Gastroenterologists are equipped to assist folks with fecal incontinence (FI) – an awful symptom for reasons that need not be explained. While many of these individuals experience leakage only occasionally, the fear of an impending episode is ever present. They leave home wondering if this will be a day when they will experience a lapse in control. Many remain at home or curtail social activities because of fear and anxiety. So, while the condition is not life threatening, it is an assault on an individual’s quality of life. It’s more common in women and the elderly and is associated with a host of medical conditions. Fecal incontinence is extremely common in extended care facilities which can result in medical consequences. This post is not to discuss the diagnosis and treatment of this condition. Indeed, this blog is a medical commentary site, not an ‘ask a doctor’ site. Here’s the point of this post. More often than not, individuals suffering from fecal incontinence
The raison d’etre of MDWhistleblower is to give readers a peek ‘behind the medical curtain’. This post is true to this mission. I offer readers a lesson that I have shared with patients, friends and family over the years. I suspect that elements of my point have been covered in prior posts. As I have penned over 800 posts since 2009, I hope readers will forgive me of an example or two of repetition. There is a frequent technique that I’m about to share that misleads patients about the value of various medical tests or treatments. While these communications to the public are technically true, they are misleading. Let me explain. If you saw a product or medical test from reputable organizations that promised to cut your risk of a heart attack by 30%, would you be interested? Odds are that you would be very interested. Who wouldn’t want their risk of a heart attack to be cut by nearly a third? Medicine is riddled with similar promises of benefit for various conditions