Lying to your doctor
Replies
-
JeromeBarry1 wrote: »In America, the American Medical Association wants doctors to ask clinical patients to disclose information about their ownership of firearms.
What???
Why?
Not to turn this into a political post, but the AMA has decided that guns and gun ownership represent a HEALTH hazard and they are trying to get the member doctors to preach the politically correct stance of 'guns are the DEBIL'.
Neither my GP nor his nurse has asked me this question but if they do, I will simply answer that it is none of their business.
I was asked once and that was my answer. My doctor was fine with the answer0 -
floridamike99 wrote: »I just read an article that said 64% of people surveyed admitted that they have lied to (or withheld info from) their doctor. Is it just me, or does this sound like the stupidest thing ever? Why pay a doctor's fee but then not give them honest information? I mean, if you are going to lie, just don't go, right?
Well, it doesn't make sense to me but it is their business and relationship with their physician.
Maybe a number of people don't feel they can be open with their doctor- someone they see for a few minutes- about everything but still need help.
You're right, maybe many don't. Maybe many are stuck in a specific form of healthcare they don't want but they can't afford an improvement and/or they're on HMOs and if they change this one doctor, they have to lose two others they really like, and/or start all over again from scratch with histories and so on. Maybe they're being held hostage by a doctor they can't logistically and financially "fire" whom the know will refuse them a recommendation on some technicality or other unless they play their cards very, very carefully. Maybe they've been seeking help but they KNOW the doctor, and probably any next doctor they were to hire after firing this one if it were possible, would still sneer down his/her nose and simply say "go on a diet and work out" rather than realistically trying to help with health issues that may have nothing whatsoever to do with weight or exercise habits, but could happen to anybody. So they "!!!lie!!! Lying dummy-dums! Peh!!!" to their doctors about one thing or another...to get some sort of help rather than a sneer and rolled eyes. I mean, just maybe, for a few of these !!!!!!!!!!!!liars!!!!!!!!!!! You never know, right?
I know I recently was over a barrel trying desperately to help my child with thyroid issues. Looking at his (just slightly) overweight belly, the endo we "had" to go to due to our HMO (or else change the entire practice and ALL our doctors - mind you, my son has special needs and has A LOT of doctors) informed us that being overweight causes hypothroidism (um...?) and sneeringly told me that after I got my child to lose weight, he might consider medicating him. For. A. Physical. Damned. Issue. I was very honest with this doctor. I told him I felt the weight issue (tiny as it was, and I mean that literally, tiny...just barely over that BMI line) was a combination of my son seeming hungrier recently, AND physically being unable to stand up out of bed some days or managing to do his school day but then collapsing at home into a half-coma of sleep. Should have lied about that first part but who wants to be a !!!!!!!!!!!liar!!!!!!!!!! just to get their child some help for the physical torture he's going through, right?
Maybe some people realize they're very much over a barrel with the appalling state of healthcare today, assemblyline-format doctoring and they know the personality of the doctor they're stuck with so they fudge something so they can be helped in some way. So they can have some relief of suffering. Then again, maybe the doctor's perfectly nice...well, except for those little sideways slams she manages to get in about what an apparent fat pig the patient is and how s/he is "killing him/herself," etc., etc. and the patient just wants to get the hell through the appointment and back out the door without having to be scolded like a child and basically being made to feel like a hopeless, disgusting person. Now these potential scenarios are not definite, of course, but I'd wager my left ovary that things like this are a huge part of what's behind many, many people's "lying" to the doctor they only have to see "for a few minutes," peh, silly dummies, eh?
It's easy to look down at others if we don't bother walking in their shoes for a few minutes.
You and others bring up specific reasonable scenarios about why some might omit information or exaggerate information. There is a lot wrong with health care and the issues that surround it.
I think what someone chooses to share or not share with a doctor is their business. I wasn't looking down on anyone with my post and I hope it didn't come across that way.
1 -
JeromeBarry1 wrote: »In America, the American Medical Association wants doctors to ask clinical patients to disclose information about their ownership of firearms.
What???
Why?
Not a firearms owner, just wondering what the tie-in could possibly be here.
Here's a piece about a FL law that discusses the underlying reasons:
https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2014/08/doctors-cant-ask-about-guns/375566/1 -
LowCarb4Me2016 wrote: »I can't say I've ever been asked if I own a firearm.
