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How Do We Stop Doctor Shopping
TLDR: If one is attempting to gatekeep a treatment, whether surgical or pharmaceutical, that is important for some patients but that other people may seek to access for reasons we find unacceptable, behind physicians and medical standards, how does one prevent doctor shopping? How does one prevent a sufficiently wealthy or connected individual from trying doctor after doctor until they get what they want?
My wife and I were discussing SCOTUS granting cert for USA v. SKRMETTI (link to petition, link to lower court decision here) a case in which the Justice Department is attempting to overturn a Tennessee law banning medical transition for minors. I commented that I saw no path forward for the case at SCOTUS, because they don't even bother in the petition to argue that Tennessee lacks the power to regulate medical care. The petition repeatedly cites WPATH standards, so recently discussed here, as though their existence writes itself into Tennessee law or the US constitution automatically. No matter how many times the petition uses the term "evidence based;" I'm left wondering where in the Constitution the legislature is required to act based on evidence. The core of their argument is around equal protection:
The decision from which they appealed concluded that:
It seems to me that the state has the power to regulate medical treatments within its borders.
Being straight, as one occasionally must, I then listened to my wife bring up Kylie Jenner and her adventures in plastic surgery. I have to admit my wife has a point, the 26 year old woman looks at least 40. Her face is weirdly contoured, filler has wandered around, and her breasts are kinda detached from her body at some angles. Why, she asked, is it legal for her parents to get her plastic surgery, starting her on a path that has permanently altered and ruined her body; merely because those procedures were gender conforming? Because the weird "negroid-barbie-doll-centaur" Kardashian look is undoubtedly feminine rather than masculine, Kylie and her parents are unrestricted in making insane changes to her body?
I replied that it would make sense to ban plastic surgery for minors, and that Tennessee would certainly have the power to do so, and that I'd support a total ban except in cases of extreme deformities. How would you define extreme deformity, she shot back. Well, I guess you'd need a doctor to certify it. Gotcha, she said, that wouldn't stop Kylie or her parents for a second, they'd have crooked Armenian doctors on tap anywhere they needed them.
And it occurs to me that I have absolutely no idea what the next step in that process is. How do you gatekeep medical procedures against the well resourced?
In law school I knew lots of people who doctor shopped. First for a certification of "disability" that would grant them extra time on entrance exams, then for adderall prescriptions. ((I honestly felt they ought to piss-test before finals, addys were such a problem.)) They all fit the same criteria: well connected, wealthy families, people who often knew lots of doctors personally and had the resources and support to try multiple to get the diagnosis they were looking for to get what they wanted.
I've no doubt that if a diagnosis of "deformity" were required for cosmetic surgery, many women would suddenly be diagnosed with deformed breast tissue. I've already heard of plenty of use of creative diagnoses to get things covered by insurance policies.
Maybe it's lack of knowledge, but I'm at a loss as to how one fights this. A blanket ban on trying a different doctor seems like it would run dangerously close to banning second opinions, and I've seen many second opinions that massively improved on the first doctor's results. People should be free to keep trying if one doctor can't get results. But how do we distinguish the case of an individual trying to find help for a condition, from an individual without medical training settling on a pill they want to pop and trying doctors until they find one who will let them pop it?
This has obvious pharmaceutical implications. Adderall, Xanax, Oxy have all been abused. But what about things like TRT? Plastic surgery? And of course it comes back around to Transgender Kids: if somebody takes their kid to three doctors and they all say the kid isn't trans, but drags them on to a fourth doctor who says they are, is the kid trans or not?
I can't think of any good way to draw the line. At best we can rely on professional ethics, but, you know, lol. What's the strategy here?
You can just let people do what they want with their own bodies, including drugs or surgery, even if it is stupid or gross. What is wrong with people taking adderall for better grades if they see it as a good tradeoff vs side effects?
The part where the rest of us are paying for it, as well as the part where many aspects of education are competitive.
Amphetamine salts are simple and cheap to manufacture, less than a penny per dose in an unregulated market. Yes education is competitive, what is fair about being born smart or more in control rather than taking drugs? Ritalin me that.
These drugs are long term bad for you. The true cost of long term use is not a penny per dose.
Yes I already addressed this.
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