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The Range
Law & Order
Doctors and gun question
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<blockquote data-quote="Glocktogo" data-source="post: 1750994" data-attributes="member: 1132"><p>I fail to see how this particular survey question has one single damned thing to do with health care as it's asked? I've yet to see a disease other than lead poisoning that's created by a firearm. If the medical industry restricted their gun concern to lead poisoning, I'd see no issue with it. Does the use of a firearm trigger a blood panel for lead? No. </p><p></p><p>Safety is not the purview of the medical profession and they need to be reminded to stay in their lane. I get quite sick of this "mission creep" that is pervasive in every part of our society. Instead, they get all Ralph Nader on the subject and the reported statistics are turned into anti-gun porpoganda. Guns are not cigarettes, booze, drugs, unhealthy food or any other causative health concern. When a patient dies due to the discharge of a firearm, the industry standard answer should be " That has nothing to do with the patient's health care". If that's a problem for your industry, it's because your industry MADE it a problem! As for "your protection", when the doctor is paying me to take their surveys it becomes a two way street. Otherwise it's a straight up service provider/customer relationship. No more, no less. If the customer says the provider doesn't need to know all the intimate details of their life, then they don't. <img src="/images/smilies/frown.png" class="smilie" loading="lazy" alt=":(" title="Frown :(" data-shortname=":(" /></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Glocktogo, post: 1750994, member: 1132"] I fail to see how this particular survey question has one single damned thing to do with health care as it's asked? I've yet to see a disease other than lead poisoning that's created by a firearm. If the medical industry restricted their gun concern to lead poisoning, I'd see no issue with it. Does the use of a firearm trigger a blood panel for lead? No. Safety is not the purview of the medical profession and they need to be reminded to stay in their lane. I get quite sick of this "mission creep" that is pervasive in every part of our society. Instead, they get all Ralph Nader on the subject and the reported statistics are turned into anti-gun porpoganda. Guns are not cigarettes, booze, drugs, unhealthy food or any other causative health concern. When a patient dies due to the discharge of a firearm, the industry standard answer should be " That has nothing to do with the patient's health care". If that's a problem for your industry, it's because your industry MADE it a problem! As for "your protection", when the doctor is paying me to take their surveys it becomes a two way street. Otherwise it's a straight up service provider/customer relationship. No more, no less. If the customer says the provider doesn't need to know all the intimate details of their life, then they don't. :( [/QUOTE]
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