Posted on 02/23/2006 6:47:11 AM PST by SWO
Thanks, have printed and copied. I've already dumped one doctor because of this crap.
Have an appointment with a new one next week. Going to be fun!
LOL! When they finally do computerize medical records nationally, they will have some real strange statisticial "studies." No one in America smokes, drinks or does drugs and everyone wears their seatbelt and condoms. We are finally perfectly healthy so nanny staters can all retire! : )
I am SO glad I sat the cup of coffee down before reading this one!
If you ever give a doctor knowledge of unlawful activity, they can report you and in some cases like suspected child abuse are required to report you to the police. Doctors are not priests and will turn over medical records if ordered by a court. They have been trained in a new humanism code of amoral "ethics" so if you expect them to interact with you in an ethical way by Western standards, they may not. You have to check on them and make sure they are not wackos/moonbats.
Be real careful that your kids understand that doctors (teachers, police officers, etc.) are not their best friends and blabbing unnecessarily or to get attention is not to their advantage. Your medical record will become a part of a national computer system sooner or later so keep it in a way that will look pretty to employers, insurers and cops.
If they really cared about safety, they would ask about all the other dangers to kids which are statistically more likely to maim or kill them.
If they really cared about gun safety, as opposed to having an interest in prying into my privacy, they could accomplish it by handing out safety information. IIRC, when my kids were little, I got a "fact sheet" about car seats, a "fact sheet" about immunizations, etc.
http://www.2ampd.net/Articles/horn2/Firearms%20Malpractice%20Form.pdf
Can I play?
LOL
Should the state disallow pediatricians from asking parents about gun ownership?
Yes
51.32%
No
46.35%
Undecided
2.33%
Total: 1931 votes
Yes, it does.
If the data indicate that fewer households have firearms than do, the pediatric injury/death statistics will show the presence of a firearm to be proportionally more dangerous than it actually is.
That will be shouted from the rooftops every time a gun control bill hits a legislature. (along with the liberal battle cry: "Forrrr the Chillldrennnn!"
If even people who do no have firearms reply that they do, the number of owners will appear greater, the danger less, and the study will be buried.
I am more concerned when doctors and school authorities ask kids about things their parents own.
Uh huh. What was it Hillary said? "We will take things away from you for the common good."
And don't forget "If it will save just one life...".
Sorry, but you need to do more research.
If the interest was to save prevent harm, this can be done with a handout, no questions asked. There is no need to record the information if it is just about safety. And, like smoking, the questions are commonly unrelated to the problem at hand.
I have endured the antitobacco lecture, only to request that the doctor quit yapping about cigarettes and take a look at my injured leg. At 90 bucks for 15 minutes, I don't want to waste a chunk of that expensive time on unrelated data gathering to support someone's political agenda.
No. The pediatrician should be able to ask whatever he thinks is pertinent. The parent doesn't have to answer, of course, and can always choose another pediatrician.
Sorry, this bill is constitutionally obscene. Asking a question is in no way an infringement of my right to bear arms. It might be a stupid question, but anyone is free to ask stupid questions at any time. Criminalizing a question is just absurd.
You're unnecessarily confusing the issue. No one is defending the assinine question. However, the right to ask assinine questions must be defended.
Absolutely. I agree 100%. However, the proper response when asked a question that is none of someone's business is a simple, "That's none of your business." That's all it takes. The idea that we need to criminalize the question and incarcerate the person asking the question is constitutionally obscene.
This is an excellent bill. I'm in medical school right now, and perhaps I can offer some insight.
Insurance companies are basing doctors compensation on asking patients lifestyle questions and putting these answers in medical records. In some cases (diet, exercise, tobacco, alcohol use) such questions are helpful medically. In others - The "gun" question is one such case - they are not. The reason it even came into play is probably as a result of liberals in management at said insurance companies.
Furthermore, the entire medical establishment has taken a hard turn to the left somewhere along the line. While I'm not sure if this is true of practicing physicians, the AMA, and state medical societies it certainly seems true here in academic medicine.
So though it might seem a bit obscure, such a bill is actually necessary.
It is about a question being asked and the answer recorded in what is a permanent file which follows you everywhere.
Getting something straightened out after it gets in there is next to impossible.
If you refuse to answer, that is taken as an answer in the affirmative, and that is RECORDED.
THERE IS NO WAY TO PREVENT THAT OTHER THAN STOPPING THE QUESTION FROM BEING ASKED. THE DATA WILL BE IN YOUR RECORD OTHERWISE.
The only time the question is justified is if there is a firearm related injury involved, period.
Which is why even incorrect medical entries are assumed to be correct.
Not good advice in my opinion. IMHO, and speaking not only as being married to a woman in the medical field but as the father of a 12 year old who had heart surgery when she was 10, politics has nothing to do with medicine. When someone's cutting on a loved one, you want the absolute most competent professional present, and politics doesn't make good doctors.
I know full good and well that the surgeon who did my daughter's operation is a flaming lib, but I don't give a damn. He's without a doubt the best surgeon in his field, in this area, and I considered it a huge boon and favor that he took the time to perform a fairly routine repair, when most of his work is typically much more lucrative pedi-transplants.
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