Puff Puff Pass
You have to think that the community of Bad Oldeslo in Northern Germany is going to let out a collective, Oh Scheiße, this morning when they pick up their copy of the local Stormarner Tageblatt . As a guy with family in the Durham region, and who has seen Roger and Me so many times that I cant get that visual of the lady clubbing the bunny out of my head, I think it is important that in this age of economic uncertainty that anyone who manages to read my writing know that times may be tough, but fret not, as you are not alone.
You see Bad Oldeslo is home to GlaxoSmithKline Deutchland who manufactures Volmax. Volmax is one of the four ingredients that make up long-acting beta2 agonists, the most common form of Asthma treatment that most of us would call a puffer or inhaler. With the Canadian Medical Association Journal’s release that up to 30% of Canadians living with asthma have been misdiagnosed, I can’t help but visualize the German GSK acting out like a Stride Gum commercial this morning.
Report author Shawn Aaron and the crew that put this report together, have possibly uncovered one of the greatest medical oversight’s in modern medicine. In simpleton terms, this means that in a room of ten asthma sufferers, THREE OF THEM SHOULD NOT EVEN BE IN THE ROOM. This is either, an incredible black mark on public health care that highlights what happens when you overwork an industry to a point where detail regarding the healthy lifestyles of our communities is passed over for productivity and benchmarking, or this is the perfect plot line for the next James Bond film!
I started looking at this story through cbcnews.ca, and I think this quote got me rilled up the most.
Physicians are under a lot of pressure to manage a lot of patients quickly,” Aaron said. “For a patient who comes in complaining of shortness of breath and wheeze, it’s much more easy and it takes much less time to say, ‘I think you have asthma, take this puffer.
What’s worse is I don’t know who the fault ultimately falls on for this collective gaffe. Do we blame the overworked and underfunded health care system that needs to implement quantity over quality processes to meet demand? Or maybe there is some real world Ernst Stavro Blofeld character running around plotting human demise with the use of inhalers and Ritalin (don’t get me started on ADHD). Or is it possible that we ultimately need to point the finger at the concept of public health care at its root?
For any readers from Bad Oldesloe, take a deep breath I am sure you will all be fine.
posted 7 months ago | Permatime