Monday, February 15, 2010

Understanding the Incomplete Medical Diagnosis


*names and some details have been changed to maintain and protect privacy*
If multiple sclerosis was an anatomy review item, I can just imagine Dr. Zeller pointing at the spinal cord and asking me, “Eva, what is the clinical presentation of multiple sclerosis?” After overcoming the anxiety of being “pimped,” my response would probably include symptoms such as: muscle weakness, difficulty in moving, difficulty with balance, visual problems, fatigue, and pain. Before meeting my patient volunteer, Casey, that’s how I characterized multiple sclerosis. The mental image in my head also included a wheelchair. This snapshot of multiple sclerosis is the medical mold that physicians give to their patients upon diagnosis, which I used to think was complete and scientifically correct.

After almost six months with Casey, I now understand that this sort of medical mold is incomplete. This medical mold is analogous to giving an unknowing sculptor a headless cast of Michaelangelo’s David and telling him that this represented Michaelangelo’s complete masterpiece. What was missing in the medical mold of multiple sclerosis (MS)?

What was missing was Casey...

Click here to read the full post on the IHI Open School Blog!

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