After having spent so many years in medical school I have experienced the mostly ineffective and inefficient public health system of today. Doctors abide the "Hippocratic Oath" of do no harm for individual patients. I raise the ethical issue of what about the population as a whole? If money was not an issue and we had an infinite supply of this resource healthcare would be awesome. However, we live in a society where money is a finite resource and increasing media pressure to achieve best outcomes for all patients.
I pose this scenario to evoke your thoughts on this issue. A 26 year old female who was diagnosed with liver inflammation due to her own body attacking her liver. She was put on drugs to suppress her immune system so her liver could recover. This disease could be a self limiting illness and some people after a few years can be weaned off drugs. She doesn't attend follow up appointments to check on her the status of her liver and does not take her medication. She now presents to hospital with liver failure and is going to die if she does not receive a transplant. The cost of a liver transplant is expensive, ten's of thousands of dollars and given her non-compliance in the past, what if she does not abide by advice once again and end up "wasting" this gift of a new liver.
Taxpayers money are being spent on portion of people who are not listening to doctor's advice yet expect the best treatment to manage their now ailing condition. Right now, we treat these people just like any other person in the public health system, the sickest as our priority. An extremely sick person could potentially spend more than what they have paid taxes in their lifetime to treat their condition. I understand most people do listen and take on board advice and do their best to manage their condition but what happens to the ones that don't listen and end up sick and costing the public health system hundreds of thousands to millions of dollars? Could this money be better spent elsewhere?
I have seen plenty of people being ignorant to advice, a guy who had a kidney transplant which is now failing because he didn't take his drugs, a diabetic whose problems arise from her weight yet refuses to do anything about it, autoimmune patients who don't attend follow up appointments to check their disease and adjust their medication and the list goes on and on.
I pose this scenario to evoke your thoughts on this issue. A 26 year old female who was diagnosed with liver inflammation due to her own body attacking her liver. She was put on drugs to suppress her immune system so her liver could recover. This disease could be a self limiting illness and some people after a few years can be weaned off drugs. She doesn't attend follow up appointments to check on her the status of her liver and does not take her medication. She now presents to hospital with liver failure and is going to die if she does not receive a transplant. The cost of a liver transplant is expensive, ten's of thousands of dollars and given her non-compliance in the past, what if she does not abide by advice once again and end up "wasting" this gift of a new liver.
Taxpayers money are being spent on portion of people who are not listening to doctor's advice yet expect the best treatment to manage their now ailing condition. Right now, we treat these people just like any other person in the public health system, the sickest as our priority. An extremely sick person could potentially spend more than what they have paid taxes in their lifetime to treat their condition. I understand most people do listen and take on board advice and do their best to manage their condition but what happens to the ones that don't listen and end up sick and costing the public health system hundreds of thousands to millions of dollars? Could this money be better spent elsewhere?
I have seen plenty of people being ignorant to advice, a guy who had a kidney transplant which is now failing because he didn't take his drugs, a diabetic whose problems arise from her weight yet refuses to do anything about it, autoimmune patients who don't attend follow up appointments to check their disease and adjust their medication and the list goes on and on.
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