Thursday, January 16, 2014

Sometimes a trip to the doctor is a guilt trip with consequences

-Doctors office, seniors worry about having funds for care

Leanne Jenkins---Truth or dare, have you been doing what your doctor ordered?  It turns out for many of us a trip to a doctor is a guilt trip with consequences.Often that guilty person, in order to make the doctor happy, will tell the physician he or she has complied with doctor's orders.  In other words, there are those little white lies.  On the other hand, this fibbing can be a big mistake when it comes to accuracy in the physician overview of one's health status.

While lying about our health, to our doctor, is sometimes done, more often than it should be, it is not a good idea, medical experts remind us.  That's because doctors must have the facts in order to prescribe a medication or direction for health.

If the doctor believes a patient has been complying with a certain type of medication, and there has not been compliance; and a medical problem persists, the doctor may prescribe a different medication or a different approach.  And that different medication or different approach may not have been necessary if the doctor knew the truth.

The doctor's visit is important because not only is the doctor evaluating medical problems but is also interested in preventing them.  That's why regular tests are ordered to determine a patient's status.  So when the status does not mirror the expected results, given the doctor's original recommendations, problems can occur.

Researchers examined this behavior of obfuscation on the part of patients that has been published in Basic and Applied Science and found people lie to their doctors for a number of different reasons, most of whom involve shame.  Women often feel more shame than men, researchers determined.  Furthermore, there are certain topics that people lie about the most that include weight and smoking but also include not following doctors orders.  Much of this behavior is dependent upon the patient's view of the anticipated response from the doctor.

What's particularly critical is this cited statement in an article about the research and the author's remarks,   Gaining insight into patient reactions is important because “more than one third of all deaths in the United States are still essentially preventable and largely due to unhealthy patient behavior.”

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