Sawbones: A Marital Tour of Misguided Medicine - Sawbones News: Vaccine Updates
Episode Date: September 13, 2022Extra, extra! It’s the first edition of the Sawbones Medical News, updates on what’s going on in the world of medicine. We’ve got the newest reports on Monkey Pox vaccines and the hot new COVID-...19 booster. Plus, an analysis of Dr. Oz’s interesting medical care advice.Music: "Medicines" by The Taxpayers https://taxpayers.bandcamp.com/
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Alright, talk is about books.
One, two, one, of misguided medicine. for the mouth. Wow, it's amazing.
Hello, everybody, and welcome to Saw Bones,
a marital tour of misguided medicine.
I'm your co-host Justin McRoy.
This is my first podcast of the day,
and I'm delighted to discover that I'm in excellent voice
this building.
We waited too late.
My voice is not in its best spot.
What's your peak?
What's your like voice peak would you say?
Because to me, it sounds like music all the time, so it's impossible to distinguish.
It's best when I first get out of bed.
Yeah.
That's why I'm talking to myself.
It's all downhill from me.
I always try to podcast at 6.15 am if I can.
Yeah.
I've also been like lubricating.
I've been drinking with my vocal cords.
Oh, okay.
No, like my vocal cords. I've been like drinking water is what I meant by that
I'm drinking water listen. I got it
No said the gravels going away. Yeah, just a little I need a more black coffee less water
We're trying something I am a doctor. We're trying something new today
You know, it's a swiftly moving world out there. Lots of changes in the medical world
and a lot of stories were sort of like following here
at the Salmon's news desk.
And we thought it would be good to just kind of update
about some of the medical related stuff
that's going on in the world.
Yeah, like medical news in the world today,
I don't have a title.
I don't have like a catchy title.
I'll come up with some by the end of the episode.
By the end of the episode. Yeah. You didn't
shut the door. Is that distracting you? Well, I didn't know if it affected the
sound quality to have the door open because then the space is larger and I
don't know if like that. Listen, if you can tell the difference between the
beginning of this podcast and this part, please do let us know. Yeah, I don't know.
If I can leave that door open,
just let the sweet breeze just blow,
then I'm in, but I do want the best sound quality
for our extended podcasting family.
That's what I, I mean, I thought that was the goal.
Justin, what do you want to talk about first?
Um, I know, so I don't know why that's game.
The result works.
Series on the resort?
No, that's not medical. Oh, okay
Now there's lots of stuff we could talk about if we're just talking about news. I don't want to do that show
No, I just want to talk about medical stuff
Let's I think everybody is been you know, it's like monkey pox. What are we?
Monkie pox, it's we did an episode a couple months right back in May
It's we did an episode a couple months, right? It's back in May, twist into May, I believe.
And we refused.
I think we were, we tried to be really,
I tried to be really, really pessimistic on that episode.
So we didn't get caught with our proverbial pants down
as we did during the COVID pandemic.
How has my skepticism been founded, Sid,
or what's the situation right now?
I would say it's like a mixed picture.
There's good and bad news in terms of
how are things going with this pandemic?
Is it a pandemic?
I mean, it's in multiple places all over the world
out breaking simultaneously.
Okay, all right.
But I mean, I think if you're comparing it
to the numbers that COVID has achieved,
it is not as widespread, certainly not even close.
But that is because it is transmitted as we have covered through a very different route.
And so therefore is less contagious in that sense.
If you stand in a room with someone with COVID, you're probably going to get COVID.
If you stand in a room with someone with monkey pox, you're probably not going to get monkey
pox depending on what you do next.
The standing in the room part is not the biggest risk.
Yeah, parts fine.
Yeah.
So I'd say it's a good news, bad news kind of thing.
Like globally, the case counts are definitely dropping overall.
Like that is what we're seeing is now,
now that being said, it's really important
to not just look at that number
because there's a lot that that number can't tell you.
First of all, is it because we are controlling the spread of monkeypox through isolation,
quarantine, vaccination, all the things we do?
