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This could be a movie. Reminds me of Fargo.
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Heh...Fargo indeed.
I guess those kinds of things are what very wealthy people do in lieu of actually committing suicide. |
275-Pound Woman Says Hospital Told Her to Use Zoo MRI
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And the last line - “They should have machines that fit most everybody,” I think they already do. Her height/weight is way outta the "most everybody" category. |
This is a non-story. Millions of people, every day, can't have a radiological etc. study for various reasons (contrast allergy, for example). This is a boring fact of life, and not noteworthy in any way whatsoever. Yet I've read about this on two websites today. Why?
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I believe that "1000 people a day" are subject to some factor which contraindicates a diagnostic imaging study they would otherwise have, in every moderately-populated metropolitan area. This is not rare or uncommon in any way, and there are a lot of people in the world.
The number I stated was an extrapolated speculation which may be slightly hyperbolic |
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This paper reports, according to MEPS, 644 imaging studies "per 1000 persons (all ages) in the U.S. population" in the year 1999. Today, there are 305,614,860 people in the US; at 1999 rates that's 196,815,970 imaging studies performed. If only one half of one percent of that many people needed a study but couldn't have it (for a variety of very common reasons) that would be almost one million (984,080) people in the US alone.
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Heh, if millions of people every day couldn't fit into MRIs, they probably would have zoo-sized MRI machines in hospitals.
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I'm guessing it includes x-rays at the dentist, which are routine every 2-3 years. Still, it's much higher than I thought. I take back my "horseshit" comment and embrace your "slightly hyperbolic" characterization. Dammit. |
In the weeks before he died, it seemed like my father was getting 1-2 'imaging studies' done per day. I bet there is a subset of patients that skew the statistics mightily.
For which the rest of us (mostly healthy) people should be glad. |
Oooh, I want in on Fun Math:
1 million people x 365 days a year = 365 million people. The study is for a year's worth of fail. He said a million people a day, originally. Well, actually, he said "millions of people a day." slightly hyperbolic just sayin' :blush: |
people can't have rad. procedures coz they're too big, pregnant, allergic, not followed the "cleansing" routine (ie. too full of poop to see), can't hold an enema, freak at getting their boob squished, loads, loads of reasons. Even some US can't be done if someone is too fat or too gassy or can't hold the twenty gallons of water needed to do a uterine/pelvic US. so many appointments get cancelled. It's great! :)
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I used to do daily portable chest Xrays on tons of patients who were clearly only days away from passing. |
Hospital. After a bmt.
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