SolveYourProblem
eLearning Series: Stop Snoring
Stop Snoring Now & Sleep Better Tonight
Learn which sleep aids could be best for you
SECTION 3: WHY SURGERY CAN BE A BAD IDEA
One of the nicest things about living in the 21st century
is the amount of surgical options available to more people,
including more and more people in the developing world (though,
obviously, not enough).
Quite sincerely, countless numbers of lives have been outright
saved, or inestimably improved, due to surgery. I doubt you’d
find anyone who would absolutely conclude that surgery, as
a concept, is a mistake; or that we should long for pre-surgery
days, where infections and ailments so easily morphed into
life-threatening conditions.
Are We Addicted to Surgery?
Yet (and yes,
there’s always a yet!), there is a bit of a cloud attached
to this surgical silver lining. We now live
in a world that is, for all intents and purposes, addicted
to surgery. It has become the first option – and in some
cases, the only option – that both doctors and patients
consider when trying to remedy a problem.
Advances in medical technology have played a role here as
well; transforming within the span of a generation a surgery
that once required 7-10 days of hospital care, to an “in
by 2:00pm, out by 4:00pm” outpatient experience.
And since many (enhanced) medical insurance plans cover
many types of surgery – all it needs is a doctor’s okay –
it’s not uncommon to come across people who have had a litany
of surgeries over the past few years. They might even know
the surgeons by name, and have a favorite parking spot at
the hospital.
Snoring and Surgery Is Often a Bad Combo
It is in light
of all this is that we look at snoring, and at surgery.
In a nutshell: the two don’t mix; and this
is a bit of a problem to people who are persuaded by medical
doctors (or by surgery-addicted colleagues, friends, and
relatives) to go under the knife to get rid of that “pesky
snoring problem”. These people may be well intentioned,
but they don’t have all of the facts.
One of the things that they probably don’t (yet) know –
again, not deliberately – is that surgery is not an exact
science. It may look that way, especially when one sees the
army of hi-tech equipment that clogs many operating rooms
and makes one think that they’re at NASA Mission Control
instead of a local hospital.
Surgery Is Exploratory!
However – and
even surgeons will readily admit this (or their insurance
companies will if they won’t) – surgery is, always
has been, and always will be, somewhat exploratory. True, some surgeries are better known and more ordinary
than others, and the chance of a successful outcome for,
say, a quick knee surgery might be radically more predictable
than a kidney transplant. But the bottom line is that both
of these procedures are surgical, which means that they both
have risks.
This, indeed, is something of a wake-up call for people
who have equated surgery with certainty.
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