Or is it that we're not reporting?
Or is it that it is spreading more in populations who do not have readily
have ready access to medical care to be diagnosed?
Is stigma reducing the number of people who come in and tell somebody that they're worried
they have it?
So there's a lot, I mean, like overall, that's good, but you don't want to just see that
number and say, well, we licked it, folks.
It's why we always talk about how important it is to destigmatize illness because you prevent
people from seeking treatment or appropriate care.
Exactly.
The most recent case count in the US, because the US is number one.
Hooray!
In Valkyrie Pox cases.
Oh!
Um, guys.
Anyway, uh,
Hey, it's a big country, all right.
There are other big countries.
The US has, as of yesterday at like two o'clock,
I think was when I got this number 21,504 confirmed cases. Okay.
You can track this on the CDC.
They have graphs and big banner.
A lot of I got to update my bookmarks.
Yeah, I'm done.
Great.
You can look state by state.
Like West Virginia has eight cases.
As of yesterday at two o'clock, that could have changed.
Do you remember when we were like counting single digit cases of COVID for West Virginia?
Like, oh, look, we've got five now.
Oh, it was St. Patrick's Day was the day we got one.
Really?
That was the I still remember in 2020.
Cause I was on a hospital surface.
And I thought, are they here?
They weren't in my county, but we were watching.
Still.
It's, but and again, still largely like if you look
at the percentages, most of the cases are in men.
Specifically again, the majority not all, but the majority are still in men who have sex with other men.
Okay.
I will say that the numbers are growing disproportionately in the black community and in the Latino community.
We are seeing that like the breakdown, the percentage
of who is getting this is rising in those communities, which means, and what that tells
you is that you're not necessarily reaching all of the populations you need to with your
information and with your vaccines. That tells you that you need to augment your response, because okay, so white people are having access to information on how to prevent, identify,
you know, access vaccines, and everybody else that isn't. Which is a common problem,
because a lot of our healthcare systems are inherently
ingest to black people and indigenous people and you know people of
color. So so that is something that we obviously still need to increase
efforts to get information of vaccination to those to those parts of our
communities. And we have come up with a new way to get the vaccine out.
So we talked about the vaccines last time there to most people I think are getting the
Janayow vaccine.
That is the one that I know I have some friends locally who have gotten vaccinated and that's
the vaccine they've received.
Janayow.
Janayow.
And it is, they have found a way to like sort of and when I say this it sounds like a shortcut or cutting corners
This is a good thing. This is science figuring out a way to take a limited resource and
Safely effectively make it go farther. They found that by doing it intradermally
Between layers of skin. It's if you've ever had a TB test a tuberculosis test
If you've ever had one of those tests
where they stick and they make a little bubble
right under your skin, and a lot of people
will know what I'm talking about,
that's an intradermal injection.
Between layers of skin.
Yeah, in the dermis, intradermal, in between the dermis.
And if you do it that way, you can use less
and still get the same effect.
So you can stretch a vial of vaccine farther. Oh, nice.
Just by using a different method of injection.
And that is a safe, effective thing to do, no matter who you are.
There were a lot of questions at first like, well, what about people with
compromised immune systems?
Will this still be an effective way?
Yes, there is the same risk exists.
If you have a compromised immune system, there is always the possibility you won't react
to a vaccine, but that doesn't change depending on which one.
That is a risk either way, but there is no increased risk in getting the vaccine this way.
So that has been a good thing because you can get more doses out of the same bio, so we
can get more people vaccinated, which ultimately information, destigmatization, and vaccination.
Hey, hey, that's good. Somebody write that down.
It's a way to control this because we have the advantage still with monkey pox
that we did when we eradicated smallpox, which is that you can vaccinate people after they've
been exposed and you can create these rings of vaccination around people.
To protect people without the meat vaccinated.
Well, like, so let's say that you find out
that you were exposed to monkeypox two days ago.
It wasn't.
You weren't, but let's say you found out you were,
you can still go get vaccinated now.
Oh, okay.
