- Apr 30, 2010
- 69,751
- 106,469
Starting to feel "I can't call it" in my soul and really mean it.
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are you also "coming home" ?
Naw its the norm, my doc even told me no need unless there are issues.Every 2 years is just as wild.
Naw its the norm, my doc even told me no need unless there are issues.
Not dental related but during my search for a new primary doc I had one tell me I only need a general checkup once every 5 years. And that I’d know better than he would when something is wrong. Nice guy but needless to say I found a new doc. Annual checkups are always what I heard and from a business perspective why would you discourage more frequent visits?Naw its the norm, my doc even told me no need unless there are issues.
Not dental related but during my search for a new primary doc I had one tell me I only need a general checkup once every 5 years. And that I’d know better than he would when something is wrong. Nice guy but needless to say I found a new doc. Annual checkups are always what I heard and from a business perspective why would you discourage more frequent visits?
you're a dentist too right?Because some people feel that acting ethically and in the patients best interest is more important than bilking you for a visit every few months?
My dentist says every few years is fine for me - zero fillings, brush twice daily, floss occasionally…
you're a dentist too right?
PAAAREACH!Because some people feel that acting ethically and in the patients best interest is more important than bilking you for a visit every few months?
My dentist says every few years is fine for me - zero fillings, brush twice daily, floss occasionally…
Edit: US medicine is interesting. In some ways it’s the best money can buy - but it’s also built on income for the system being reliant on doing more procedures. More isn’t better. It isn’t more thorough - its just more expensive. You want to do the right tests at the right time to tell you something - not just perform a battery and see what it throws up.
Everyone doesn’t need their wisdom teeth removed. People don’t need an annual physical at 25. Women don’t need their “hoohah” examined annually (that’s what a Texan I knew asked my mom about when she moved here).
There’s a time for routine checkups and definitely targeted screening - but it’s not as frequent as your system has programmed you to think.
That’s part of the reason that US healthcare costs significantly more than anywhere else.
I didnt go to the doc for a couple years, had some some stuff going on, still didnt go and ended up being cancer.
Been to doc visits/hospitals more times in the past 9 months than someone will ever go in their lifetime x2.
Go for the yearly checkup. Its once a year. ONCE. You can spare a couple of hours ONCE a year. And if not fine, but if something doesnt feel right, also go. You really never know.
I’m sorry to hear about that - but you had “stuff going on” - that’s why you should have gone. What was a physical going to find? Were they going to examine you from head to toe checking every organ just in case? They’d have been lucky to find something that they didn’t know to look for because you reported symptoms.
That sort of scan just finds things we don’t need to know about too - like aneurysms. There’s a significant portion of people who have one but most go on to live normal lives - knowing you have it or performing risky surgery doesn’t help those people, in fact it hurts them.
A routine blood test woudve found my wbc’s to be abnormally high.
I’m not trying to be insensitive - but it may have found it - by coincidence if you happened to go at the right time. But it may just have given you false assurance until the next time.
A blood test when you went and said “doc, I don’t feel good” would also have found it.
It’s also much more efficient - how many young people do you think you’d have to test before finding the unlucky one? What’s the sensitivity and specificity of those tests - ie how many would you tell were okay who weren’t or vice-versa.
In your case a blood test may have been the right test - but for a lot of problems it wouldn’t show anything. You can’t test everyone for everything every year just in case.