsquare@fedia.io on 06 Sep 02:15 next collapse

I'm not in the USA but this trend is also happening in other countries. I guess USA feels it more because of the already punitive health system.

I've been thinking in recent times about pharmacies. 20 odd years ago, pharmacies used to deal with things too severe to put off, maybe not severe enough to see a doctor for. Now pharmacies are about "wellness" which is marketing crap to make more money. Middle aged woman feeling unwell? Cut your hair short and dye it 3 different colours. You'll look young and feel young! But they're still unwell and still have sore joints etc. Pretty depressing to think about.

RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 02:34 next collapse

They’re paid by the job, not by the hour.

IOW they get paid a fee for the visit, a fee for any tests, etc.

Thank modern insurance for that.

They do not get paid any extra to have a conversation with you or to spend actual time with you to discuss whatever issues you are facing. I think the caveat is more that the GP/PCP is more likely to speed by you as they’ve got 20 more patients to see that day and a specialist will probably spend more time with you because they’re only trying to work on one issue rather than deal with weird pains, blood tests, talk to you about your weight, etc…

InternetCitizen2@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 03:39 collapse

Doesn’t help that the insurance is the real employer and superior physician as they ultimately decides the treatment too

fine_sandy_bottom@lemmy.federate.cc on 06 Sep 02:40 next collapse

Australia checking in … I feel similarly about the attitude of doctors and the type of care I receive. I don’t have any amazing advice that you’re not already following, but I’ll regale you with my thoughts regardless…

About 18 months ago I developed a chronic health condition that I will need to manage for the rest of my life (hopefully several decades). In that time I’ve seen a myriad of medical professionals.

My first tip would simply be that if you’re not satisfied with a doctor or specialist, your only recourse it to arrange to see another instead. Sometimes the advice / treatment prescribed will vary significantly, sometimes they just have a less punchable face.

As regards GPs, I’ve come to categorise them thusly: those that just prescribe meds without any conversation, those that try to manipulate you into wanting the meds they want to prescribe, and those that will have a conversation with you about what meds you ought to take. Obviously this last category is the one you want.

Finally, I’ve gotten a lot of mileage out of simply staying on top of all the data about me. I have all my test results available on my phone, as well as medications, dates of treatments, contact details for specialists, et cetera. Also just understanding the available treatments.

corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca on 06 Sep 03:12 next collapse

why you have to be completely sedated and pay thousands upon thousands of dollars for expensive anesthesia

I’ve got this one, my dude. It’s because American healthcare is mercenary and broken. When I had, um, a similar ‘retroscopic’ test from the other end, I was under a general, needed a buddy at the end, out for a few hours, etc; seems to be about the same.

Cost: $0

Premiums/subscription: $0

Material costs: $0 also

Like, I pay my income tax and the healthcare is just what’s there – we run it on income tax only, and before covid it was apparently funded adequately. Yeah, we’re short on doctors right now as many of them left the field because of aggressive ‘mah raghts’ hillbillies whipped into a frenzy by the conservatives, but they run the triage and they keep their appointments. It’s so different from when I lived in 07974.

IamAnonymous@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 04:53 next collapse

This is just over generalization of your experience.

A primary care doctor should ask questions like if you are stressed out as it affects your life but they are not going to have a long non-medical related conversation because you are no longer a kid and also they won’t remember you until you go back the next time so why waste time when they can see other patients, unless it’s a psychiatrist. The questionnaire they have has all the required medical questions.

Doctors aren’t out to get your money. You don’t even pay them directly. Blame the health insurance companies for that. If they did want to take your money wouldn’t they make you do more tests and take more of your money? There are a lot of ways to get your money apart from anesthesia.

Maybe there is a different medical reason but it is certainly not to just to make your pay for anesthesia. I’m not in a medical field so I can’t into those details. However, I had some oral surgery and I refused anesthesia as I could handle the pain and didn’t want to pay more money. The surgeon didn’t force it on me. I’m not sure where you live but I hadn’t heard that we are forced to take anesthesia when it might not be required as it has its own risk. Why would the hospital risk that? Just to make more money when they can just order other non-risky expensive tests?

shalafi@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 18:06 collapse

Yeah, I don’t feel this is on the doctors. They’re overrun with work and are just trying to get through it. I was unable to find a single GP in my town that takes both insurance and new patients. My wife can’t find a heart doctor, no one is taking new patients.

An anecdote that illustrates my point:

Went to CVS one Sunday with what I had thought was a mild, post-surgery infection. Turned out it wasn’t, I merely overworked my hand, and was in fact healing up great! This young doctor, having no other patients, sat and shot the shit with me for nearly an hour. I learned so much about my current and past problems. He spoke casually, fielded questions unrelated to my current issue, treated me like an old friend. “The hell made you think kayaking was OK 6-days out of surgery?! Damn, man…” All because he had time to kill. Imagine that. (LOL, he have me antibiotics anyway, knowing I was losing my insurance and would bank them against future need.)

DudeImMacGyver@sh.itjust.works on 06 Sep 11:02 next collapse

Because medical care in the US places profit over people

Bacano@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 17:01 collapse

In the US, unlike most other countries, medical doctors are most at risk for suicide.

sinceasdf@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 18:53 collapse

Source?

irreticent@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 19:04 collapse

I’m not the person you asked but I just did a quick search. I don’t know if it’s more prevalent in the US or not, but here is a scientific journal on the subject:

“The medical profession faces a critical challenge with the mental health of its practitioners, leading to an alarming increase in suicide rates among healthcare workers (HCW).”

sinceasdf@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 08:12 collapse

The CDC reports rates pretty well below the general average, at least for 2021.