Like after exposure.
Oh, interesting.
Up to four days, there's still a lot,
they're still very effective, nothing's 100%.
There's still very effective, nothing's 100%.
There's a very effective in protecting you.
And so you still have this opportunity
to go protect yourself even after you've been exposed.
That's really key.
And that is unique to this virus.
Other infections are like,
this is why you can get a rabies vaccine
after you've been exposed to rabies.
If you think you got, usually it's a bat in this country and other parts of the
world where dogs aren't routinely vaccinated, it could be a rabid dog. But if you think you've been
exposed to rabies, you can still go get a rabies vaccine afterwards. With smallpox or with monkeypox,
if you think you've been exposed to monkeypox, you can still go get a monkeypox vaccine. So the
criteria still for vaccination, you kind of need to contact, I would say your local health department is your best bet. There may be other providers in your area who have the vaccine.
I'm sure they're advertising the heck out of it if they do. But for us, the health department
is the only place you can get it. And I'd say that's true for a lot of places.
Are we still, what's like the supply constraint situation like?
We just still have limited amounts. There's just, there's not enough to just advise everyone who has, and they keep focusing
on people who have sex, anyone, anybody who's sexually active.
And again, that is just because sex is one of the situations where two humans have prolonged
physical contact.
Right.
Is something specific about the sexual congress?
Any, any situation where you have prolonged physical contact with another person puts you at risk
for contracting monkey pox if they have it, obviously.
You don't generate it spontaneously through your grinding.
It is one person has to have it.
But they're not recommending it for everyone in those situations yet,
because we don't have enough and two, But they're not recommending it for everyone in those situations yet,
because we don't have enough and two, we don't know if that's necessary per se,
although I don't know. I love vaccines. I'll get any vaccine you'll let me get.
As soon as I am eligible, I am not high risk, and so I am not seeking a vaccine
because I would like others who are more high risk than myself to get it first.
But as soon as it is readily available for me, I'll go get that one too.
What is how I was thinking,
I was thinking here thinking about other situations
that we have prolonged physical contact.
At some point, like have there been any sort of advisories
about like best practices for people that aren't like obviously with
COVID we hit you know you have the social distancing and and you know don't touch your
face if you remember that hit from the early days like when when when or if do you think
that we'll start to see like the new new like social behaviors are best practices to avoid this.
So I don't necessarily.
That was something that things like massage, right?
At, I don't mean to lay this at the feet of massage therapist,
but like prolonged physical contacts can just get in
whatever, like when do you think,
or do you think we'll see people start to recommend
against stuff like that?
Uh, I don't think you're gonna see
widespread recommendations to isolate or like shutdowns like we did with COVID again because it's not
nearly as contagious in that sense. You need to think more about specific risk and like our own personal behaviors is going to be
I think the way that this and so far that seems to be the way it's targeted. I was reading some actually some recommendations on large events.
There's a toolkit and the CDC has tons of information on this. If you're somebody who for instance the targeted. I was reading some actually, some recommendations on large events. There's a toolkit,
and the CDC has tons of information on this.
If you're somebody who, for instance,
the reason that I was looking at this
is locally, there is a pride festival planned for October.
So it's still a bit away,
but a spooky pride festival was planned in our area.
And I have had people asking me,
what do you think?
So I went to the CDC,
and there's a whole toolkit specifically for large events.
And they even mentioned like because some of these are pride events, but also just generally any
large event. So again, not necessarily aimed at the LGBTQ plus community, but they have
recommendations for how to have your event in a safe way, not to cancel your events.
to have your event in a safe way, not to cancel your events.
You were not seeing that messaging coming out right now
because the big thing is to know what monkeypox looks like,
recognize the symptoms so that if you have them,
you stay home.
That's really...
Personal responsibility.
Yeah, that's really more the messaging
as opposed to everybody shut down everything and stay
home. And I think that's really important because when it comes to, and when we talk about
again, like prolonged physical contact, if you sit shoulder to shoulder with somebody like
watching a movie for two hours, you've had prolonged physical contact. Like think about it.
