From Men's Journal:
Every time you walk into a physician's office, you run the risk of overtreatment: Tests you don't need, medications that are ineffective (or dangerous), procedures that cause more problems than they solve. In many cases the best thing for your health is to do nothing.
Make no mistake: A good doctor is, or should be, your most trusted resource if you're sick. If you're not sick and he wants to treat you anyway, that doesn't necessarily make him a bad doctor. But it does make him a player in a system that operates according to the unspoken and often unexamined assumption that more treatment is better for the patient. It's unquestionably better for the financial health of the stakeholders in the system: the doctors, the pharmaceutical industry, the health-insurance companies, and the hospitals. If you don't know how the game is played, the odds go up that you'll wind up the loser.
What do you people think, will people change if they know this?
(Score: 2) by monster on Thursday September 25 2014, @03:33PM
Suppose that when he cut himself, some other pathogen also entered the body. Say something in his dirty hands, or something in a not clean enough bathroom. Now suppose that a doctor sees him treating the wound with carbolic soap and doesn't do any extra tests. Would the AC be so happy when, three weeks later, discovers that he contracted ebola, for example? That it's too late to treat him because some doctor decided that no more tests were needed?
The problem with 'patient pays' systems is that at the end the patient has to be his own doctor, balancing procedures done (cost) against curing himself, precisely when he's the least informed and capable of making the correct and balanced decision.