I am looking when we are discussing pain from an MSK/Ortho point and is for most cases but not all cases. Each patient must be treated as an individual and thus be assessed as one.
"This raises questions which are difficult to phrase, so please excuse me if this seems blunt. Are you saying that the pathology is not particularly important unless you have pain? At the very least, I would think there was useful information for preventative or mitigating measures. That principle appears to me uncontroversial. Surely the point of medicine/ general practice is not significantly a matter of dealing with pain? If that is the case, I'm absolutely horrified."
I think this really say all that is needed to be written. Again just from a MSK/Ortho point.
"I would think there was useful information for preventative or mitigating measures. That principle appears to me uncontroversial"
This is a sweeping statement with no value, unless you expand on this. Are you proposing everyone should have MRI scans every 3, 6 12 months just in case something may be found, even if it does not need any treatment?
But honestly, how often does the typical patient actually get a proper process of assessment and expert clinical reasoning at the first appointment with a GP? From the other side of the fence, it is far from a sure bet.
A GP being a generalist will not have the expertise of a specialist. Is it more important that they can assess, and refer on? simple questions need to be answered like is this cancer, is it something that needs an operation, does it need non surgical specialist input.
As with any profession we all have or strengths and weakness, knowing this is important. We also some some amazing practitioners and others who are not. We could go into pay and does the current situation encourage school children to think lets go into health care.
The current answer appears to get doctors , nurses and other health care professionals to come from abroad. Many come, but where does that leave the health care of their origin? Why should the rich nations take from the poor nations. ( I do realise there are different ways to look at this, an how it can benefit families back home) BUT we are the same nation that wants to close or boards. I move away from the topic other than saying if we paid an appropriate wage ,had working condition that were good, ( so retaining staff) and had enough places funded for new health care practitioners we may not have been in the current mess.
That then takes us back to the question asked many posts ago. What do we do with the NHS letting disappear so only the well off can get appropriate care. Make everything private? current premium for my parents both in their 90's is £15,000 per year. I guess that most pensioners will find it difficult to find that sort of money. But does it matter, a USA style health care may be one you would like.
"This raises questions which are difficult to phrase, so please excuse me if this seems blunt. Are you saying that the pathology is not particularly important unless you have pain? At the very least, I would think there was useful information for preventative or mitigating measures. That principle appears to me uncontroversial. Surely the point of medicine/ general practice is not significantly a matter of dealing with pain? If that is the case, I'm absolutely horrified."
I think this really say all that is needed to be written. Again just from a MSK/Ortho point.
"I would think there was useful information for preventative or mitigating measures. That principle appears to me uncontroversial"
This is a sweeping statement with no value, unless you expand on this. Are you proposing everyone should have MRI scans every 3, 6 12 months just in case something may be found, even if it does not need any treatment?
But honestly, how often does the typical patient actually get a proper process of assessment and expert clinical reasoning at the first appointment with a GP? From the other side of the fence, it is far from a sure bet.
A GP being a generalist will not have the expertise of a specialist. Is it more important that they can assess, and refer on? simple questions need to be answered like is this cancer, is it something that needs an operation, does it need non surgical specialist input.
As with any profession we all have or strengths and weakness, knowing this is important. We also some some amazing practitioners and others who are not. We could go into pay and does the current situation encourage school children to think lets go into health care.
The current answer appears to get doctors , nurses and other health care professionals to come from abroad. Many come, but where does that leave the health care of their origin? Why should the rich nations take from the poor nations. ( I do realise there are different ways to look at this, an how it can benefit families back home) BUT we are the same nation that wants to close or boards. I move away from the topic other than saying if we paid an appropriate wage ,had working condition that were good, ( so retaining staff) and had enough places funded for new health care practitioners we may not have been in the current mess.
That then takes us back to the question asked many posts ago. What do we do with the NHS letting disappear so only the well off can get appropriate care. Make everything private? current premium for my parents both in their 90's is £15,000 per year. I guess that most pensioners will find it difficult to find that sort of money. But does it matter, a USA style health care may be one you would like.