GrayBackgroundMusic@lemm.ee on 06 Sep 15:38 next collapse

I’ve also been through at least several primary care physicians because the ones I have seen are so short and don’t really take time to get to know you at all. They just pop in, ask you a handful of questions and leave, if your test results come back with anything abnormal, they say it’s nothing to worry about, they don’t want to take any extra time to help look into anything or diagnose you… like wtf?

Because we’re not people to them. They’re incentivized to treat us like cars. Repair as fast and as many as you can to get the most money.

Holyginz@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 20:11 collapse

Insurance companies have control over what the doctors can do and over their schedules. They are only allowed to spend certain amounts of time with patients or they get in trouble. All the doctors I’ve talked to hate this. Blame insurance companies and the hospitals for prioritizing profit, not the doctors.

Hazor@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 21:02 next collapse

Yes, but to clarify: the time constraints are imposed by for-profit healthcare businesses trying to optimize billable time because insurance will only reimburse for so much time, rather than being imposed by the insurance companies directly. (It’s generally not quite as silly in the non-profit sector.) I work in healthcare in the US: we all hate how it works. The system sucks and it interferes with the quality of care that can be provided, leaving patients worse off just so that greedy can be fed. It’s just asinine that anyone who has no medical knowledge/training is making decisions about how patient care can be implemented, especially where there’s a profit motive involved. We really need to pivot to single-payer or national healthcare system, and abolish for-profit ownership of hospitals.

Avatar_of_Self@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 13:08 collapse

They can spend as much time as they want with the patient. The insurance simply caps how much is billable.

Horsey@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 17:05 next collapse

Doctors are not individual practitioners and cannot normally decide to go off on their own doing a procedure that they were not specifically trained to do (doctors are trained in procedures during their residency and in CTE). Unless they are offered a course in this new method, the hospital would not authorize them to perform that new procedure. The best way to get this care would be to travel or to lobby the hospital to train staff on this new methodology.

SplashJackson@lemmy.ca on 06 Sep 21:19 collapse

Ten years in medical school and still can’t think for themselves!

bss03@infosec.pub on 06 Sep 21:58 collapse

Most people never become auto-didacts. Most auto-didacts still benefit from formal training because above average gross performance can mask subtle mistakes until the mistake becomes root cause for a significant error.

Under significant pressure (like a well-written dramatic fiction, but almost never IRL), most doctors will be willing to perform a procedure without formal training, but under normal conditions, they know it is not worth the additional risk.

aaaaace@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 06 Sep 17:14 next collapse

When you go to a doctor in the USA, you’re really being treated by their lawyer and insurance company.

linearchaos@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 14:06 collapse

And the practice. In most cases are doctors are now essentially hair stylists working for some larger entity. A larger entity with shareholders. If you want somebody that cares you probably need to go see a family practice with only one or two doctors. The problem is places like that run out of spaces to see people quickly.

JustZ@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 14:39 next collapse

Corporations, now. Can’t even really call it a practice. They are businesses that employ doctors. In law, most civilized places, you can’t own stake in a law firm unless you are a member of the bar. Makes for a more service focused industry.

Another thing I haven’t seen mentioned is the way people find doctors now has changed. People look online, and there are plenty of sites that are just aggregators for data about doctors. Anyone can scrape that info and then setup a webpage to rate doctors. So now doctors are finding that they aren’t getting patients if they aren’t getting good ratings, so now we have doctors just telling patients what they want to hear, prescribing what they want to be prescribed. Gotta keep up that 9.8/10 rating to keep patients coming in.

aaaaace@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 07 Sep 22:29 collapse

Chrissie Hynde…“I hate anything official”

Good guiding principle right thete.

Kit@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 06 Sep 22:03 next collapse

Finding a good physician is as difficult as finding a good romance or a good therapist. You need to shop around to find the right fit. After years of struggling with horrible Healthcare I finally found the perfect fit - a middle aged lesbian Nurse Practitioner working out of a health center that caters to lower income folks and the LGBTQ community. Every time I go in we chit chat for a few minutes, then she spends at least half an hour with me going through all of my concerns. She’s very thorough and has made a dramatically positive experience in my health. I can even shoot her an email any time and she gets back to me within a day.

I think it helps that the health center’s board of directors is entirely staffed by the physicians working there, overseen by an elderly doctor who spent his entire career helping the needy in his community.

Keep trying. It’s frustrating, but the right fit is out there.

YeetPics@mander.xyz on 07 Sep 17:08 next collapse

Afaik it has to do with licensing regulations and litigations…

A doctor is licensed to practice by the state, and must carry insurance on a state-by-state basis to acquire a license to practice.

The problem is that if you get sued 3 times you get blackballed by the insurance industry in your state and the insurance companies won’t insure you.

You see a lot of doctors moving states often, its often because they became un-licensable in their former areas.

I have limited industry experience and have talked to quite a few doctors who were indeed a bit distant and hands-off in their practice for this reason alone.

Burn_The_Right@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 19:48 collapse

U. S. medicine is corporatized. You are visiting a corporate store front, not a doctor’s office.

If you want personalized medicine from doctors who give a shit, you’ll either need to find a small clinic that gives a shit or you’ll need to get your procedures done for cash while on vacation in Europe.

Medical tourism can sometimes be the same price (including travel) as staying in the U.S and dealing with insurance.