Now universities are promoting less
care for the elderly. Yes, I know many of the elderly have memory
problems and trouble with many medications. But to advocate that we
not be cared for and die seems like advocating for death panels to
rid them of troublesome patients.
When researchers for the University of Michigan make the statement, “Harm to
quality of life outweighs benefits of treatment for older patients
and those with negative feelings about side effects, burden of
medication,” this not only harms patients with their
words, but also shows that they could care less about the elderly.
What else they say shows their
ignorance about diabetes. They claim that patients with type 2
diabetes that are over age 50 should not have frequent insulin shots
because the side effects of weight gain trumps the benefits of drugs.
Why can't they teach patients about cutting carbohydrates and how to
exercise? All they can emphasize is insulin and how this harms
patients. The fear of hypoglycemia rules their thinking.
As a person with type 2 diabetes and
over 70 in years, this is an insult and says I should not be on
insulin. Well, I intend to stay on insulin and these researchers can
take a hike. The study by the University of Michigan Health System,
the VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System, and University College London was
published in the Journal of the American Medical Association
Internal Medicine. They claim that for many, the benefits of
taking diabetes medications are so small that they are outweighed by
the minor hassles and risks.
I would like to know when the benefit
of diabetes medications depended less on blood glucose and more on
hassles. Yes, safety and side effects are important, but when these
factors of hassles becomes all important, I think these researchers
have their priorities scrambled.
To my way of thinking, these
researchers are challenging the diabetes guidelines for the wrong
reasons and because they are setting the age of 75 as their goal for
people to have reduced treatment because of hassles seems very
arbitrary and smacks of discrimination against the elderly. When our
elders develop dementia and Alzheimer's disease, there needs to be
concern and different guidance for treating them.
However, to pick an age of 75 and put a
one-size-fits-all equation in place is not practical and basically
says – let people over 75 die. This is discrimination of the worst
type and researchers at universities are trying to set parameters on
treatment of the elderly to help them die. Their tactics need to be
recognized for what they are and opposed at every turn.
I suggest that the elderly that develop
memory problems be seen by someone that can properly assess them and
then be allowed to develop community assistance programs that would
help them in their treatment and prevent the hassles those of the
university say exist.
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