|
|
|
|
|
by lindseymysse
1688 days ago
|
|
Why do I keep on having to give my allergies to the doctor every time I'm there? My timeline is that it is too expensive and full of forms for me to go talk to my doctor. And I have to keep answering the same questions to my doctor about my allergies over and over and over anyway. I think all this paper work helps a parasitic managerial class, but I've never seen it help me. |
|
It's the physicians job to weigh the benefits against risk of a drug. And potential allergic reactions is a part of that. If a patient with a known history of severe allergic reactions gets another one from a prescribed drug, and the physician hasn't done their due diligence, then the physician could be at fault. I can only imagine that it's even more prudent for US-based physicians to ask that question due to lawsuits and or personal liability.
Also a patients medical status is never static. While unlikely a patient could have had a reaction since the last visit. I guess a more realistic example of something non static is pregnancy status which can be equally important when prescribing drugs etc.