I haven't either. I looked it up because I didn't believe it was a thing, but I guess it is.0 -
JeromeBarry1 wrote: »In America, the American Medical Association wants doctors to ask clinical patients to disclose information about their ownership of firearms.
What???
Why?
Not a firearms owner, just wondering what the tie-in could possibly be here.
Presumably, the follow-up question to a "yes" should be "Have you taken a gun safety course?" Assuming the answer to that question is "yes", move along. Guns in households where people haven't learned how to handle them safely are certainly a health issue.2 -
Maybe its just where I live and they consider it redundant? There are a lot of hunters in my area.0
-
SusanMFindlay wrote: »Guns in households where people haven't learned how to handle them safely are certainly a health issue.
So are most ordinary household items - you'd be amazed by the damage that a casually tossed dinner plate can cause.0 -
Those are the same people who say doctors don't give the right medicine and complain. Can't stand those type of people.0
-
SusanMFindlay wrote: »JeromeBarry1 wrote: »In America, the American Medical Association wants doctors to ask clinical patients to disclose information about their ownership of firearms.
What???
Why?
Not a firearms owner, just wondering what the tie-in could possibly be here.
Presumably, the follow-up question to a "yes" should be "Have you taken a gun safety course?" Assuming the answer to that question is "yes", move along. Guns in households where people haven't learned how to handle them safely are certainly a health issue.
So are steak knives with habitually drunk paranoid boyfriends in the household prone to making hysterical and baseless accusations about infidelity.
So are common baseball bats when personality disordered teens live in the household who keep being returned to mother and stepdad after being sent to juvie for 48 hours for ripping the doors off the hinges and kicking the cat.
Well, you probably can't spray a group of people with steak knives and kill 10 of them in 10 seconds this way unless you're VERY talented (ditto baseball bats), and on top of this obvious fact, I have zero interest in guns and would not have one in my household...yet even I, a crunchy crazy lib who's oddly a bit more frightened of spraying gunfire than a steak knife, agree that if we are to have patients grilled on home safety procedures...that is going to get more than a bit cumbersome. I'll be honest, I think it is still the patient's right not to say, "Yes, doc, I have X amount of firearms in my home...these are what type they are...my kids have taken a gun safety course..." etc. This stuff DOES get intrusive, and it's dumb, because YES, people will lie even if (ironically) on principle, to wit: "The doctor has no right to intrude on my personal life, so I'm just going to answer any way I want to."
OTOH, I have been asked about a gajillion times by doctors whether I have smoke detectors in my home. I don't wander around with a cigar in my shirtsleeve or anything so I'm not sure where that's coming from but I don't think being asked about guns (now that I understand the reasoning) is any weirder than other (sometimes intrusive) safety "questions" doctors nail patients with. Again, sometimes, that's just personal and people won't want to answer. Another point for the !!!liars!!! team and yet another good point as to why !!!!lying!!! isn't always a matter of some giant diabetic shoveling in donuts and then expressing shock at a lethal FBS reading.0 -
SusanMFindlay wrote: »JeromeBarry1 wrote: »In America, the American Medical Association wants doctors to ask clinical patients to disclose information about their ownership of firearms.
What???
Why?
Not a firearms owner, just wondering what the tie-in could possibly be here.
Presumably, the follow-up question to a "yes" should be "Have you taken a gun safety course?" Assuming the answer to that question is "yes", move along. Guns in households where people haven't learned how to handle them safely are certainly a health issue.
So are steak knives with habitually drunk paranoid boyfriends in the household prone to making hysterical and baseless accusations about infidelity.
So are common baseball bats when personality disordered teens live in the household who keep being returned to mother and stepdad after being sent to juvie for 48 hours for ripping the doors off the hinges and kicking the cat.
Yes, and I'd assume that there are questions getting at the possibility of habitually drunk paranoid boyfriends or personality disordered teens. ("Do you fear anyone that you interact with on a regular basis?", for example.) Just as I'd expect a question about knives being kept out of reach of young children. Doctors tend to have *really* long lists of questions looking to establish potential health risks. And if I have to answer a stupid question about whether or not my 18 month old can stack blocks horizontally*, I don't see why it's a bad thing to check whether or not gun safety is a thing in households with guns. You want to say "none of your business"? Fine. No harm in them asking.
