So often, our views on an issue change when we are personally affected or exposed. When this occurs, I believe it reveals hypocrisy on our part. Shouldn’t our points of view be the same whether we are affected or not? Of course, it should be but we all know that this is not the case. Here’s a stark example illustrating my point. Many of us support a policy prohibiting paying ransom for hostages. Doing so, we argue, only encourages the taking of future hostages. However, might our intellectual view on this issue be different if one of our loved ones was taken hostage? I suspect that it would be. I could have cited ransomware as another example. It’s easier to advise a business not to pay the criminals to restore its data and functionality from a safe perch. There are still millions of people here in America without health insurance. I suspect that most folks out there with medical insurance who are busy with ...
Here’s a scenario that I face fairly regularly in my endoscopy and colonoscopy practice. As readers know, over the past 5 or so years I have been employed in a rather well-known Cleveland-based health care institution. Prior to that, I was a private practitioner. During those earlier days, I personally knew most of our scope clientele as they were our patients. There was a minority of patients whom we did not know who were referred in by their doctors for routine scope exams. In contrast, in my current employed role, nearly all the scope patients on my schedule are meeting me for the first time. From time to time, a patient who is scheduled for a colonoscopy will call my office asking if an upper endoscopy can be performed at the same time because their heartburn or some other symptom has been active. Which of the following responses are most appropriate? Yes we will gladly add on the extra scope test to assess your stomach and esophagus as this would be an o...