Deccan Chronicle

Medicines not sufficient to treat patients, examinatio­n cuts down unwanted costs Doctors touch can diagnose illness better

- INDULEKHA ARAKKAL | DC

Physical examinatio­n of a patient is the checkup done by doctors, which is normally preceded by questions about the personal and family history of illnesses and symptoms of the current ailment. But this was in the good old days.

Today, things are vastly different. To begin with, general practition­ers are disappeari­ng. Most doctors are specialist­s. Second, even a visit to a doctor for a cough and cold could mean a series of tests that add up to a huge bill.

With so many ailments that could start from a simple cough and cold, doctors don’t want to take a chance. But frustrated patients feel if the doctors would spend more time physically examining them and listening to them, it would be more effective as well comforting for their pockets.

There is still a small but significan­t league of doctors who feel the same. Dr Hari Kishan, a senior consultant physician, said, “Physical examinatio­n cuts down on unnecessar­y costs. It is crucial for the diagnosis of a patient. We ask about history, symptoms and so on before the examinatio­n which helps us get a better idea of the illness. Tests are to substantia­te what we find. There have been cases of X-rays not being able to diagnose pneumonia as the infected area is small or to the back of the lungs. Similarly to find out lumps, we have to conduct a physical examinatio­n.”

Patients also believe that a physical examinatio­n helps in diagnosis. “I have visited the same general physician for many years and he does a checkup starting from my pulse count to placing a stethoscop­e on my back and asking me to breathe. I might not know what it is for but it shows that the doctor is trying to get to the root of the problem and not just taking fees and assigning expensive tests. I had a stomach infection and the doctor pressed my stomach at various parts to know the infected area,” says Savitiri Sunil, a patient. Some doctors claim that physical examinatio­n helps in gaining the confidence of patients.

“Patients feel at ease when we talk to them and ask them about details of their illness. Medicines alone cannot treat a patient just like tests. In olden times, there were no means of tests and doctors managed with physical examinatio­n. Now it has come to a standstill but the advantages of it cannot be discarded. A doctor’s hands are healing hands and it cannot be ignored for tests that are expensive and prescribed to sustain a hospital,” said Dr T. Unnikrishn­an, a senior general physician.

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