rvallee
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Poll of more than 2,000 people found 26% of respondents were told they had something else
https://www.theguardian.com/society...sufferers-were-wrongly-diagnosed-says-charityMore than a quarter of people with Parkinson’s disease were initially misdiagnosed, new research has found.
The poll of more than 2,000 people found 26% were first told they had something else, while 21% saw their GP three or more times before being referred to a specialist.
Of those who were misdiagnosed, 48% were given treatment for their nonexistent condition, with 36% receiving medication, 6% undergoing operations or procedures and a further 6% given both medication and operations or procedures.
It is an actual, current and effective, belief in many corners of medicine that presenting with a large number of symptoms is itself undeniable evidence of psychogenic disorder. This is the natural, guaranteed, outcome of this belief system.Katie Goates of Parkinson’s UK said: “Parkinson’s is an incredibly complex condition with more than 40 symptoms, and it affects everyone differently.
All too familiar:
Psychogenic-obsessed medical guidelines create this outcome, guarantee this outcome:“One of the biggest challenges for Parkinson’s research is that there is no definitive test for Parkinson’s, and as a result we’ve heard of people being misdiagnosed with anything from a frozen shoulder or anxiety to a stroke.
“I went to the doctors but no one could understand what was wrong with me.
“It took four years of appointments and being told that I was ‘doing it to myself’ before I got my diagnosis.
“In that time I was wrongly diagnosed with a functional neurological disorder and told that the way I was walking was ‘learned behaviour’.
“Our survey has shown that because of this, people are being left in limbo and seeing their health deteriorate, which is unacceptable.
It's way past time to seriously look into the harmful impacts of the various psychosomatic beliefs used in medicine and how they create those negative outcomes. The mantra in the various psychosomatic models, whether BPS, MUS, FND or any other similar nonsense, is that there are no negative impacts whatsoever and therefore zero risks.
This is obviously not only wrong but immoral. The issue is always brushed aside, no one ever wants to look because it will reveal just how massively misguided this hysteria-of-the-gaps ideology has been, amounting to tens of millions of people whose health care was inappropriate because of those irrational beliefs.
Diagnosis remains by far the hardest part of medicine. This idea that diagnosis can safely be done with zero effort and based entirely on beliefs about psychology is an enormous and ongoing failure.