Literature DB >> 9060487

Doctors, diagnosis, and disability: a disastrous diversion.

J D Loeser1, M Sullivan.   

Abstract

Patients and third party payers expect physicians to identify damage or disease as the cause of pain and disability, but often there is no damage or disease that can be identified. The process of disability determination requires physicians to make determinations that cannot be based on medical science and for which they have no specialized training. The combination of pseudodiagnosis and pseudodisability is likely to bankrupt countries that do not recognize this folly and design more productive health and disability systems. Physicians need much more education about human behavior and the highly variable relationships among disease, distress, and disability.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9060487     DOI: 10.1097/00003086-199703000-00009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Orthop Relat Res        ISSN: 0009-921X            Impact factor:   4.176


  6 in total

Review 1.  The Minnesota Health Partnership and Coordinated Health Care and Disability Prevention: the implementation of an integrated benefits and medical care model.

Authors:  Michael P McGrail; Marilou Calasanz; Jon Christianson; Cathy Cortez; Bryan Dowd; Robert Gorman; William H Lohman; David Parker; David M Radosevich; Gary Westman
Journal:  J Occup Rehabil       Date:  2002-03

2.  Medical education and disability studies.

Authors:  Fiona Kumari Campbell
Journal:  J Med Humanit       Date:  2009-12

Review 3.  Fibromyalgia following trauma: psychology or biology?

Authors:  G C Gardner
Journal:  Curr Rev Pain       Date:  2000

4.  Do mental disorders matter? A study of absenteeism among care seeking Gulf War veterans with ill defined conditions and musculoskeletal disorders.

Authors:  T L Dremsa; C C Engel; X Liu; M Johantgen; S Smith
Journal:  Occup Environ Med       Date:  2002-08       Impact factor: 4.402

5.  Aspects of functioning and environmental factors in medical work capacity evaluations of persons with chronic widespread pain and low back pain can be represented by a combination of applicable ICF Core Sets.

Authors:  Urban Schwegler; Jessica Anner; Christine Boldt; Andrea Glässel; Veronika Lay; Wout Ernst Lodewijk De Boer; Gerold Stucki; Bruno Trezzini
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2012-12-18       Impact factor: 3.295

6.  Towards comprehensive and transparent reporting: context-specific additions to the ICF taxonomy for medical evaluations of work capacity involving claimants with chronic widespread pain and low back pain.

Authors:  Urban Schwegler; Jessica Anner; Andrea Glässel; Mirjam Brach; Wout De Boer; Alarcos Cieza; Bruno Trezzini
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2014-08-29       Impact factor: 2.655

  6 in total

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