|
|
|
|
|
by Guillaume86
1824 days ago
|
|
Your point across this thread is weird because it's not the testing itself which is an issue (if we assume the testing has a negligible cost economically and is comfortable/easy for the subject). We just need to improve the decision making after getting test results (one of these decisions is to decide to not do anything), and more data make improving it easier. |
|
My argument is not about particular individuals, but about populations as a whole and wholesale screening of those populations. The consensus is that this does not lead to improved patient outcomes across that population, though in individual cases it may very well be the result.