Yeah, we should also limit access to medical books too. With a copy of the MERK manual, what’s to stop me from diagnosing my own diseases or even setting up shop at the mall as a medical “counselor” ?
The infantilization of the public in the name of “safety” is offensive and ridiculous. In many countries, you can get the vast majority of medicines at the pharmacy without a prescription. Amazingly, people still pay doctors and don’t just take random medications without consulting medical professionals.
It’s only “necessary” to limit access to medical tools in countries that have perverted the incentive structure of healthcare to the point where, out of desperation, people will try nearly anything to deal with health issues that they desperately need care for but cannot afford.
In countries where healthcare costs are not punitive and are in alignment with the economy, people opt for sane solutions and quality advice because they want to get well and don’t want to harm themselves accidentally.
If developing nations with arguably inferior education systems can responsibly live with open access to medical treatment resources like diagnostic imaging and pharmaceuticals, maybe we should be asking ourselves what is it, exactly, that is perverting the incentives so badly that having ungated access to these lifesaving resources would be dangerous?
> If developing nations with arguably inferior education systems can responsibly live with open access to medical treatment resources like diagnostic imaging and pharmaceuticals,
Well, the conditional in this if statement doesn't hold.
Yes, pharmaceuticals are open access in much of the developing world, but it has not happened responsibly. For example, Carbapenem-resistant bacteria are 20 times as common in India as they are in the U.S [1]
I really don't like this characterization of medical resource stewardship as "infantilization" because it implies some sort of elitism amongst doctors, when it's exactly the opposite. It's a system of checks and balances that limits the power afforded to any one person, no matter how smart they think they are. In a US hospital setting, doctors do not have 100% control over antibiotics. An antibiotic stewardship pharmacist or infectious disease specialist will deny and/or cancel antibiotics left and right, even if the prescribing doctor is chief of their department or the CMO.
Honestly, that's a short-sighted interpretation. Would you get treated by someone who's fresh out of school? If not, why? They're the ones with the most up to date and extensive knowledge. Today, medicine is still mostly know-how acquired through practical training, not books. A good doc is mostly experience, with a few bits of real science inside.
I don’t get
The relevance to my comment here,Maybe you replied to the wrong one? Or were you thinking I was
Seriously implying that a book was a suitable substitute for a doctor? (I wasn’t)
Someone fresh out of medical school is a resident so they're under direct supervision for 3-7 years. And unless you live in an area with an abundance of hospitals, there's a large change your local hospital is a teaching hospital staffed largely by residents and the attendings that supervise them. You can request non-resident care only but it's a request and is not guaranteed.
The TLDR is that most people when interacting with anything other than their GP family doctor, are probably interacting with someone "fresh out of school."
So, why do residents need so much supervision? Since they have the most recent, and also usually most extensive knowledge. Granted, specialized knowledge is sometimes acquired during residency. Still, it's mostly taught by attendings instead of being read from books. Medicine is a know-how profession.
You don't learn how to be a radiologist, or an orthopedic surgeon, or an OB-GYN, or any other specialty, in med school. You can't learn surgery from a book. Maybe there are large parts of family or internal medicine you can learn from a book but those residencies are already several years shorter than most surgical specialties.
You wouldn't drop a fresh college CS grad by themselves in a group a developers and expect them to just figure it out. Just like medical school doesn't really teach you how to be a doctor, a CS degree doesn't really teach you how to code. They're both much more academic than the day-to-day of the job you're getting that degree for. They'd still get mentorship from colleagues, supervisors, and others. The only difference is medicine has the ACGME and all the government regulations to make it much more structured than what you need for most everything else.
Could there be, perhaps, a middle ground between “backyard chop shops powered by YouTube tutorials and Reddit posts” and the U.S.’ current regulatory-and-commercial-capture exploitation?
I honestly don’t think we need more amateurs performing healthcare services for fun and profit, but I also think that barriers to self-care should be nearly nonexistent while encouraging an abundance of caution. Not sure how to best accommodate those somewhat disparate goals.
> The infantilization of the public in the name of “safety” is offensive and ridiculous.
It comes from dealing with the public.
> In many countries, you can get the vast majority of medicines at the pharmacy without a prescription. Amazingly, people still pay doctors and don’t just take random medications without consulting medical professionals.
I see people on this site of allegedly smart people recommending taking random medications ALL THE TIME. Not only without consulting medical professionals, but _in spite of medical professional's advice_, because they think they _know better_.
Let's roll out the unbelievably dumb idea of selling self-diagnosis AI on radiology scans in the countries you’re referring to and ask them how it works out. If you want the freedom to shoot from the hip on your healthcare, you've got the freedom to move to Tijuana. We're not going to subject our medical professionals to deal with an onslaught of confidently wrong individuals who are armed with their $40 AI results from an overhyped startup. Those startups can make their case to the providers directly and have their tools vetted.
Doctors give out wrong and bad advice all the time. Doctors in general make mistakes all the time to the point that there’s some alarming statistic about how preventable medical errors is a scary high percentage of deaths. People should absolutely question their doctors and get more opinions, and in a world where my last 10 minute doctor visit would have cost $650 without insurance, for a NP, I don’t blame them for trying to self diagnose.
