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Related: About this forumHealth panel tells doctors: Screen all adults for illicit drug use
WASHINGTON - An influential group of health experts recommended Tuesday that doctors screen all adults for use of illegal drugs, another step toward curbing the epidemic that claims tens of thousands of lives each year.
The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force said that health providers should attempt to determine whether their patients 18 or older are using illicit drugs, including nonmedical use of prescription drugs. But the panel said it did not have enough information to decide whether all adolescents should be screened.
The recommendation is the first time the panel has concluded there is enough evidence to support screening all adults. In 2008, it declined to do so.
The guidance is important because the Affordable Care Act requires that services recommended by the task force be covered free or with very small co-payments. The proposed recommendations are open for public comment until Sept. 9, after which the task force will consider them for final approval.
Read more: https://www.yourstephenvilletx.com/zz/news/20190813/health-panel-tells-doctors-screen-all-adults-for-illicit-drug-use
While there might be good intentions, this reeks of too much of intervention by Big Brother.
Fullduplexxx
(8,254 posts)Hoyt
(54,770 posts)that bad.
But, I get the concern.
flotsam
(3,268 posts)...because they say coverage will be extended under ACA. Very bad Ju-Ju. How many additional deaths when people ignore medical danger signs because they can't piss clean? And one bad test will be written down and alter how medicos treat you for the rest of your life! You're in great pain-let me check your chart-Whoops-that's very unfortunate...
Hoyt
(54,770 posts)"However, Karina Davidson, co-chair of USPSTF, noted that the task force is not recommending providers use drug tests to screen their patients. Instead, USPTF said providers could ask their patients a series of questions to determine whether they are using drugs illicitly."
https://www.advisory.com/daily-briefing/2019/08/14/illicit-drug
flotsam
(3,268 posts)How many users do you expect to admit it?
Hoyt
(54,770 posts)But, you are right that someone who doesn't want help, or think they have a problem, isn't likely to answer Yes. Although, it might help folks down the road to call the practitioner for help if things get really bad, knowing it's available.
flotsam
(3,268 posts)But admitting to earlier alcohol addiction made it an MF to get pain pills even when I was hospitalized for 6 broken ribs.
phylny
(8,584 posts)I'm not paying for an unnecessary test, though.