The New York Times: A New Approach to Treating Hypochondria

Andy

Retired committee member
Thought this was, generally, utter bollocks but useful to get some insight into what 'the other side' think I suppose.
This spring, when every tree in Brooklyn seemed to be shedding pollen all at once, I developed a nagging itchy throat with frequent spasms of coughing that made it difficult to talk or walk. I attributed the problem to allergies even though I’d never had such a reaction before.

But when I got worse instead of better after taking antihistamines and after days of rain had presumably cleansed the air, I began to wonder if I had something more serious — maybe walking pneumonia or possibly even throat cancer from years of drinking hot coffee through a straw.

Though I tried to dismiss such sleep-disrupting thoughts, anxiety about my health loomed until the cough finally abated, then disappeared. But the incident hinted at what it must be like to have chronic health anxiety — a problem long called hypochondriasis, in which people are convinced they have a serious undiagnosed illness despite repeated medical reassurances that they do not.
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/18/well/a-new-approach-to-treating-hypochondria.html
 
This whole area looks such a mess. Some people do have real problems with health anxiety, getting caught up in concerns about any health problem they just read about, fears about potential health problems in the future, etc, but I have little confidence in some doctors ability to distinguish that from other people's concerns about symptoms that are poorly understood by the doctor.
 
seems like the writer was mirroring or more than likely making up the experience just to make a persuasive intro . what happened to the belief that many sick people with niggling symptoms avoided going to any doctor until their symptoms gave them no choice this was mentioned by public health info commercials regarding the late diagnosis of cancer. late diagnosis =patients fault taking yourself to the doctors with symptoms that particular doctor doesn't immediately give a diagnosis for then that must also be the patients fault . back to the familiar circular arguments from so called psychs your damned if you do damned if you don't and every one in the medical industry does not have to feel any responsibility .
 
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