18G
Paramedic
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What happened to "studies don't prove something as fact???" The US has great healthcare... I see it firsthand.
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What happened to "studies don't prove something as fact???" The US has great healthcare... I see it firsthand.
What happened to "studies don't prove something as fact???" The US has great healthcare... I see it firsthand.
What happened to "studies don't prove something as fact???" The US has great healthcare... I see it firsthand.
If you are lucky enough to be able to afford it.
PS: I love the quote at the top of the page. "To save one life is as if to save the world" : I guess I am heartless and do not share the same opinion
If that one life is your son or daughter, than yes, that is the same as saving the world.
That is just emotional bias and semantics. This is why the average person can be so easily convinced that this would be a great idea. Your tugging on heart strings to support something that most likely will have very little reduction of deaths.
It's not emotional bias when it's your kid.
Yeah, and you know so much more than the cardiologists from the multiple studies advocating this, right?
It's not emotional bias when it's your kid. Do you even have kids? It's not something to be written off.
I don't think I need kids to determine that the above statement is an excellent example of letting emotions effect one's view on a practical issue.
For everyone on here that preaches the, "show me evidence, show me evidence".... studies are being done by leading pediatric cardiologists at major US hospitals and evidence is being provided yet people are still discounting the potential positives of this.
Is it absolute? No, and I'm not saying that at this point. Is the research going in that direction? I think so.
So what are the opinions of the studies that have been done recently on this issue? Are you all saying the research was flawed or done poorly?
There seems to be a few arguments going on. I am not saying that doing these EKGs would not have a positive outcome, I am arguing that the small potential positive outcome is not worth the cost. I do not agree with the "if we save one child it is all worth it" mentality. If I was some politican with $xxx,xxx,xxx to spend I wouldn't be looking to dump it into this.
And finally, for our program, every athlete is offered the opportunity to have an echocardiogram done when they start their athletic career. It's totally optional, but many take advantage of it. The cost is $75 total for exam, tech, and interpretation by a cardiologist. Parents pay for the exam, and if they can't afford it and want it, it magically gets taken care of. We refer a few athletes each season for follow-up. I would guess we do about 100 exams per year for our large high school.
Obviously nobody is making any real money off this program, and the charge is drastically reduced from what a hospital or cardiologist would normally charge. It's voluntary, but available to all regardless of ability to pay. I'm aware of other schools that strike a deal with a local hospital to run similar programs, with the hospital of course getting a ton of free publicity and "sponsor" status for various sports.
Mandatory screening with EKG / echo ? I dunno, I'm not convinced - but the peace of mind was well worth the $75 it cost us 9 years ago. I'd do it again in a heartbeat.
For everyone on here that preaches the, "show me evidence, show me evidence".... studies are being done by leading pediatric cardiologists at major US hospitals and evidence is being provided yet people are still discounting the potential positives of this.
Is it absolute? No, and I'm not saying that at this point. Is the research going in that direction? I think so.
So what are the opinions of the studies that have been done recently on this issue? Are you all saying the research was flawed or done poorly?
For everyone on here that preaches the, "show me evidence, show me evidence".... studies are being done by leading pediatric cardiologists at major US hospitals and evidence is being provided yet people are still discounting the potential positives of this.
Is it absolute? No, and I'm not saying that at this point. Is the research going in that direction? I think so.
So what are the opinions of the studies that have been done recently on this issue? Are you all saying the research was flawed or done poorly?
But as cold as it sounds, costing millions if not hundreds of millions to save a handful of people per year is just not realistic.