Why Ignore the Symptoms?

healthblog


 


Ignorance is bliss, supposedly, but that is not the answer. Nor is this a post about Writing. Health is today’s imperative – your health.


This is my contribution to the Survive and Thrive Bloghop! This blogfest, hosted by Stephen Tremp, Michael Di Gesu, L Diane Wolfe, and Alex J Cavanaugh, is “meant to bring awareness of disease prevention and early detection regarding medical conditions that may be averted or treated if caught in the early stages. Our desire is to motivate people to go in for early screening, and if a condition is caught early and treated, then our world just became a little better place to live.”


So why ignore your symptoms, because you are coping? They might go away – or they might get worse. I suspect that the doctor would prefer an early diagnosis than the complications of extended treatment.


Minor-seeming ailments could be the symptom of something worse. My earliest Multiple Sclerosis symptoms were subtle and could have been ignored. I went to my doctor and he diagnosed Repetitive Strain Injury, but, when the symptoms flared up again, I was sent for more extensive tests. These tests led, within three months, to the diagnosis that I had MS. I could have ignored the problems, continued driving – with extreme difficulty – and the consequences could have been far worse than early retirement, a wheelchair and a rebellious body.


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I’m not suggesting that doctors will always get their diagnosis right. There have been some tragic cases of medical incompetence. I might have gained a daughter when I got re-married, but within four months of her birthday in December 2010, she had died of stage four stomach cancer. A tragedy as she was a wonderful person, but the doctor told her that the stomach cramps were just acid reflux.


That suggests that if the problem persists, you should seek a second, third, fourth opinion. Don’t ignore the symptoms because the first doctor says you have a mild cold.


Maybe there is great value in the Chinese philosophy that prevention is the best cure. Traditionally, Chinese doctors had failed when a patient fell ill. But that’s another post. Just eat healthy until then.


 


Chicken Soup ~ Image courtesy of tiramisustudio at FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Chicken Soup ~ Image courtesy of tiramisustudio at FreeDigitalPhotos.net


PLEASE VISIT OTHER BLOGFEST PARTICIPANTS


 







1.
Stephen Tremp




2.
Ninja Captain Alex J. Cavanaugh






3.
Michael Di Gesu @ In Time




4.
L. Diane Wolfe






5.
Literary Rambles




6.
SA Larsen/Writer’s Alley






7.
Confessions of a Watery Tart




8.
Entertaining Interests






9.
Writing Wings




10.
Left and Write






11.
Susan Says




12.
DG Hudson – Rainforest Writing






13.
Pensuasion




14.
Clarissa Draper






15.
The Story of a Writer




16.
LuAnn Braley/Back Porchervations






17.
Hilary of Positive Letters




18.
Richard P Hughes






19.
The Write Game




20.
The Beveled Edge






21.
Jay Noel – Writer on Fire




22.
dolorah at Book Lover






23.
Rohn Federbush




24.
melanie schulz






25.
Writer’s Block




26.
Tamara Narayan






27.
Julie@ Empty Nest Insider




28.
My Miracle Life






29.
Read is the New Black




30.
Life by Chocolate






31.
Diane Burton – Adventure and Romance




32.
Pat Hatt






33.
J. L. Campbell




34.
TrueWanderings






35.
Birgit




36.
Arlee Bird Tossing It Out






37.
The Warrior Muse




38.
Michelle @ Writer~In~Transit





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Published on October 20, 2014 10:43
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