Quote from: Evelyn K on April 30, 2014, 12:17:07 PM
Wow you nailed it. I find the medical establishment leans toward the apathetic side to our health interest, taking a too restrictively cautious and drawn out grace period wait and see approach to see if we'll change our minds during the course of what basically amounts to ineffectual starting treatments.
I would like to disagree on that. In the world of health care, there are agreed/accepted standards of care. These are supposedly supported by evidence based treatments and outcomes. To go counter to that, is to invite major trouble should something go wrong.
We, as patients are often very pushy for treatment _our_ way, and when we get it _our_ way and it goes wrong, well, it's the treating doctors fault right? They should know best, even if we insist differently right? You can understand the reticence of the high level of caution (AKA CYA, cover-your-A**) that treating doctors go by, given the current medico-legal climate. On the other hand, it does mean that a lot of stuffing around happens as a result of caution.
In other words, if you find health care providers overly cautious, blame the lawyers!! j/k