Originally posted by MoValley John
View Post
Patients want the thing they've heard about, so doctors are happy to prescribe EpiPens. Their patients are happy, there are no more questions from the patient.
The patient doesn't know to ask for something different. The doctor has been told over and over what a great solution the EpiPen is for their patients. Nobody is telling the doctor about the advantages of their patients using an equally effective, but less costly, solution. There's no reason for the doctor to bring the subject up. The patient doesn't know it's available.
My doctors were rock solid on whatever the pharmaceuticals had told them. 1 of my 4 actually cared about what was going on with me. The others just looked up what prescriptions they should be giving me and gave me the scrips. They put more credibility on the information they got from that source than from actually following patients to see what was going on with them.
I refused to take about half a dozen prescriptions I was given because I found out they were highly (and sometimes incredibly highly) addictive. The doctors wouldn't tell me about that. All the labeling has to say to alert a user to a highly addictive drug is "Consult a physician before discontinuing this drug". That's it. It sounds harmless. Schedule an appointment with your doctor to let him know you're stopping. That's not what it means.
Comment