When docs ask instead of order
It's easy to take medical risks when it's not your own body at stake.
Docs often forget that -- or some just don't give a hoot -- as they volunteer their unknowing patients to be Big Pharma's next set of human guinea pigs... and too many patients just go along for the ride without asking questions.
But a new study shows patients are much less willing to board the Big Pharma drug bus when they know where it REALLY stops.
The study found that patients are as complacent as sheep when a doc TELLS them what to do. But when a doc ASKS for their input, they're far more likely to thumb their noses at Big Pharma meds and pick less risky treatments.
Researchers at Yale University let patients watch videos in which a doctor described a drug along with a low risk of a serious side effect.
In some cases, the video was followed by instructions that they take the drug. In others, the patients were asked to make a choice.
And it turns out those who were given the choice were much less likely to take the new drug.
I can hear the whines now. "They're only patients! When the heck do they know?"
I've always found they know a lot more than most docs will ever give them credit for. What they don't know, it's up to us doctors to tell them... and by that I mean the whole truth, not just a line from some drug salesman's propaganda sheet.
Believe me, most folks are perfectly capable of figuring it out when we give them all the information they need. But too many dictator docs expect patients to walk into the office and submit to their every command, pop every pill and lie back for every test and procedure -- no questions asked.
Don't put up with that. If your doc won't invite you into the process, politely thank him... walk out... and then invite yourself to a new physician's office.
You're not a sheep, and you're no one's guinea pig. If docs don't like it, too bad.
About the author

William Campbell Douglass I.I., M.D. has been called "the conscience of modern medicine."
You can sign up for his "Daily Dose" at DouglassReport.com.

Comments
RRoberts
It's a shame that people cannot trust their doctors, but before
laying the blame on "Big Pharma" investigate the WHO and our
government (CDC). I believe they were the ones pushing the
swine flu scare.
jam427
I remember my family Dr. one word that is taboo now days, I trusted this Dr. on my visits he gave me 5 minutes of his valuable time and he covered every thing, and the last thing on his mind was prescription drugs, not like now Drs they give you about a minute already with a prescription pad on hand just because of a paper cut, it is a shame so many years of studying just to do that. I feel not like a patient but as a customer, what ever happened to that OATH.?
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