If you sit squished up against somebody, if you're hugging somebody or like cuddling with them, yeah, I mean, I mean, people cuddle and watch a movie, that's
for long physical contact. If you have like congregate living settings where people might
be in close physical contact a lot longer than they normally would or share bedding, that's
another, if somebody has lesions, has a rash, and they're using their sheets and blankets and pillow
and all that, or they take their coat off
and offer you their coat, or you share their clothes
or whatever, these are all modes of transmission too.
Is that filmite transfer?
Yes, and so that's something to think about too,
is like we have had this question
working at a shelter for people experiencing homelessness.
What will we do this winter
when we start getting donated coats and blankets?
Oh, yeah.
But a lot of the messaging, again, that I think
is most effective is to say, before you donate something
wash it, because regular laundry detergent will get rid of it.
So like washing it in the washing machine and dryer,
that fixes it.
So I think a lot of it is gonna be about responsible messaging, empowering people
to protect themselves, to recognize the symptoms,
encouraging people to stay home
if they think they might be ill,
and making the vaccine readily available
if somebody thinks they've been exposed.
That's huge, is making sure that all segments
of the population are aware of the vaccines,
know where they can get them,
and know if they are somebody who is eligible for them.
There are still some restrictions on who is eligible.
They're largely targeting people still in the MSM community, men who have sex with men,
although I know that, and that is both cis and trans men. I also know that they have started to, I haven't heard of any
cis women or trans women being vaccinated, but I think that it depends on your state or
your local health department. I would definitely call. If you think you're somebody who qualifies,
please call, if you've been exposed, you definitely qualify. So if you know somebody has monkey
pox that you've been around, that you've been in prolonged physical contact with, that you shared bedding
with, that you've shared a coat with whatever you qualify.
The, as far as the, you mentioned like the MSM community being more of a focus right
now, that is purely just a community, like it happens to be prevalent in that community
in some places, has nothing to do with mechanisms or anything of them
as to why it would be more prevalent in many cases.
It has nothing to do with that.
It is just that is where it started.
And so because of the mode of transmission
prolonged physical contact,
you are seeing it more prevalent in that community at this moment.
That will not remain.
It's not a sexually transmitted disease
in the way
that we would think of.
No.
VD or you don't say VD.
We don't say that.
What do you say now?
STI, sexually transmitted infections.
Okay.
No, it is not like that.
It definitely, anyone is at risk for monkeypox.
It does not matter your gender or orientation.
Everyone is at risk for monkeypox.
Yeah, we all are.
So we should all take precautions
and protect ourselves and access whatever resources
are available for that, I think what's important to know
is a difference between stigmatizing something
and targeting a population with information
and empowering them to protect themselves.
And those are two different things. We should be
Why are you wiggling your ear at me while I'm talking to you're wiggling your ear?
Is that distracting? I was watching your ear wiggle. And the CDC is being very
You need to be very
Purposeful about this. Yes, like they probably learned
You would hope you would hope over the past couple of years. There are people right now who are at higher risk because of who has it and how it's spreading
and getting information to those people is essential.
I'm recognizing that this is a person who's at higher risk because of who they are.
So let's make sure right now we are not doing a good job of making sure everybody who
isn't white has the same access to information and vaccines.
So we need to do better.
So recognizing that is one thing, stigmatizing it and saying that like, oh, if you're not gay,
you could never get it.
That is dangerous.
That is what we need to stay away from.
We need to stay away from shame or guilt or any sort of moralizing
about any infectious disease.
But especially about this, because then exactly my fear, which is, we are finding everybody,
right?
Like, we're still, and that is always my fear with the patient population I take care of.
They are often neglected by not just the medical community, like hands-on medical
community, but by statistics and research.
People experiencing homelessness, people with substance use disorder, these people, people
with serious mental illness are often left out of the equations when it comes to how do
we get information and vaccines to everybody, who do we test? Who are we worried about? Who do we target with this sort of outreach and advocacy?
