Many doctors order tests rather than do a history and physical
Posted by: admin on: July 20, 2011
Take a good history, do a good exam.
- Rather than doing a careful history and physical, many physicians resort to order expensive tests based on a complaint rather than a full history.
- Physicians almost unanimously believe that other physicians do this and some will admit that they are guilty also.
- Our predecessors were able to gather essential pieces of clinical data from a physical exam.
- Today, in the world of overburdened emergency departments, full hospitals, and electronic ordering and note-writing systems, we are forced to spend less and less time with our patients.
- In an attempt to compensate for this problem, we make up in quantity what we cannot provide in quality – and we make up with money what we cannot provide in time.
- Although the perception is that patients benefit, by getting a myriad of lab tests and imaging studies, they do not. These tests mean very little unless they are correlated clinically.
- Clinicians have begun to practice test-centered medicine rather than patient-centered medicine.
- This causes huge delays and expenses in patient care and also places patient at risk for
- Being treated unnecessarily for incidental findings
- Being exposed to unnecessary radiation.
- Furthermore, it alienates patients even further from their physicians – and this, perhaps, is the greatest cause of increased lawsuits and patient dissatisfaction, which starts the cycle of practicing defensive medicine all over again.
- Careful history helps us make a diagnosis without needing shotgun testing.
- Less often, but just as important, a targeted physical examination helps us make a diagnosis.
Read More on http://www.kevinmd.com/blog/2010/09/doctors-order-tests-history-physical.html
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