The Medical Board of California has launched investigations into doctors who prescribed opioids to patients who, perhaps months or years later, fatally overdosed.Rx to opioids is very easy to get. There is no easy way to get Rx to Insulin or Heparin which will prevent stroke and fave lives. This medicine is out of medical box patients need. Opioids are all the time easy to have in any medical box. It is pain killer, and pain treated only with painkillers. Start to take Heparin, and there is no pain, no headaches. Start to take Insulin and sugar dropping back to normal level. No fancy side effects. Diabetic, at any stage of diabetes development, any type of diabetes, live many years without painful wound care, headaches, and heart attacks. This medicine is not easy to have to be Rx-ed. It is understandable. Healthy patient no longer paying patient. Patient who takes painkillers will come back and back. Good for business. Bad for patient.
https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/908262?nlid=127687_381&src=WNL_mdplsnews_190201_mscpedit_wir&uac=164666HZ&spon=17&impID=1874303&faf=1
To date, the regulators have formally accused at least 23 doctors of negligent prescribing, and more accusations are expected. Some of the accusations, like one 63-page document filed against Dr. Frank Gilman, a San Diego internist, detail hundreds of prescriptions for one patient over four years, most of them by him. Gilman did not respond to a request for comment.Now, let us take a look at the San Diego internist. Hundreds Rx for one patient during 4 years. Sounds scary. How many Rx I got during 4 years?
Insulin.
Usually people take two types of insulin, long acting basal insulin and short actine bolus insulin. I take only one, Lantus Solo Star.
Asthma Medicine:
Montelucast, tablets;
Symbicort,
Spiriva,
Ventolin,
Albuterol.
BP and Heart:
Carvedilol, metaprolol, lisinopril, lasatran, isosorbite, nitrostat,
other medicine:
Gabapentine, Lipitor, clotrimasol, plavix, SSD,
glucose strips, lancets, needles.
I can continue this list, but remember, it is prime doctor, all medicine he Rx for one person who is in condition such as diabetes. 4 years it is 48 month, to Rx every medicine for just one person. So, every Rx multiply for 48. Do the math. I am regular diabetic, the same as every one else. I am just ill person, and I take not only medicine that doctor Rx-ed to me buy also Excedrin, and some more. I use C POP, wrap for my legs, different creams and lotions, and so so on. s every one I do have flu season and need to take additional medicine.
In other words, when we read that doctor Rx-ed hundreds of Rx for one patient during just 4 years, then it is better to take a look what patient condition is?
It is easy to see that doctors are bad. The treatment is very expensive. What is less expensive? Death. This payment come once, and after there is no payments, no bills. I see it is next step in medical treatment for us, those who needs medicine to love.
At first, medicine must be 'cost effective' What does it means? It mean that any treatment must be as cheap as it is possible. So, Insulin replaces by Metformin and SU. A few years later diabetic develops high obesity, lost mobility, and heads to mortality spot in CDC tables. Still before there are nursing and wound care, amputations and complications development, and finally kids in foster care. I wish to say, it is very very expensive. When we take into consideration all these costs then is this really true that Metformin so good to treat diabetes?
To diagnose diabetes in present time there is not big problem or too much testing. Simple glucose strip will do the job. Then less then 50 units of insulin for less then 4 years, and there is no diabetes. No complications. No lost mobility. No Weight loss surgery. No botox. There are many "no" after there is no to diabetes. In present time there is first "no" to Insulin.
After first "no" to insulin there are many "no" to add. "no" to heart medicine, Nitrostat. "No" to Heparin. "No", "no", and so so so on. All whait is left just "Yes" to opioids, to Death.
via Ravenvoron
No comments:
Post a Comment