biddles911
New member
- May 12, 2014
- 348
I am not so sure about this, as soon as I reached 50 if ever I went to the doctors (rarely), out came the scales, bloods appointment, urine tests it was similar to Slimming World but for depressives.
I know the argument, if you can catch it early etc etc, but if you are in your 50's and you have no discernible symptoms of anything, then it seems an unlikely worry and an unnecessary take up of the doctors time.
Its the 'worried well' syndrome and then you give yourself a pat on the back when you make it through the test virtually unscathed and of course with a false sense of security, disease has a starting point that is undetermined, you must keep going for the test annually at least otherwise its a pointless exercise, I would love to know the average number of appointments whilst well until something that is serious enough to need immediate attention is ever flagged up and if when it is symptoms had presented themselves anyway.
So education on our health seems great, I am guessing the NHS have these policies of wellbeing tests perhaps for those patients, usually men that have symptoms presenting but still do not go to doctors, so I get that, but it is being dominated by those of us that seem relatively fit and healthy but just want a gold star sticker and bore their friends on a Friday night whilst your twenty stone mate rocks up and tells you he only found out at one of those tests that he has high blood pressure, no sh1t sherlock.
I note that quite logically if you are determined to get basic wellbeing tests and associated results that you must now consider going for the full monty set of tests, bit like going to the car wash and end up buying the gold star car wash for a tenner a pop, otherwise its not a true picture is it.
To enter a cycle of ongoing investigative medical testing even when no symptoms are presenting themselves must be quite stressful and invasive, not for me.
Several good points made and I'm sure I read some while ago that some longstanding screening programmes are under scrutiny as so few issues are found (don't ask for a reference though!).
More pertinently, I used to work for the British Heart Foundation and we were considering offering regular check ups to senior staff.
We were put off by our then medical director, however, whose view was that most of the standard checks are of little value and as long as you take care of the basics i.e. weight, diet, no smoking and exercise then regular checkups add little to the equation.
The only one he did advocate was a regular blood pressure check since symptoms rarely appear till too late, which you can do at home yourself on a BP monitor, of course.
Don't want to dissuade people from getting themselves checked out of course but it's no substitute for basic self-help by looking after yourself..........
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