You are proving my point talking about the percentage of deaths caused by medical errors. If you had 100,000 people receive medical care, 10 die, and 5 of them are due to medical errors, then sure, you could spin that as "50% of deaths were caused by medical errors". Never mind the context, never mind the fact that we are actually able to identify the errors in the first place!
So again, if you want to ignore the safeguards that we've built for good reason - take your business to Tijuana.
TBF, 'medical error' is a super wide definition. Most aren't diagnostic errors, and they encompass all healthcare professions, not only doctors. It makes a big difference in interpretation and potential solutions.
Well.. funny you say that.. I did move to Tijuana some years ago. One time while I was there, I was sick and a neighbor (Mexican) seemed to insist that I go to the doctor. She recommended a hole in the wall office above a pharmacy that looked like a little-league concession stand.
It was a serious 30 something woman who collected something like 50 pesos (around $3), listened to me for about 30 seconds, and told me to make sure I slept and ate well (I think she specifically said chicken soup). I asked about antibiotics or medicine and she indicated it wasn't necessary.
So I rested quite seriously and ate as well as I could and got better about a week later.
During the time that I was in Playas de Tijuana I would normally go to nicer pharmacies though, and they didn't ask for a prescription for my asthma or other medicine which was something like 800% less expensive over there. They did always wear nice lab coats and take their job very seriously if I asked for advice. Although I rarely did that.
I do remember one time asking about my back acne problems at a place in the mall and the lady immediately gave me an antibiotic for maybe $15 which didn't cure it but made it about 75% better for a few months.
Another time at the grocery store I asked about acne medicine and the lady was about to sell me something like Tretinoin cream for a price probably 1/4 of US price. She didn't have anything like oral Accutane of course. It was just a Calimax Plus.
There are of course quite serious and more expensive actual doctors in Tijuana but I never ended up visiting any of them. I was on a budget and luckily did not have any really critical medical needs. But if I had, I am sure it would have cost dramatically less than across the border.
EDIT: not to say the concession-stand office lady wasn't an actual doctor. I don't know, she may have had training, and certainly had a lot of experience.
I live in the Dominican Republic. People here go to the doctor for things I never would have in the USA. If anything, people here self treat much less
Than the USA, even though you can walk into any pharmacy or imaging center and ask for whatever you want.
They go to the doctor because the healthcare system here works, for the most part, and they value and respect the expert counsel in matters of their health.
That's interesting, thanks for the context. I think it takes a unique kind of arrogance to self-diagnose medical problems w/ no knowledge or understanding of what you are talking about, and while I love this country I think that arrogance is in high supply here. Many people here aren't aware that it creates a huge strain on physicians or don't care because they think the world revolves around themselves.
I'm curious what you think the problem is, concretely, with a tool like this in the hands of the public which you clearly have such disdain for. Let's assume I buy this thing (the horror). I have to actually get access to my scans, which despite being legally required to provide most providers will be loathe to actually do. So I get my scans, I get this AI tool, I ask it some questions. It's definitely going to get some answers right, and it's very likely going to get some answers wrong. I'd be shocked if it's much less accurate than a resident, and if they're commercializing it there's a decent chance it's more accurate than the average experienced attending.
What is your doomsday scenario now that I have some correct data and some incorrect data? What am I going to do with that information that is so "unbelievably dumb" that I need the AMA to play daddy and prevent me from hurting myself? I can't get medication based on my newfound dangerous knowledge. I can't schedule a surgery or an IR procedure. I can't go into an ER and say "give me a cast here's a report showing I need one."
While I disagree fundamentally with the premise that people should be kept away from useful tools, I think that there is an understandable fear of dealing with the fallout of certain demographics having access to tools.
Unfortunately we have a lot of people that despite an abundance of ignorance are arrogant enough to think that they know better than most, but still are incapable of applying basic logic and critical thinking in their reasoning. (which if you think about it is sensible, since wisdom is largely a matter of comprehension of the depth of ones ignorance)
These people are a huge PITA to work with and every tool they wield inflicts pain on those trying to help them.
I don't know what point you think that comment makes but it certainly doesn't answer any of the very legitimate questions I posed, including the first one since I'm willing to bet you have a pretty big conflict of interest here.
The infantilization of the public in the name of “safety” is offensive and ridiculous. In many countries, you can get the vast majority of medicines at the pharmacy without a prescription. Amazingly, people still pay doctors and don’t just take random medications without consulting medical professionals.
It’s only “necessary” to limit access to medical tools in countries that have perverted the incentive structure of healthcare to the point where, out of desperation, people will try nearly anything to deal with health issues that they desperately need care for but cannot afford.
In countries where healthcare costs are not punitive and are in alignment with the economy, people opt for sane solutions and quality advice because they want to get well and don’t want to harm themselves accidentally.
If developing nations with arguably inferior education systems can responsibly live with open access to medical treatment resources like diagnostic imaging and pharmaceuticals, maybe we should be asking ourselves what is it, exactly, that is perverting the incentives so badly that having ungated access to these lifesaving resources would be dangerous?