*How do you even stack something HORIZONTALLY? That's not stacking! It's a stupid question! So, with the first kid I answered an honest "I don't know" and they wanted to test him for developmental issues he doesn't have. With the second kid, we're just saying "yes".2 -
SusanMFindlay wrote: »SusanMFindlay wrote: »JeromeBarry1 wrote: »In America, the American Medical Association wants doctors to ask clinical patients to disclose information about their ownership of firearms.
What???
Why?
Not a firearms owner, just wondering what the tie-in could possibly be here.
Presumably, the follow-up question to a "yes" should be "Have you taken a gun safety course?" Assuming the answer to that question is "yes", move along. Guns in households where people haven't learned how to handle them safely are certainly a health issue.
So are steak knives with habitually drunk paranoid boyfriends in the household prone to making hysterical and baseless accusations about infidelity.
So are common baseball bats when personality disordered teens live in the household who keep being returned to mother and stepdad after being sent to juvie for 48 hours for ripping the doors off the hinges and kicking the cat.
Yes, and I'd assume that there are questions getting at the possibility of habitually drunk paranoid boyfriends or personality disordered teens. ("Do you fear anyone that you interact with on a regular basis?", for example.) Just as I'd expect a question about knives being kept out of reach of young children. Doctors tend to have *really* long lists of questions looking to establish potential health risks. And if I have to answer a stupid question about whether or not my 18 month old can stack blocks horizontally*, I don't see why it's a bad thing to check whether or not gun safety is a thing in households with guns. You want to say "none of your business"? Fine. No harm in them asking.
*How do you even stack something HORIZONTALLY? That's not stacking! It's a stupid question! So, with the first kid I answered an honest "I don't know" and they wanted to test him for developmental issues he doesn't have. With the second kid, we're just saying "yes".
Heh, I'd say "apparently the developmental difficulties are mine, as I have no idea what horizontal stacking might be!" I suppose that wouldn't really be helpful, though. ;-)
(And I am with you, that question would confuse me too.)0 -
SusanMFindlay wrote: »SusanMFindlay wrote: »JeromeBarry1 wrote: »In America, the American Medical Association wants doctors to ask clinical patients to disclose information about their ownership of firearms.
What???
Why?
Not a firearms owner, just wondering what the tie-in could possibly be here.
Presumably, the follow-up question to a "yes" should be "Have you taken a gun safety course?" Assuming the answer to that question is "yes", move along. Guns in households where people haven't learned how to handle them safely are certainly a health issue.
So are steak knives with habitually drunk paranoid boyfriends in the household prone to making hysterical and baseless accusations about infidelity.
So are common baseball bats when personality disordered teens live in the household who keep being returned to mother and stepdad after being sent to juvie for 48 hours for ripping the doors off the hinges and kicking the cat.
Yes, and I'd assume that there are questions getting at the possibility of habitually drunk paranoid boyfriends or personality disordered teens. ("Do you fear anyone that you interact with on a regular basis?", for example.) Just as I'd expect a question about knives being kept out of reach of young children. Doctors tend to have *really* long lists of questions looking to establish potential health risks. And if I have to answer a stupid question about whether or not my 18 month old can stack blocks horizontally*, I don't see why it's a bad thing to check whether or not gun safety is a thing in households with guns. You want to say "none of your business"? Fine. No harm in them asking.
*How do you even stack something HORIZONTALLY? That's not stacking! It's a stupid question! So, with the first kid I answered an honest "I don't know" and they wanted to test him for developmental issues he doesn't have. With the second kid, we're just saying "yes".
My girls and I are all asked if all of our needs are met at home and if we are being abused. Presumably if someone is answering honestly, the gun thing might come up.0 -
LowCarb4Me2016 wrote: »I can't say I've ever been asked if I own a firearm.
Neither have I, except by my Psychiatrist which is understandable.0 -
SusanMFindlay wrote: »JeromeBarry1 wrote: »In America, the American Medical Association wants doctors to ask clinical patients to disclose information about their ownership of firearms.
What???
Why?
Not a firearms owner, just wondering what the tie-in could possibly be here.
Presumably, the follow-up question to a "yes" should be "Have you taken a gun safety course?" Assuming the answer to that question is "yes", move along. Guns in households where people haven't learned how to handle them safely are certainly a health issue.
Who determines whether or not the person has gone through a gun safety class or whether or not there is an adequate gun safe in the home? Why ask the question in the first place.
0 -
LowCarb4Me2016 wrote: »I can't say I've ever been asked if I own a firearm.
Neither have I, except by my Psychiatrist which is understandable.
