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  • fuckedgaijin ‹ General ‹ Gaijin Ghetto

Black Hospitals

Groovin' in the Gaijin Gulag
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Black Hospitals

Postby Russell » Wed Apr 30, 2014 9:30 am

Checklist for 'black hospitals' to be avoided

“In economically advanced countries, the big three in terms of causes of death are cancer, heart disease and stroke. But there are also reports that the fourth major cause is excessive medical treatment.”

So says Dr Masahiko Okada, professor emeritus at Niigata University and author of “How to Pick Doctors and Medicines.”

Shukan Taishu (May 12-19) thinks it’s on to something. Just as “black companies” have been generating controversy over the past year for their callous treatment of employees, it appears there’s also such a thing as “black hospitals. And readers are advised to be alert for the seven warning signs that would identify a hospital as one they’d be wise to avoid.

The average Japanese sees a doctor 13 times a year—tops among industrialized nations—and picking the right hospital often means not picking the wrong one. Owing partly to the prolonged economic recession, plus intensified competition, many hospitals have been cutting corners and looking for new ways to milk the health insurance scheme.

The first sign that a hospital may be “black,” says Shukan Taishu, is an unusually large number of departments relative to the number of physicians employed therein. Often in such cases, the doctors will be examining and treating patients outside of their own field of specialization.

Another warning sign is a hospital with extended hours for outpatient services, such as on evenings and weekends.

“They aim to attract more salaried workers who can’t spare the time from their jobs to see the doctor on weekdays,” a veteran physician tells the magazine.

Hospitals where the nurses are busy to the point of being pathologically harried are to be avoided, as this may be a sign they have reduced its staff to save money. And institutions where the doctors habitually attribute patients’ problems—any problem—to stress don’t have much to recommend them.

“Actually the cause of a medical condition may not be immediately evident, but there’s no scientific evidence of anyone expiring from stress at a young age,” says Dr Okada.

Another type of hospital to be avoided are those that order excessive testing. Yes, there are certain tests that need to be performed. But the hospitals also earn compensation from the testing, so it’s in their interest to do more of them. But overexposure to X-rays can cause malignancies.

“According to a report from the UK, researchers determined that 4.4% of diagnosed cancers developed as a result of overexposure to X-rays,” says Okada. “Tests for esophageal and stomach cancers are particularly scary. The strength of the X-rays for a stomach cancer examination are one-thousand times that used to check for lung cancer.”

Another place to stay away from is where the explanations regarding treatment are “one-way,” i.e., when doctors fail to advise the patient with guidance needed for “informed consent,” which has become the medical norm.

And it’s wise to steer clear of establishments that prescribe too many medications at a single visit.

“For example, if a patient suffers from high blood pressure, a physician can easily prescribe a variety of medications to reduce it. But most of the factors causing blood pressure to rise can be attributed to body type or lifestyle, and drugs will not remedy the root cause,” Okada explains, adding “A good doctor will first make recommendations to change things like diet and exercise over several months, and then if the patient shows no signs of progress he’ll start a drug regimen.”

A doctor who prescribes medications in large quantities can be said to be indifferent to the patient’s welfare.

“A responsible physician would never a large volume of medications to a patient all at once,” says the aforementioned veteran physician. “First he should prescribe a week or 10-day supply, and then respond appropriately after examining the patient again.”

Link

I always avoid stomach X-rays, and rather take an examination by camera probe. Through the nose works best for me, if the Doc knows what he/she is doing.
Image ― Voltaire
“To learn who rules over you, simply find out who you are not allowed to criticize.”

“I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones.” ― Albert Einstein
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Re: Black Hospitals

Postby Russell » Thu May 01, 2014 8:45 pm

Medical mishaps hit highest since 2005

Hospitals reported more than 2,700 “medical near misses and adverse events” in 2013, more than in the past eight years, according to an annual report released recently by the Japan Council for Quality Health Care.

The report tracks such mishaps as broken bones incurred when patients fall while hospitalized, incorrect medicine dosages, and gauze or other items left inside patients during surgery.

The 2,708 cases are more than double the 1,114 reported in 2005, when the council started publishing annual reports.

Shin Ushiro, director of the council, said Thursday that the practice of reporting such incidents “has gradually begun to take root in Japanese society in recent years,” bolstering the council’s aim of preventing medical mishaps.

However, he pointed out that the vast majority of the mishaps in the March report were contributed from the 1,364 national and university hospitals that are required to report them to the council, which is overseen by the Health, Labor and Welfare Ministry.

Private medical institutions, which are not required to register with the council, reported only 341 near misses or adverse medical events last year.

He said there were 521 cases in 2010 and 316 the following year.

Ushiro stressed that many medical institutions are hesitant about “sharing the information openly among other medical institutions.”

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Image ― Voltaire
“To learn who rules over you, simply find out who you are not allowed to criticize.”

“I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones.” ― Albert Einstein
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Russell
Maezumo
 
Posts: 8578
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Joined: Fri Aug 13, 2010 11:51 pm
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