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    George_1950's Avatar
    George_1950 Posts: 3,099, Reputation: 236
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    #1

    Nov 20, 2009, 07:08 AM
    Obamanoids destruction of women's healthcare underway
    Of all things, for the Obamanoids and progressives to attack first, is cancer and womens' health. The American Cancer Society has not scrubbed its site: "If you can't prevent cancer, the next best thing you can do to protect your health is to detect it early. Getting regular check-ups is the best way to do this." ACS :: Early Detection

    But now: "New guidelines by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists say most women in their 20s can have a Pap smear every two years instead of annually to catch slow-growing cervical cancer.

    "The change comes amid a separate debate over when regular mammograms to detect breast cancer should begin. The timing of the Pap guidelines is coincidence, said ACOG, which began reviewing its recommendations in late 2007 and published the update Friday in the journal Obstetrics & Gynecology." Report: 20-somethings can go 2 years between Paps - Yahoo! News
    ETWolverine's Avatar
    ETWolverine Posts: 934, Reputation: 275
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    #2

    Nov 20, 2009, 07:14 AM

    First mamograms, now pap smears.

    There is a clear pattern of the government setting the stage to decrease the level of preventive care that they will pay for under government-run health care.

    The rationing has already begun. The death panels are in session. The stage is being set. And they haven't even passed nationalized health care yet.

    What's it going to look like if it becomes law?

    Wake up, folks.

    Elliot
    Synnen's Avatar
    Synnen Posts: 7,927, Reputation: 2443
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    #3

    Nov 20, 2009, 07:24 AM

    I hate to tell you guys this, but most 20-something women are okay with the 2 years thing.

    I HATE having pap smears. I know they're necessary, but they still suck.

    And in my 20s--I didn't have the TIME to go for an appointment that SHOULD only take about 1/2 hour, but still manages to eat up half your day because it's a non-emergency thing and doctors are always running late.

    I'm pretty sure that just like mammograms--if you DO have something unusual show up, you come back more often. Because I'm at a higher risk for breast cancer (mother has it, 2 aunts and my sister had it), I get a mammogram every year, and insurance covers it NO problem.
    excon's Avatar
    excon Posts: 21,482, Reputation: 2992
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    #4

    Nov 20, 2009, 07:43 AM
    Quote Originally Posted by Synnen View Post
    I hate to tell you guys this, but most 20-something women are okay with the 2 years thing.
    Hello Synn:

    One of the reasons we spend MORE than any other country in the world on health care, and get LESS, is because we spend the money in the wrong places...

    It should be noted, that since the righty's think our medical delivery system is the BEST in the world, and since they think that health care reform ISN'T really about health care anyway, but about a commie plot to take over the world, I think you can discount most of what they say...

    If only they hadn't made themselves irrelevant...

    excon
    ETWolverine's Avatar
    ETWolverine Posts: 934, Reputation: 275
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    #5

    Nov 20, 2009, 07:58 AM
    Quote Originally Posted by Synnen View Post
    I hate to tell you guys this, but most 20-something women are okay with the 2 years thing.

    I HATE having pap smears. I know they're necessary, but they still suck.

    And in my 20s--I didn't have the TIME to go for an appointment that SHOULD only take about 1/2 hour, but still manages to eat up half your day because it's a non-emergency thing and doctors are always running late.

    I'm pretty sure that just like mammograms--if you DO have something unusual show up, you come back more often. Because I'm at a higher risk for breast cancer (mother has it, 2 aunts and my sister had it), I get a mammogram every year, and insurance covers it NO problem.
    If you CHOOSE to get a pap smear every two years, that's YOUR choice.

    The question is whether the government should be the one making that decision for you or not.

    Now... what happens when health care is nationalized, you are forced onto the government plan (which will happen within 5-10 years after the "public option" goes into effect), and they decide not to cover mamograms more often than once every two years. After all, they have an official study to rely on now to substantiate that position. The fact that YOU happen to be a high risk patient doesn't mean anything to them. They WON'T cover the annual exam because the study says so and they don't have to... and worse, you won't be allowed to pay for it out of pocket either, even if you can afford it. (That's the meaning of having a single-payer system.)

    The bottom line is, whether YOU decide to get a pap smear or mamogram every year or every two years, the GOVERNMENT is going to use this as an excuse to set limits that may not be right for OTHER women.