Even my therapist didn't ask about guns. Hmm...maybe they just assume people here are likely to have one.0 -
I don't lie to my Dr, but my Dr dismisses me because I'm obese. I've gotten lectures for *not* having high blood pressure or diabetes or high cholesterol because of my weight.0
-
LowCarb4Me2016 wrote: »SusanMFindlay wrote: »SusanMFindlay wrote: »JeromeBarry1 wrote: »In America, the American Medical Association wants doctors to ask clinical patients to disclose information about their ownership of firearms.
What???
Why?
Not a firearms owner, just wondering what the tie-in could possibly be here.
Presumably, the follow-up question to a "yes" should be "Have you taken a gun safety course?" Assuming the answer to that question is "yes", move along. Guns in households where people haven't learned how to handle them safely are certainly a health issue.
So are steak knives with habitually drunk paranoid boyfriends in the household prone to making hysterical and baseless accusations about infidelity.
So are common baseball bats when personality disordered teens live in the household who keep being returned to mother and stepdad after being sent to juvie for 48 hours for ripping the doors off the hinges and kicking the cat.
Yes, and I'd assume that there are questions getting at the possibility of habitually drunk paranoid boyfriends or personality disordered teens. ("Do you fear anyone that you interact with on a regular basis?", for example.) Just as I'd expect a question about knives being kept out of reach of young children. Doctors tend to have *really* long lists of questions looking to establish potential health risks. And if I have to answer a stupid question about whether or not my 18 month old can stack blocks horizontally*, I don't see why it's a bad thing to check whether or not gun safety is a thing in households with guns. You want to say "none of your business"? Fine. No harm in them asking.
*How do you even stack something HORIZONTALLY? That's not stacking! It's a stupid question! So, with the first kid I answered an honest "I don't know" and they wanted to test him for developmental issues he doesn't have. With the second kid, we're just saying "yes".
My girls and I are all asked if all of our needs are met at home and if we are being abused. Presumably if someone is answering honestly, the gun thing might come up.
I have never been asked this particular question and would be shocked if I were, but I have been asked other "safety" questions - i.e. smoke detectors (I mentioned this above); whether we use car seats for our children (WTH??? "Do you keep your children in car seats?" "No, we put them in the trunk" - OMG, I wouldn't dare, I'd be worried about CPS being called but damn it's tempting sometimes to answer "Are you a horrible, ignorant parent? Just checking" questions sarcastically), and so on.1 -
LowCarb4Me2016 wrote: »LowCarb4Me2016 wrote: »I can't say I've ever been asked if I own a firearm.
Neither have I, except by my Psychiatrist which is understandable.
Even my therapist didn't ask about guns. Hmm...maybe they just assume people here are likely to have one.
I am in a big hunting area too. It was part of the "are you safe at home" conversation. Since I went to her for depression and suicidal thoughts, it made sense to me.0 -
3rdof7sisters wrote: »SusanMFindlay wrote: »JeromeBarry1 wrote: »In America, the American Medical Association wants doctors to ask clinical patients to disclose information about their ownership of firearms.
What???
Why?
Not a firearms owner, just wondering what the tie-in could possibly be here.
Presumably, the follow-up question to a "yes" should be "Have you taken a gun safety course?" Assuming the answer to that question is "yes", move along. Guns in households where people haven't learned how to handle them safely are certainly a health issue.
Who determines whether or not the person has gone through a gun safety class or whether or not there is an adequate gun safe in the home? Why ask the question in the first place.
I'd guess it's a case of CYA. If a doctor suspects either abuse, neglect or dangerous conditions, I believe (there must be specifics to this) she is required to report these issues to the authorities. If she doesn't, and something terrible happens, I think the doctor could be taken to task legally for it.
A doctor asking a woman with a black eye whether she's abused in the home and being told "no, doctor, I'm just clumsy" almost certainly knows she's being lied to but has at least done her legal duty in asking.
I'll bet sometimes, doctors feel stupid even asking these questions, and feel intrusive, but also think they'd better CTA.0 -
I don't lie to my Dr, but my Dr dismisses me because I'm obese. I've gotten lectures for *not* having high blood pressure or diabetes or high cholesterol because of my weight.
I had that too. I switched to an APNP and finally feel like I have a partner in my health care rather than someone on a pedestal looking down at me.0 -
LowCarb4Me2016 wrote: »SusanMFindlay wrote: »SusanMFindlay wrote: »JeromeBarry1 wrote: »In America, the American Medical Association wants doctors to ask clinical patients to disclose information about their ownership of firearms.