My patients are left out of that.
And so part of my response to this has been remembering
that I take care of people who are also at high risk
in a variety of ways for this.
And overlap with some of the high risk populations
and making sure that they have access to.
I think that's the big thing we need to do right now
is target your information,
but don't stigmatize the messaging.
Tough line to walk, I bet.
There's a, I just wanna, I was very excited.
The...
Oh, this is gonna be really interesting.
I can tell if you're this excited,
this is gonna be interesting.
Dr. Dmitry Doscalakis is in charge of the monkey pox response.
And he's a physician, he was already working with the HIV response in at the CDC.
And I just was really excited to learn about him. He does some great videos you can read about,
or you can watch his videos where he gives you all this information. I'm to learn about him. He does some great videos. You can read about, you can watch his videos where he gives you all this information.
I'm giving you about monkey pox vaccines and stuff.
So I got a lot of it from him.
But he's a really great example of a doctor taking medicine to the people, going out to
where people need vaccines or where they need to be tested for HIV, going to those places
and taking medical care to them.
It's just really inspirational.
I hope I get to meet him someday.
That's it.
I just wanted to mention it.
And he's a great resource.
There's somebody you can turn to who's gonna give you
good, not stigmatized, but practical information on this topic.
Well, what else is going on the world, Sid?
I'm gonna tell you right after we go to the billion department.
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So that was the big story and we had wanted to do a monkey box update, but we're worried like, we didn't know if there was
enough new stuff with monkey pox to justify it, but we didn't
want to ignore it. So we thought, are there other things like that
in the world, maybe not a full episode, but definitely something
where we could share a little bit
of insight.
What else is on your news desk?
I wanted to briefly mention the COVID-19 by Vailant Booster,
one from Pfizer, one from Moderna.
I feel like it's worth mentioning
because it's so weird.
Certainly we haven't, have we moved on
like as a society, past COVID?
Because I feel like people have,
like this vaccine came out and it was not,
people didn't celebrate and talk about it the way that,
you know what I'm saying?
I mean, yes.
Co-quieter.
Yeah, because that's because,
a lot of, yeah, because yeah,
but I don't think that that's like, oh boy,
this is so fraught.
I mean, it's tough, right?
Because for some people, it is still very much
impacting them day in, day out.
I think a lot of people are rushing to get back
to daily life and there's definitely, you know,
through vaccines and boosters,
facilitating some of that,
but I'm not here to make a grand parklemation one way or another, but it does seem after, you know, through vaccines and boosters, or facilitating some of that, but I'm not
here to make a grand proclamation one way or two other, but it does seem after, you know,
it's, it seems very conditional, let's say. I spent some time in, where were we just,
Atlanta? And at the convention there, there was like, and then a lot of the cities I go
to that aren't here,
there's a lot more masks and vaccines required
and what have you than we do here.
So kind of an unequal standard, I would say being a lot more.
Yeah, I don't see anybody wearing masks here.
But I'm stoked about this booster
because like we need, we, this bill will be
a bit since we've had one.
I'm kind of in the Johnson, kind of a level of,
well, you know, just a bump. So the FDA amended the EUA's for Moderna and Pfizer to include by valent formulations
of the vaccine, meaning there are two different strains in the vaccine.
Does that make sense?
It's protecting you against two things.
Kind of like the flu vaccine is usually a trivalent or quadruvalent. Does that make sense? It's protecting you against two things.
Kind of like the flu vaccine is usually a trivalent or quadruvalent, it protects you against multiple strains.
Take your word on that.
Well, it's usually got a couple A's and a B in there.
You know, there are different types of flu.
Anyway, the point is this new byvalent formulation,
you can get it at least two months following your primary
or boost your vaccine, depending on where you are, how many, I don't know. I feel like I, again. I have a lot of data. I have a lot of data. I have a lot of data. I have a lot of data.
I have a lot of data.
I have a lot of data.
I have a lot of data.
I have a lot of data.
I have a lot of data.
I have a lot of data.
I have a lot of data.
I have a lot of data.