    Elliot
    J_9's Avatar
    J_9 Posts: 40,298, Reputation: 5646
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    #6

    Nov 20, 2009, 08:26 AM
    Quote Originally Posted by Synnen View Post
    I hate to tell you guys this, but most 20-something women are okay with the 2 years thing.
    Of course they are okay with it... they are the age group that believes "it won't happen to me."

    Quote Originally Posted by Synnen View Post
    I HATE having pap smears. I know they're necessary, but they still suck.
    What sucks worse? A PAP smear or a long and painful death?

    Quote Originally Posted by Synnen View Post
    And in my 20s--I didn't have the TIME to go for an appointment that SHOULD only take about 1/2 hour, but still manages to eat up half your day because it's a non-emergency thing and doctors are always running late.
    Sorry, Synn, but I'm going to tear this one up. You have a choice to "eat up a half" your day once a year, or have the worst that can happen... cancer, surgeries, even death. I think I'll go with missing a half day of work.

    Why do doctors run late? Well, since we are on women's health, Let me fill you in. Now, this is all hypothetically speaking since I am bound by HIPAA (or is it HIPPA (LOL))...

    Bertha Beauregard is at the doctor's office early at 8 am for her prenatal appointment and Gertrude Hornswagler shows up at her 9:00 OB/GYN appointment for her yearly PAP smear. Sally Mae (pregnant) went in to the hospital at midnight with contractions. Well, all was not going well with Sally Mae's labor and at 8 am her doctor calls an emergency cesarean section. This C-Section can take up to an hour before it is complete (dependent upon the grade of the emergency (emergent, non-emergent, or stat)).

    So, now the doctor is already behind schedule and this was an unseen emergency. Doc gets back to his office at 9 to see Bertha since her appt was scheduled first... Well, Bertha has a ton of questions (remember we always tell people not to leave the doctor's office unless all of their questions are asked and answered). This puts the doctor behind some more. OH, NO!! L&D called at 10am and Josephine Johannesburg showed up at L&D dilated 9cm and is involuntarily pushing... doc has to run back to the hospital to deliver this baby, then he has to fill out all of the required paperwork. Finally, at 11:30 doc gets back to the office to see Bertha, who is having not only her PAP, but an STD is suspected so this pushes the doctor even further back in his schedule.

    You see, it is a domino effect. We schedule patients approx every half hour, according to the DRG... which is how the insurance companies pay. If they don't fall into the DRG (and this includes time spent with the patient), then the insurance company won't pay.

    While we thought that HPV can only cause one kind of cancer, cervical, it is now known that it can cause 5 totally different kinds of cancer.

    While I am all for ACOG, this announcement astounds me. Is it the government mandating these tests? The insurance companies? OR the insurance companies and the government banding together.

    I hope I made sense here... it's been a long busy night.

    So, I will sign off now 'cause it's bedtime for me.
    J_9's Avatar
    J_9 Posts: 40,298, Reputation: 5646
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    #7

    Nov 20, 2009, 08:34 AM
    Quote Originally Posted by excon View Post

    It should be noted, that since the righty's think our medical delivery system is the BEST in the world,
    Sorry, Exy.. the righty's DON'T think our medical delivery system is the BEST in the world... just spend a night in the hospital and listen to us righties discuss the abuse of the system, how things could be better, what works and what does not work. But we are considered overpaid, overworked idiots. Of course the general uneducated public knows better than we medically educated people.

    Come spend a night with me.
    NeedKarma's Avatar
    NeedKarma Posts: 10,635, Reputation: 1706
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    #8

    Nov 20, 2009, 08:46 AM
    Quote Originally Posted by J_9 View Post
    Come spend a night with me.
    Quoted for posterity. :D
    J_9's Avatar
    J_9 Posts: 40,298, Reputation: 5646
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    #9

    Nov 20, 2009, 08:49 AM
    Quote Originally Posted by NeedKarma View Post
    Quoted for posterity. :D
    Ummm, I meant a night at WORK with me! :rolleyes:
    excon's Avatar
    excon Posts: 21,482, Reputation: 2992
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    #10

    Nov 20, 2009, 08:52 AM
    Quote Originally Posted by J_9 View Post
    Sorry, Exy..the righty's DON'T think our medical delivery system is the BEST in the world....

    Come spend a night with me.
    Hello again, J:

    I agree, that IF you have money or insurance, we deliver the BEST, and you're a BIG part of it being that way...

