Picking the Treatment
When a physician proposes a course of action, how do
you decide to accept or not to accept the recommendation? The easy way
is to say the physician is a physician and is always right. Doing
so risks a clash of expectations once the treatment is under
way. Inappropriate trust in the physician is bad for the patient, and
treacherous for the physician.
This set of questions is a script which applies in every
circumstance.
1.What will happen if the condition isn’t treated at all?
2.How does this treatment compare to doing nothing?
3.What other treatments are there for this condition, and what
will the outcome be if I choose them?
There it is no need to be shy about asking these questions. At some point your physician has gone through these same steps. Most physicians will not be threatened by you gently asking these questions. You’ll be surprised about the level of uncertainty in most of the answers. Take, for example, the treatment of Meniere’s Disease, one of the inner ear problems. There’s not a great deal of information in the books about how the disease the changes the inner ear over time .It’s difficult to say with great precision what any treatment will accomplish in altering the course of the disease. The answers to the three questions in such a case can only be expressed as a set of probabilities.
You’ll get answers as statements of probability in response to most questions you might ask. It’s the nature on medicine. The doctor, in addition to using the knowledge in the books...which you could look up yourself...includes his/her experience with the particular, as well as related disorders in formulating the answers. It’s that experience you’re paying for.
When it’s surgery, how can you tell if this is the doctor for you?
When evaluating a surgeon, it’s important to compare apples to
apples. It’s common to ask how many times the doctor has performed an
operation. To appreciate the answer, you need
some idea how many times the operation you’re considering is
performed in your setting. Ask. If it’s a common operation..say,
appendectomy...just about any general surgeon in the community can be
trusted. In an academic setting, by contrast, these common
operations are not done as often, and the professor of surgery may be
doing them rarely. I wouldn’t want the average surgery department
chairman taking out my appendix. The key with any operation is to
go where it’s routine..if you can or if such a place exists. You really
do want to be just another something- ectomy. You don’t want to be the
only one this year!
If you don’t receive satisfactory answers, you may you may be
experiencing a mismatch between you and the physician. Physicians
are, by and large, honest. Most disputes between
physician and patient happen because of miscommunication, and
personality mismatches. Understanding clearly what you’re after..cure
and relief...will make your experience less stressful for you and your
physician.
