|
|
|
|
|
by dnautics
4656 days ago
|
|
>is that everyone is guaranteed the same provisions for healthcare You're missing my point. If those provisions are the same, that's exactly the problem. It's only worse if they aren't the same (because who chooses?) CK levels warnings are only triggered when you are having a serious complication from the statin. When you have a lesser complication, like, "going to the gym sucks instead of making you feel good", and you aren't aware of what's happening, and it's making you fatter, and your quality of life is going down, then what? |
|
The principle is not about ensuring that someone with a specific amino acid substitution receives a specific drug, because this is an example of the specific medical management of a specific patient. If you are going to continue to insist that your dad was treated inappropriately, and I have no reason to be able to assume one way or the other from my current position on the other side of the planet without a through examination of your father and his medical results, then what you are complaining about is not universal healthcare per se but in fact poor care by the treating physician. Which could happen under any system, anywhere.