I have a lot of data.
I have a lot of data.
I have a lot of data.
I have a lot of data.
I have a lot of data.
I have a lot of data.
I have a lot of data.
I have a lot of data.
I have a lot of data.
I have a lot of data.
I have a lot of data.
I have a lot of data. I have a lot of data. I have a lot of. And another one that is, has things in common from both the B.A.4 and B.A.5
Oma-Cron lineages. So, the B.A.4 and B.A.5 are two lineages of the Oma-Cron variant,
and this has a messenger RNA that is similar between the two of them.
So it's good.
Yes. So the point is it covers you better against these new strains.
That is the point. It is more targeted at these new strains.
And that is what they were like kind of holding off on, right?
Like they were waiting on this new booster round before they can nail that down
for what we understand.
The Madonna is for use as a single booster in individuals 18 or older.
Mm-hmm. The Pfizer as a single booster in individuals 18 or older.
The Pfizer again single booster individuals 12 or older.
That is all it is released for so far.
You'll have to check locally again to see if it's available.
It wasn't readily available in my neck of the woods when it was first approved. I believe it's out now.
But I want one.
Well, the only reason I know I want one too, and I mean, of course we will get them.
The only reason that we had held off, and this is something that my dad, I guess I'll
shout out my dad for giving me medical information, he said, I thought we were supposed to wait
for this one since we had COVID. And there have always been recommendations that if you
received monoclonal antibodies in your
treatment for COVID, then you needed to wait a certain amount of time before you would get vaccinated
after that, right? Like that's always been true. But typically what we've said is that even after
you've had COVID, once you're out of quarantine, you can go get a vaccine if you didn't receive some,
you know, the monoclonal antibodies. Now, what they
what they have found is that specifically for this booster, there was some evidence that
if you waited three months, the immune response to the booster was stronger than if you got
it closer to when you actually had COVID. That doesn't mean you can't like I there's
a little calculator on the CDC. You can go and say, when can I get a booster?
And it walks you through a series of questions.
It's just a little algorithm.
And you click yes or no.
And how old are you?
Have you done this?
Would you do this?
Would you do whatever?
And then at the end, it says either like,
nope, you're good.
You don't need one.
Or yes, you should go get one now.
I would recommend that if you're not sure.
It's an easy to use little tool that told me
I should get mine based on my answers. So I don't think that
they would recommend against me getting the vaccine at this point, even though it's been
just over two months since we got, it has not yet been three months since we had COVID.
But anyway, even if you have had COVID recently, the CDC would say you can get these new
bivalent vaccines.
You just need to wait two months from your last booster vaccine.
If you want to wait the three months, there is some evidence for that.
I think it's important to remember that COVID strains are still circulating and changing.
And changing, exactly.
It will mutate again
That is an inevitability and we know we can get reinfected We know that just because you've had COVID doesn't mean you're safe forever
I have by no multiple people who have had COVID two three times and is it typically worse the second time
Or is there any reason to?
No, there's no it's there's no reason to necessarily assume it would be worse or better. I mean, the strains are different.
When you've been vaccinated, we know that your course is less severe.
We know that your risk of hospitalization and death is lower.
So that's what you can do.
In addition to still being smart about masking and if you choose to do that and social distancing, I think if you're in large crowded areas or you're traveling or those kinds of things, especially indoors, as we move into winter, these strains are going to circulate again.
Hey, and folks moving into the cold seats, and there this, like where in a mask you get sick less?
I mean, if you're gonna be at a,
I tell you, I don't think, I mean, planes,
I feel like that's the kind of thing
where I'll probably just keep wearing.
I mean, it just, I mean, why not, right?
Well, and I mean, we saw that like a lot of the measures
we took to prevent COVID in the first year,
we saw a precipitous drop in a flu related deaths
in the pediatric population.
So like that's reason enough, like mask, there's no harm to masking.
There's no risk to masking.
There's no.
Well, that's not true.
Yes, it is.
Well, now that I have a beard, there is definitely a risk to masking and it is itchiness.