    But, when I speak of it NOT being the best, I'm factoring in those people who DON'T have those things

    excon

    PS> I'd love to spend the night with you.
    NeedKarma's Avatar
    NeedKarma Posts: 10,635, Reputation: 1706
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    #11

    Nov 20, 2009, 08:59 AM
    Quote Originally Posted by J_9 View Post
    Ummm, I meant a night at WORK with me!! :rolleyes:
    Of course I knew that. My sister's a nurse. I dated a british nurse for two years. Somewhat familiar with the working conditions. Having said that our family is rarely in the hostipal so the two times were there at Labour and Delivery for our kids we felt compelled to buy gifts for all the nurses. My city is a great place to have a kid.
    J_9's Avatar
    J_9 Posts: 40,298, Reputation: 5646
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    #12

    Nov 20, 2009, 09:08 AM
    Quote Originally Posted by excon View Post
    But, when I speak of it NOT being the best, I'm factoring in those people who DON'T have those things
    I agree. Here in Tennessee we have TennCare, it's a form of medicaid. Do you have any idea how frustrating it is when a woman comes to my unit at 2 am complaining of contractions when all she wants is her drug "fix" (Tylenol #3 or 4-8 milligrams of morphine because that's all I will give her, or nothing at all if she has a history) or to find out if the baby is a boy or girl?

    Or, since I do some moonlighting work in the ER, the patient who comes in by ambulance complaining of chest pain when all they have is a cold. This happens quite frequently because they think they will get treated faster if they come in by ambulance.

    You see, our healthcare system is "broken" but there is no easy fix. It's not working the way it is, and I don't believe that a nationalized healthcare system is going to be any better.

    I don't mean to be condescending, but all of you, at least most of you, are on the outside, you don't see what goes on behind the scenes.
    Synnen's Avatar
    Synnen Posts: 7,927, Reputation: 2443
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    #13

    Nov 20, 2009, 09:13 AM

    I REALIZE why doctors run late, J.

    And I currently spend most of a day at the doctor's office once a month because I DO get my annual tests done.

    What I do NOT understand, though, is this: There are a BUNCH of women sitting around at the appointment desk doing nothing but gossiping. Why are they not assigned to call patients later in the day and give them the OPTION of rescheduling because the doctor is running late?

    I get the first appointment in the morning now. Every time. It's the ONLY one that is ever on time.

    In my 20s, though--even with insurance, I couldn't afford to take a half day off from work to spend it at the doctor's office.

    You want to fix the problems with the cost of medicine? Screw going after insurance companies. They cover routine check ups (at least--they do now. Who knows under Obamacare?). What they do NOT cover is the loss of wages because your 1/2 hour appointment turned into 4 hours. It also doesn't cover when you lose your job because you were only supposed to be gone for your lunch hour, or only be 1/2 hour late in the morning.

    Yes, I realize that I was taking my chances--but isn't that what the study released said? That the chances of something being wrong was lower in your 20s, especially if you aren't sexually active? Forgive me if I mis-read that.

    Yes, it was MY choice. Yes, I was taking my chances. But frankly---I was weighing the possibility of not affording rent and food against the possibility of cancer. Guess which one had a higher chance?

    And all it would take is someone picking up the phone and saying "Your doctor is running about 3 hours late today. I know you have a 3 PM appointment--would you like the option of re-scheduling?"

    I'm off topic a bit, I think... but that's probably because I go today for my pap smear, annual physical, etc. My appointment is at 1:30, but I'm absolutely SURE that I won't be seen until 3, and won't get out of there until 5. Thank goodness my current job is flexible about WHEN I work my 40 hours.
    J_9's Avatar
    J_9 Posts: 40,298, Reputation: 5646
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    #14

    Nov 20, 2009, 09:19 AM
    Quote Originally Posted by Synnen View Post
    I REALIZE why doctors run late, J.
    You do Synn my love, but not all of our readers do.