What???
Why?
Not a firearms owner, just wondering what the tie-in could possibly be here.
Presumably, the follow-up question to a "yes" should be "Have you taken a gun safety course?" Assuming the answer to that question is "yes", move along. Guns in households where people haven't learned how to handle them safely are certainly a health issue.
So are steak knives with habitually drunk paranoid boyfriends in the household prone to making hysterical and baseless accusations about infidelity.
So are common baseball bats when personality disordered teens live in the household who keep being returned to mother and stepdad after being sent to juvie for 48 hours for ripping the doors off the hinges and kicking the cat.
Yes, and I'd assume that there are questions getting at the possibility of habitually drunk paranoid boyfriends or personality disordered teens. ("Do you fear anyone that you interact with on a regular basis?", for example.) Just as I'd expect a question about knives being kept out of reach of young children. Doctors tend to have *really* long lists of questions looking to establish potential health risks. And if I have to answer a stupid question about whether or not my 18 month old can stack blocks horizontally*, I don't see why it's a bad thing to check whether or not gun safety is a thing in households with guns. You want to say "none of your business"? Fine. No harm in them asking.
*How do you even stack something HORIZONTALLY? That's not stacking! It's a stupid question! So, with the first kid I answered an honest "I don't know" and they wanted to test him for developmental issues he doesn't have. With the second kid, we're just saying "yes".
My girls and I are all asked if all of our needs are met at home and if we are being abused. Presumably if someone is answering honestly, the gun thing might come up.
I have never been asked this particular question and would be shocked if I were, but I have been asked other "safety" questions - i.e. smoke detectors (I mentioned this above); whether we use car seats for our children (WTH??? "Do you keep your children in car seats?" "No, we put them in the trunk" - OMG, I wouldn't dare, I'd be worried about CPS being called but damn it's tempting sometimes to answer "Are you a horrible, ignorant parent? Just checking" questions sarcastically), and so on.
I've never been asked about smoke detectors for me or my kids. Mine are almost 17 so no car seats, though you'd think the doc would ask about seat belts, especially since I have to answer it for health insurance reasons . I've had plenty of "you're a bad parent" questions and comments, though, and have had to bite my tongue a few times, lol. Basically you're either not doing enough or you're overreacting.2 -
quiksylver296 wrote: »LowCarb4Me2016 wrote: »I can't say I've ever been asked if I own a firearm.
My son's pediatrician asks every time we go in. I answer truthfully, "yes, I own guns. My husband owns guns. My son has three guns of his own." She's a (very nice) hippie granola, and freaks out, every time.
It's all fun and games freaking out the hippies until it goes into the permanent medical database that is never, ever, ever erased or destroyed.
Of course we are assured that we are carefully protected by HIPAA, we can 100% trust our caring medical professionals, and that only evil people who have anything to hide have a reason to be afraid. So obviously we have no reason to EVER lie to our loving doctors, or even be concerned that we might be flagged as "hostile and noncompliant" for leaving a particular field blank or suggesting they mind their business.
And obviously, that information would never be passed on to, say, a health or life insurer (who happens to have access to your personal records via the MIB database for hundreds of assorted drugs and behaviors, including "hazardous lifestyle codes,"), and that corporate interests would never (gasp!) cut a deal with any government entity to force social change by rating or declining anyone with a history of firearms ownership.
Wait until questions about animal products and sugar, with their concomitant embedded political/social justice judgments, are included in the questionnaires. "Oh, you enjoy a weekly ice cream and have eaten bacon in the last month? You are uninsurable and I am dropping you as a patient, because you are obviously the debbil based on this one movie I saw. Thanks for not lying to me, though."
Medicine is an impressively vicious and effective tool when wielded to achieve political ends.3 -
Gee. Your finger stick blood sugar reads 497.
Take it again! Take it in my other finger on the other hand!
Okay. I get 503 this time. Did you eat anything like ice cream or pizza recently? Like the ice cream and pizza they're serving on the 1st floor leftover from the birthday party?
NO! All I had was a cup of black coffee. Check your machine! It always gives bad readings. Cheap piece of junk!
You literally have some nurse or other individual routinely pricking people's fingers and handling their blood in the office??? Bringing in the same "machine" each time (your reference to how it "always" gives bad readings)? This happens?
