Many referrals to gastroenterologists originate from emergency rooms. Patients seen there with all manners of abdominal pain, nausea and vomiting, bowel disturbances and rectal bleeding are typical examples of this. Chest pain is another common issue that emergency rooms and primary care specialists send to gastroenterologists, which we often find to be vexing to explain. I have been through this exercise for a few decades now. Here’s how it goes down. A patient experiences chest pain and seeks care in an emergency room fearful that his heart is the culprit. Emergency room personnel take a careful medical history, examine him and do all of the necessary testing and confidently conclude that the heart is well. No explanation for the pain is determined. Here’s what this patient should be told. ‘Your heart is fine. We’re not sure what’s causing your chest pain. Please arrange to follow up with your primary care physician (PCP...
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 ...