    Quote Originally Posted by Synnen View Post
    What I do NOT understand, though, is this: There are a BUNCH of women sitting around at the appointment desk doing nothing but gossiping. Why are they not assigned to call patients later in the day and give them the OPTION of rescheduling because the doctor is running late?
    Therein lies the snowball effect. If we push back one appointment, then we end up pushing back two... then three. Finally the appointments are pushed back a week, then a month, and on and on it goes. It's a viscous cycle.
    speechlesstx's Avatar
    speechlesstx Posts: 1,111, Reputation: 284
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    #15

    Nov 20, 2009, 09:41 AM

    I have to say this isn't the same as the mammogram issue (but it could have similar effects). The mammogram recommendation was from a federal panel, this is from the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. These groups do this sort of thing all the time and doctors can either choose to follow their recommendations or not.

    Where it's similar is that women will hear this and think no need to get a pap or a mammogram so I'll just wait - and insurance companies may cite these recommendations to avoid covering these tests for no more often than the guidelines say. Either way it may have serious consequences for some, but having a federal panel determine guidelines based on odds and cost is troubling. That's the sort of thing happening in the UK under their universal coverage more and more, denying treatments based on cost and the odds.
    excon's Avatar
    excon Posts: 21,482, Reputation: 2992
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    #16

    Nov 20, 2009, 09:56 AM
    Quote Originally Posted by speechlesstx View Post
    denying treatments based on cost and the odds
    Hello again, Steve:

    Do you deny that insurance companies ration treatment based on cost? We've HAD that discussion before.. Of course, they do.

    From a personal perspective, although I don't want my health care to be rationed, I'd sooner trust the government, who would ration my care so that MORE people could be treated, much more than I would trust the insurance company, who would ration my health care so the CEO's children can go to private school.

    excon
    speechlesstx's Avatar
    speechlesstx Posts: 1,111, Reputation: 284
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    #17

    Nov 20, 2009, 10:04 AM
    Quote Originally Posted by excon View Post
    Do you deny that insurance companies ration treatment based on cost?? We've HAD that discussion before.. Of course, they do.
    And here I thought you might applaud me for not blaming this one on Obama.
    excon's Avatar
    excon Posts: 21,482, Reputation: 2992
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    #18

    Nov 20, 2009, 10:11 AM
    Quote Originally Posted by speechlesstx View Post
    And here I thought you might applaud me for not blaming this one on Obama.
    Hello again, Steve:

    Next time.

    excon
    asking's Avatar
    asking Posts: 2,673, Reputation: 660
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    #19

    Nov 20, 2009, 10:19 AM

    Hahaha. (Is there an emoticon for hollow laughter?) I can't believe anybody cares about this when there are so many worse things happening.
    When I saw the title of this link, I thought it was about the fact that the blue dog dems sold women down the river and made it that much harder for women to get an abortion if they don't choose to have a baby. 35% of women in the united states (55 million) will have an abortion some time in their life. Eliminating abortion means at least 50 million unwanted children. If someone can't afford to pay for an abortion themselves, they certainly can't afford to raise a child well.

    The mammogram issue has been controversial for a decade or more. There have always been questions as to whether having so many mammograms actually do any good overall. The consensus has moved to fewer mammograms. It was not about cost but health. My own sister had breast cancer (and five children, for the record), so it's not exactly an issue I don't care about.

    And even if it was about cost, who says spending more no matter what is always better? It's not.

    Debra Gordon addresses the mammogram issue well.
    Debra Gordon on Medical Writing (and other medical topics of interest)
    asking's Avatar
    asking Posts: 2,673, Reputation: 660
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    #20

    Nov 20, 2009, 10:34 AM
    Quote Originally Posted by speechlesstx View Post
    I have to say this isn't the same as the mammogram issue (but it could have similar effects). The mammogram recommendation was from a federal panel, this is from the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. These groups do this sort of thing all the time and doctors can either choose to follow their recommendations or not. .
    I agree.

    Where it's similar is that women will hear this and think no need to get a pap or a mammogram
    You don't think women can understand the message "Fewer mammograms" as opposed to "no mammogram"? I think most women and their doctors are smart enough to know the difference. Also, the recommendations are primarily aimed at younger women. Younger women are less likely to get breast cancer and when they do, it's more likely to be an aggressive, fast growing kind. Mammograms are less useful for catching those. And why increase your exposure to radiation if it's not going to do any good?

    Either way it may have serious consequences for some, but having a federal panel determine guidelines based on odds and cost is troubling.
    I don't think cost was one of the criteria in this case.

    Public health decisions are about maximizing the public good--and that means the greatest number of healthy people. If we only need two-thirds as many mammograms to help women avoid breast cancer, why do more? Just as a symbol?

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