Guest guest Posted May 18, 2004 Report Share Posted May 18, 2004 Alan “Most doctors are people…†– I’m pleased I didn’t meet some of the doctors you’ve met. Joke apart, the cynic in me says that money is a factor which should not be ignored. OSs appear to be making more profit from carrying out THR than from ‘resurfacing’. I’d guess that in the USA they may also think about liability / insurance indemnity linked to a new procedure. And, as you say, learning a new ‘trick’ takes time and while you’re learning you’re not earning. So, it seems it’s less of “hard to tech an old dog a new trick†than “$-based decision-makingâ€. * +44 (0)7974 981-407 @ dan.milosevic@... _____ From: Alan Ray Sent: 18 May 2004 19:43 To: surfacehippy Subject: Re: THR recommendations – I need a chill pill! Dave... Let me offer a couple of following notes. Given what I've seen, heard, and read...I'm ready to believe that THR is a much less demanding surgery -- for the doctor. It requires less precision. it requires less attention to detail. It requires no training in a new procedure. Put the extra training into the mix with the fact that surgeons don't get good at these procedures before they've done 50 or so, and we may be getting a little closer to the reason for the apparently unreasoned resistence to a " new " surgical technique. Most doctors are people, and most people will take the path of least resistance. THR is, when you get right down to it, a pretty crude way to fix a hip. Resurfacing is simple and elegant...in its conception...and in its approximation of the way the joint really works. Until I asked him about resurfacing, I had a fair respect for the OS/sports med doc who diagnosed my condition. I asked him whether I'd be a candidate for resurfacing. He spent ten minutes bad- mouthing the procedure, never once explaining why I wouldn't be a good candidate. But he really did want to put in a Biomet THR. Won't be talking to him again. Getting the information about resurfing has actually been a wonderful adventure of discovery: discovery of the consoling realization that I'm not alone with hip problems; discovery of a whole area of medicine that looks forward, not back. I could go on; but I've got to go limp home...and wait for JRI to call with my insurance information. Alan > Do remember in March of 1997 when the Heaven's Gate cult members > committed suicide to hitch a ride to heaven on the Hale-Bopp comet? > Do you recall your thoughts at the time? Did you wonder how someone > could put their trust in another's belief without applying a > modicum of their own intelligence before taking such drastic action? > Well now you know how I feel when I read about someone deciding on > THR over resurfacing. > > Okay, okay, I'm sorry - this is way too harsh a comparison. > First, let me quickly add that I'm extremely sympathetic to > anyone experiencing debilitating joint pain. We've all been > there and life sucks. But many of us have discovered the freedom of > recapturing a very active, pain-free lifestyle through a procedure > that is still treated like a poor stepchild by much of the medical > community. I just don't understand why THR continues to be > favored over resurfacing. So please forgive the Hale-Bopp comparison > and help me out. When this community has, what is to us, > overwhelming first-hand evidence that resurfacing is superior, why is > an inferior option so frequently prescribed? THR is a viable plan B, > but why is it so frequently promoted as the favored option? > > Your thoughts are appreciated... even on what I can take to calm down. > > Dave _____ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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