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Thursday, February 13, 2014

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

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Patients who have received their first diagnosis of a disease or condition from their doctor are too often faced with two heavy decisions after this visit. The first question weighing on their mind is likely what to do about their supposed condition, and the second is likely to be if they should seek out a second opinion to see if they are actually dealing with that particular condition. 

Because initial diagnoses in American hospitals are somewhere between 50% and 80% inaccurate or non comprehensive, according to which data you examine, it is clear why the medical second – and third and so on – opinion is so critical and lends a necessary element of balance and possibility to the definitive first visit.
When the issue of medical futility and various treatment options come into play, a doctor with a life saving second opinion makes the single or multiple diagnosis much more complex, however. A second opinion here is necessary, in order to fully understand the grand spectrum of treatments that are available for your condition, even if the first opinion was right. Non-emergency medical decision making based on chronic pain or disease demands a second opinion because no doctor can be held accountable for being completely up to date on every potential treatment, nor can they be held to a standard that is 100% accurate all of the time.
Lyme Disease Example

Take, for example, the instance of Lyme's disease, now considered a global epidemic. Many who are successfully diagnosed with Lyme's do not find this is possible until five, ten, or even thirty doctor visits down the road. Because Lyme's is so often misdiagnosed as fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue, and depression, multiple medical opinions are absolutely essential to getting to the truth of the matter and thereafter beginning to treat the patient for the correct disease. 

Many patients with Lyme's specifically find themselves spending anywhere from $50,000 to $75,000 on initial doctor visits, testing, and medication just to get to the diagnosis of Lyme's, without having done any treatment whatsoever. Once treatment begins, that can cost anywhere from that amount to twice that, and even then sometimes the disease conquers. 

It is clear that in cases like these a second opinion is far more valuable than following the treatment plan from the initial doctor visit and diagnosis, as something like Lyme's is far more responsive when the spiroketes are treated very early in the game.
Aid in Dying Example

Another instance we may find is in the case of the state of Oregon, which is one of the only states that allows physician assisted ending of life. Those individuals who make this important choice are able to take one formula or a series of drugs that quickly and painlessly end their life with the help of an appointed Oregon resident, while also enabling them to plan ahead for their death and to be surrounded by family and friends if they so desire. Many elderly people, or those of any age, with serious chronic and painful conditions with no end in sight take this route in order to avoid any more unnecessary strife and expensive treatment. 

However, it is absolutely critical that only those with accurate diagnoses are pushed to this level of life or death decision making. The second opinion, in a case like this, is not an option or a consideration, it is essential and spells out the difference between medical futility and a second chance.
Conclusion

From these two examples, it is clear why at times the life and death dichotomy is reliant on a sound medical second opinion, and also why the patient must be his or her own advocate in demanding a second opinion, even when the first diagnosis fits the bill completely. Whether the initial diagnosis is confirmed, or whether a new one is brought up for each subsequent doctor visit, the patient who is thorough in their diagnostics will be rewarded by conclusiveness and comprehensiveness over blank doubt and overwhelming possibility.

Author Byline:

This guest post is contributed by Rebecca Gray, who writes for Backgroundchecks.org. She welcomes your comments at her email id: GrayRebecca14@gmail.com.

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