But there is no harm or risk to masking.
I would always encourage like, you know. Keep saying that there's not harm.
I told you about the itchiness.
I mentioned, I know I mentioned that.
I think that.
To say it's bad harm, but it's hard.
And I would definitely recommend getting the,
I mean, I will get every booster as it comes out.
Because COVID is not going away.
We don't know what the next strain will bring.
And we know that there are still people who are unvaccinated,
who are at risk for severe disease and death, and people who are
immunocompromised, who may not respond to the vaccines as robustly.
Therefore, also at risk for severe disease and death.
We know that that is ongoing, and it should always be all of our desires to prevent illness
and death as much as possible. And so, you know, that is the vaccine.
It's out, or the two, I would get them,
I will get them.
The only reason I hadn't,
is it wasn't immediately available here.
You can get it alongside your flu vaccine.
That was a question several people asked me,
like the flu vaccine's coming out now too.
Can I get them both together?
Yep, there's no reason to wait or stagger.
I don't know where your short doom is a combo. I do think that could come, can I get them both together? Yep, there's no reason to wait or stagger. Every chart doom is a combo.
I do think that could come.
Yeah, I think eventually we could have like,
it'd be cool to have some sort of platform vaccine
that they could immediately add strains to
for multiple things.
RSV, we could throw in there too,
because even though as adults,
we are not at high risk for severe disease from RSV.
Kids are and it can be very serious in kids.
And so it'd be really cool to vaccinate
us all against that eventually.
But that is the vaccine for COVID.
I don't know why it didn't come out to Vigilplos
because Omicron is the wave that really got a lot of us.
Ooh, ooh, so.
Varyland, virulent stuff.
Yeah, and we expect these strains
to circulate more
with winter coming.
That I don't mean that sound ominous.
I mean, like take action and protect yourself.
Anything else going on to the one to touch on?
The only thing, do we have time for brief mention?
Brief, brief mention.
Brief mention.
I noticed that Dr. Oz was out there
giving some medical advice.
Oh, man, yeah.
Friend of the...
I...
Okay, man.
I thought I wasn't gonna have to deal with Dr. Oz as much now that he had expanded his
bad advice to all realms of public policy and not just health.
He was branched out, we can't keep up.
But he made the...
He was talking about healthcare and advising people that a great way to...
I believe the way he put it was crawl
up out of the abyss, people who don't have insurance.
Crawl up out of the abyss.
Yeah, charming.
It was to have 15 minute physicals provided in a festival-like setting.
Oh, okay.
I think what he's talking about, I mean, you've seen these probably.
I know like the rural area medical group does this where they like come in, set up
a tent, and do like physicals or dental exams or whatever for people who don't
have access to healthcare otherwise. And I'm not saying there's anything wrong
with those events, certainly. I do think that since we have a healthcare system
that refuses to allow all people affordable access. I do think that since we have a healthcare system that refuses to allow all people affordable access.
I do think that we resort to things like that.
Now, were I someone asking to be in charge of public policy?
Would that be my chosen public policy?
No.
No.
It would probably make sure everybody has access to the medical care that's available. But nonetheless, it brought to mind the idea of the 15-minute physical.
What would you do with that information?
Oh, and by the way, he wanted you to know that health is not a right.
Health is not a right.
It's not a right.
Should I just be clear about that?
No.
Health is not a right.
No.