I honest to God have never heard of such a thing. I can't imagine the S-storm of someone getting sick and suing the office for throwing the employees' blood around. Anything could happen, or at least be accused to have happened, under circumstances of handling blood in a public, non-hospital/non-medical place that way. Just odd.
How often do they prick your blood? Is this a routine thing? I just have never heard of this.
p.s. As much as it may be human nature to lie to cover faults, it is equally human nature to use hyperbole to draw positive comparisons of oneself to others. It's one way to keep insisting to ourselves that we are superior, and alone; the overwhelming majority of the rest of the world is inferior, and bumbling, and stupid, and oaf-like (i.e. the screaming, raging, 500+ BG - wouldn't that person be dead? Or no..? - idiot slamming cake into his face and screaming that he never ate a thing). The fact that a majority of people tend to be the one, singular, enlightened non-oaf simply is the opposite of logic, given simple math, doesn't seem to stop the practice.
We're seeing all sorts of aspects of human nature on this thread...it's actually kind of interesting.
I don't know about @newmeadow, but I work for a health care system. I am a doctor, but not of the medical variety. This was standard practice where I work. Once a year quasi-physicals and flu vaccines (required) i.e. check fasting blood sugar, cholesterol and triglyceride levels and ask some basic health history questions. I have lied to those people:
'Are you fasted?'
'Uh, sure.' (If you don't count the bowl of Honey Nut Cheerios I ate 30min ago because I forgot we were doing this today. Oh, look my blood glucose is sitting just under 100. Good, it dropped just enough to not be flagged and need a re-test).
They quit doing that a couple of years ago and now we have to hassle with getting actual yearly physical results faxed in - a serious pain with some docs. We still have them come around for the vaccines.
Anywho, I have no problem believing the percentage. Part of my job is participating in managing clinical trials. The lying that is discovered is easily up in those ranges and mostly these people have no real incentive to do it other than not looking bad. These aren't things that would have gotten them excluded from the study (that I can understand, though it's stupid and can put you at high risk of harm or death). Things like 'no, I don't smoke, don't use a patch, etc' in a vaccine efficacy trial. Or, 'yes I'm still taking my meds' when they've had an autoimmune flare.
0 -
Sometimes its hard not to lie or omit. My dr. asks me if I eat a well balanced diet. She doesn't define what that is. So I say "Sure. Usually? I don't know, I did eat a whole box of Kraft Dinner for dinner yesterday but I guess I don't do that everyday" And she always just moves on instead of defining it. When I do ask what she means she says "do you eat veggies?" Well sure. But how many or how often do you want me to do that? There's just not enough time to go back and forth and my memory about my diet just isn't that good during appointments.0
-
kshama2001 wrote: »I've previously spent too much time answering standard questions that had nothing to do with the issue I went to see the doctor about that we ran out of time for the actual issue. So now I use my judgment as to how comprehensive my answers should be and if I want to go down an irrelevant rabbit hole.
How do you run out of time for the issue that you went to the doctor for? Or is that answering all those questions in length gets you sidetracked? I'm trying to understand.0 -
This content has been removed.
-
lemurcat12 wrote: »JeromeBarry1 wrote: »In America, the American Medical Association wants doctors to ask clinical patients to disclose information about their ownership of firearms.
What???
Why?
Not a firearms owner, just wondering what the tie-in could possibly be here.
Here's a piece about a FL law that discusses the underlying reasons:
https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2014/08/doctors-cant-ask-about-guns/375566/
That's an interesting article--it has some good basic information after you sort through the rhetorical appeals to ethos and pathos. Interestingly, they are just prevented from asking (and then entering the info in a permanent database)....it doesn't seem like they are prevented from *telling* each and every patient that gun safety is an important consideration, and then giving them a handy one-page pamphlet on the subject, including training and gun safety resources. Then they have their freedom of speech without violating privacy. I suspect that the real thing they want is the database, however.0 -
Gee. Your finger stick blood sugar reads 497.
Take it again! Take it in my other finger on the other hand!
Okay. I get 503 this time. Did you eat anything like ice cream or pizza recently? Like the ice cream and pizza they're serving on the 1st floor leftover from the birthday party?
NO! All I had was a cup of black coffee. Check your machine! It always gives bad readings. Cheap piece of junk!
You literally have some nurse or other individual routinely pricking people's fingers and handling their blood in the office??? Bringing in the same "machine" each time (your reference to how it "always" gives bad readings)? This happens?
