He annoyed me as soon as he said you get on dialysis because you "have killed your kidneys." I don't want that guilt trip laid on MY head, because I don't deserve it.I didn't do anything to kill my kidneys.Not all types of kidney disease can be prevented. Not in the current state of the art in medicine.
Absolutely right, Bill P. In the UK the NHS fell into the same trap when it was formed in 1948. It was then thought that with a universal health service the need for hospitals would fall, as the health of the nation improved. Didn't happen that way, of course.
Quote from: RightSide on December 22, 2010, 04:19:08 PMHe annoyed me as soon as he said you get on dialysis because you "have killed your kidneys." ....Not all types of kidney disease can be prevented. Not in the current state of the art in medicine.Thank you, RightSide. I agree with everything you said. I don't know what is causing my kidneys to fail, but I know I didn't do anything to make it happen. I know plenty of people who abuse their bodies a LOT worse than I have ever even dreamed of, let alone do. Not everyone is responsible for being dealt a crappy hand in life.KarenInWA
He annoyed me as soon as he said you get on dialysis because you "have killed your kidneys." ....Not all types of kidney disease can be prevented. Not in the current state of the art in medicine.
What type of kidney disease do you have? FSGS like me?
Finally, a number of studies have failed to show that preventive medicine will lower health care costs significantly. The reason is that preventive medicine costs money too. You will be doing screening, medication, expensive blood tests, etc., for a population of 300 million Americans, throughout their lives, to try to prevent perhaps 150,000 cases of kidney failure (the other 50,000, like mine, cannot be prevented by the current state of the art in preventive medicine). So screening and treating 3,000 people just to prevent one or two cases of kidney failure isn't necessarily going to save the country money.