It's access to it is something that you have a right to but
Well, I mean, I mean, I guess I agree with Dr. Oz there
I was here. I was here right to I think but I think what his point is that like
For all of for all of those people who are crawling up out of the abyss
I just how do you I mean
Just listen listen draws this is my first time running for office to
I understand I understand that it's difficult to know what to say and like sometimes people
put you on the spot and you feel like you're supposed to be an expert in everything
They want to pin you about something you don't have an opinion on then you're you're trying to learn as fast as you can and
Understand all the issues. It's tough. They'll care. She should have a lot now
He should to be fair, have
health care stuff pretty well. Yeah. Well, and I would say that in my mind, if the phrase
crawling up out of the abyss ever came into it, I would sort of like whack it away as like,
well, that's not a thing you say. I was he's trying to summon an army against the abyss
dwellers. You know what I mean? Who are threatening to overthrow the surface world. That is
something. So I just thought a brief mention for the 15-minute physical. And let me say to all of my fellow
primary care practitioners, you know I love my well visits with my, I mean, I don't
do as much of that these days because of the type of medical care I provide. But I love
that. I love checking in with patients who just want to come see you to make sure like,
do I need any screenings? Am I doing okay? How's the family? I love those visits. And there is great value in
building that relationship with a patient. This is my pitch for primary care. This is the value of
primary care. We know that seeing someone regularly,
you build that relationship in that rapport that makes it easier to tell your doctor when
something's going on, to feel comfortable saying, there's actually this one thing that I
did want to mention to you, that makes it easier for your doctor to pick up on changes
and what your baseline was versus what things are happening now. There's a ton ton and they're also more likely to be able to convince you to do things like
maybe a colonoscopy that you didn't really want to do, but you know you've known your
doctor forever and they won't get to do it.
So like there's tons of value in that relationship.
This is not what he's talking about.
He is talking about in a festival like setting.
I'm going to say it's the Pumpkin Festival.
Yes.
So it's the Pumpkin Festival.
You get your pump and dump lane.
You have checked out some lovely local West Virginia
artisans.
Oh, gosh.
They haven't gotten the pump confessible.
I would highly encourage.
And then I guess you wander over to a table
where some sort of medical provider, who may be very skilled
knowledgeable, let's say.
Maybe just like a public.
We'll do a physical exam on you.
And let's say they hear something abnormal, or something looks abnormal.
What would they then do?
I mean, they then have to, there's very little after that point that is free.
Nothing is free.
So now what they can do is hand you some worry.
For your free physical exam, for your troubles, here's something to worry about.
And if you don't have insurance, your only recourse is going to be to go to the emergency
room with this worry, which we know is not the best way to have, you know, chronic conditions
managed are treated to go through any sort of workup.
And a lot of the times if it's not an emergency, the emergency department isn't necessarily
going to have you admitted to the hospital to work this whole thing up.
They're going to tell you to go get a doctor, which you couldn't afford in the first place,
which is why you went to the pumpkin festival to get a physical exam.
Yeah.
So...
None of this, none of this is, and there is a growing, there is an amount of evidence out there
that also suggests that a yearly physical does not necessarily improve morbidity and mortality.
That doesn't mean that a relationship with a primary care doctor doesn't. Physically physical does not necessarily improve morbidity and mortality.
That doesn't mean that a relationship with a primary care doctor doesn't.
It does.
But, but showing up at a festival and getting a physical once a year from a different
random person, again, no matter how skilled, knowledgeable, and wonderful, and altruistic,
that person might be, I have no evidence to say that's gonna help you in the long run.
It's a drive-by fix, it's not a systemic solution.
Yes, and there have been groups going around the world
practicing drive-by medicine for decades,
and we have a growing body of evidence
that says that doesn't help in the long run.
We need to provide everybody globally,
but let's focus on where Dr, you know, where Dr. Oz is talking
about this country, readily available, affordable access to medical care right there in their
hometowns, not in a festival setting, but in like a typical doctor's office.
Yeah.
So, that is the, that's your news of the, of the world, of the medical world,
the medical, but I thought I'd have a name. I thought I'd open my mouth and a name for
this type of episode. We just bring to mind. If you have a good one for one of these news
updates, please let us know. We're at solbons on Twitter. How do we secure it? I would rather not say.
Our email address is sawbounds at maximumfund.org, sawboundsshow.com is the URL for our show.
Thanks to taxpayers for the use of their song medicines
as the intro and outro of our program.
And thanks to you for listening.
If you would take a moment to rate and review the show
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But until next time, my name is Justin McRoy.
I'm Cindy McRoy.
As always, don't drill a hole in your head. Alright!