I honest to God have never heard of such a thing. I can't imagine the S-storm of someone getting sick and suing the office for throwing the employees' blood around. Anything could happen, or at least be accused to have happened, under circumstances of handling blood in a public, non-hospital/non-medical place that way. Just odd.
How often do they prick your blood? Is this a routine thing? I just have never heard of this.
p.s. As much as it may be human nature to lie to cover faults, it is equally human nature to use hyperbole to draw positive comparisons of oneself to others. It's one way to keep insisting to ourselves that we are superior, and alone; the overwhelming majority of the rest of the world is inferior, and bumbling, and stupid, and oaf-like (i.e. the screaming, raging, 500+ BG - wouldn't that person be dead? Or no..? - idiot slamming cake into his face and screaming that he never ate a thing). The fact that a majority of people tend to be the one, singular, enlightened non-oaf simply is the opposite of logic, given simple math, doesn't seem to stop the practice.
We're seeing all sorts of aspects of human nature on this thread...it's actually kind of interesting.
I don't know about @newmeadow, but I work for a health care system. I am a doctor, but not of the medical variety. This was standard practice where I work. Once a year quasi-physicals and flu vaccines (required) i.e. check fasting blood sugar, cholesterol and triglyceride levels and ask some basic health history questions. I have lied to those people:
'Are you fasted?'
'Uh, sure.' (If you don't count the bowl of Honey Nut Cheerios I ate 30min ago because I forgot we were doing this today. Oh, look my blood glucose is sitting just under 100. Good, it dropped just enough to not be flagged and need a re-test).
They quit doing that a couple of years ago and now we have to hassle with getting actual yearly physical results faxed in - a serious pain with some docs. We still have them come around for the vaccines.
Anywho, I have no problem believing the percentage. Part of my job is participating in managing clinical trials. The lying that is discovered is easily up in those ranges and mostly these people have no real incentive to do it other than not looking bad. These aren't things that would have gotten them excluded from the study (that I can understand, though it's stupid and can put you at high risk of harm or death). Things like 'no, I don't smoke, don't use a patch, etc' in a vaccine efficacy trial. Or, 'yes I'm still taking my meds' when they've had an autoimmune flare.
My MIL is in a clinical trial and was asking my husband, a chemist, if he could analyze the drug she was taking to see if she was placebo group or not. Of course Mr. Ethical said no, but--LOL on the attempt to completely undermine the concept of a randomized, double-blind, placebo controlled trial!!4 -
lemurcat12 wrote: »LowCarb4Me2016 wrote: »I can't say I've ever been asked if I own a firearm.
I haven't either. I looked it up because I didn't believe it was a thing, but I guess it is.
I've been asked. It was during a well-child visit for my son.
ETA - I didn't lie. I think I may have snorted a little before re-assuming a straight face and answering, 'Yes, we do.' My husband was deployed overseas at the time.0 -
CatchMom13 wrote: »kshama2001 wrote: »I've previously spent too much time answering standard questions that had nothing to do with the issue I went to see the doctor about that we ran out of time for the actual issue. So now I use my judgment as to how comprehensive my answers should be and if I want to go down an irrelevant rabbit hole.
How do you run out of time for the issue that you went to the doctor for? Or is that answering all those questions in length gets you sidetracked? I'm trying to understand.
I'm not the person you asked, but I can say that after waiting an hour to see my doctor (too bad I can't charge her for my time) and knowing the bus is due to pull up at my house in 15 minutes or 10 minutes or whatever (and BTW, if you're not there for the bus, the bus driver keeps the child for the entire rest of the route, returns him to school and the police are called since you've been so neglectful), or some other such time-crunch based on long waits and "oh, we're so backed up"s and "sit there in this cocktail napkin, the doctor will be right in" silently subtitled "sit there in this cocktail napkin, the doctor will be in in probably 25-35 minutes while you sit here freezing," I have many, many times run out of time with my doctors beyond the absolute literal minimum. I'm generally helped along with this by many a doctor's "oh I'm so busy busy busy, hurry and tell me your complaint" attitude. So me getting the frak out of Dodge in a hurry works for both of us.
I mean there's always the option of asking to make a new appointment since you really HAVE to go now and being told certainly, there's one 11 weeks from now. For the UTI you have today. Unless you want to go to the ER where you'll pay a $50-100 copay to sit and wait for six hours to pee in a cup. You've gotta love options.
So it all works out...
0
This discussion has been closed.
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.4K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 426 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions