Super-Human Doctors
It is in our best interest if doctors take medicine to give them super-human abilities?
An examination of medical ethics and the practitioners who define them. Sign up to receive the Second Opinion topics in newsletter form at kcrw.com/newsletters .
It is in our best interest if doctors take medicine to give them super-human abilities?
In our mess of a healthcare system, there are some shining examples of a community pulling together for a person...
Perhaps no topic is more actively avoided in discussions between doctors and older people than sexual health...
Is depression a natural and necessary stage we pass through at the end of life or is it a medical condition that needs treatment?
Why is that we have such a tough time letting go when a person has a terminal illness?
Why are American rates of breast feeding so low?
We all engage in denial to some extent, but can denial cause medical problems?
Reading a hospital bill is like trying to understand a foreign language but look carefully because more likely than not there will be errors...
Several letters suggested there were other ways to ration healthcare and many suggested rationing was, well, anti-American.
Is it possible that in the US we ration healthcare?
While doctors can do a lot better with regard to talking to people with cancer about end-of-life issues, they are still in the dark ages when it comes to talking to people with other disease who have a poor prognosis...
There are several explanations for why new medicine appear to work better than older medicines...
There are several pain relievers that contain propoxyphene, a substance that is dangerous and ineffective. Why are these still on the market?
While fluorescent bulbs use a fraction of the energy required for traditional light bulbs, they pose a potential danger if broken and an even greater danger if improperly discarded...
The impact of village health workers can be enormous but there are still some barriers to what they can accomplish...
While AIDS medicines would life-saving, the need in rural India are for far more than just medicines...
After generations of fighting malaria and dysentery rural India is not trying to contend with AIDS...
We all want our surgery to go as smoothly as possible, but at what point is it not in our best interest to have lots of preoperative tests ordered?
While dementia is a common illness, and one that causes great concern, there are currently no tests to detect the disease early and this may be a good thing...
No matter how much we wish it were different, there is still no easy road to weight loss...
Why is it that Canada prohibits drug companies from advertising products directly to the public?
Two men with the same disease. Will their treatment differ?
When we go to a teaching hospital we assume the care may be better. But we often aren't given a choice about who should be involved in caring for us...
A large, high-quality study suggests that newer antidepressants may be far less effective than we have been told by their manufacturers...
Despite significant research showing the benefits of some complementary and alternative treatments such as acupuncture, they are still considered outside the mainstream...
Doctors have a hard time when people don't follow their advice. But behavior change isn't easy for anyone -- not even doctors.
Despite substance abuse being a major medical and public problem, only twelve out of 125 medical schools surveyed, offer a required course in substance abuse detection and treatment...