Showing posts with label Wrong. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wrong. Show all posts

Monday, July 22, 2013

About to throw in the towel...What am i doing wrong?

I feel like i've dont pretty good maybe 2 nights not so good but not bad either i exercise alot and Ive not lost NOTHING in 3 weeks.. Plz any advice

I'm 38 yr old female 5'1 weight 219 lbs i gained a few Kinda need some help plz???

Edited Jun 11 2013 01:36 by coach_k
Reason: Moved from Health and Support to Weight Loss Forum as more appropriate

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Thursday, July 18, 2013

I think I have been doing this all wrong. Logging activity

I just realized after reading someone else's post that I have my settings at moderate activity and been logging all my exercise. I have wondered why I haven't been loosing with how active I am and having decent deficits. So I went in and changed my settings to sedentary and will log my activities. I am confused what to do now. I am a 42 yr old female, 5'6" and weigh 156 and want to be 145. CC put me at 1200 calories. That seems so low. So will I eat more to keep a deficit around 500 cal a day?

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Saturday, June 1, 2013

Any ideas what could be wrong with my knee?

I woke up this morning with stiffness and mild pain on my left knee. I took a hot shower and got on with my day as usual. Now, 2 hours after waking, there is more pain and I noticed swelling around the meniscus. It is not a sharp pain but more of an annoying ache.

I am a 25 year old female. I used to be very active until I stopped going to the gym 2 months ago. I used to run on the treadmill for 30 minutes 3x per week. I am fairly sedentary now, but I don't sit still for long because I'm a restless person.

I did not hit my knee against anything and I did not kneel yesterday. I did paint a wall using a small ladder, but it didn't take much time. I put an elastic tube bandage on my knee now (tubigrip).

Any idea what could be causing this pain when I haven't done anything strenuous?

P.S: I had Osgood Schlatters disease between the age of 10 to 12 because I was a sprinter.


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Saturday, April 27, 2013

Primary Care Doctors Can Make the Wrong Call

Title: Primary Care Doctors Can Make the Wrong Call
Category: Health News
Created: 2/25/2013 6:36:00 PM
Last Editorial Review: 2/26/2013 12:00:00 AM

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Primary Care Doctors Can Make the Wrong Call

Study finds missed diagnoses happen with many

By Amanda Gardner

HealthDay Reporter

MONDAY, Feb. 25 (HealthDay News) -- In one case documented in a new study, an elderly patient was misdiagnosed with bronchitis but actually had full-blown pneumonia and ended up being admitted to the hospital.

Although that patient recovered, other symptoms that aren't properly diagnosed could be even more serious: numbness, tingling and dizziness that aren't recognized as the first signs of a stroke, for instance.

According to the new study, published online Feb. 25 in the journal JAMA Internal Medicine, primary care physicians can make diagnostic errors across a wide range of conditions, many of them common conditions such as urinary tract infections and anemia.

"There's a great heterogeneity of conditions [that are missed]," said study author Dr. Hardeep Singh.

Although much is known about medication errors and mistakes that occur in hospitals and other inpatient settings, less is known about mistakes that happen in doctors' offices or clinics, said Singh, chief of the Health Policy, Quality and Informatics Program at the Houston VA Health Services Research and Development Center of Excellence.

Similarly, while "high-profile" diagnostic mistakes -- missed cancer that ends in unnecessary death, for example -- often make the news, more mundane diagnostic errors can fly under the radar, he added.

In the study, Singh and his colleagues used electronic medical records to identify 190 cases of diagnostic errors that took place in a primary-care physician's office, either at a VA facility or in a private health care system. Sixty-eight of those were missed diagnoses, according to the study.

Diagnostic errors occurred across many common conditions, including pneumonia (6.7 percent of the cases), congestive heart failure (5.7 percent), kidney failure (5.3 percent) and urinary tract or kidney infection (4.8 percent). Cancer made up 5.3 percent of missed diagnoses, on a par with kidney failure.

Eighty percent of the errors were due to communication breakdowns between the patient and practitioner. This could have been failing to take a proper medical history or not performing a comprehensive physical exam. There also were problems with ordering and interpreting tests and follow-up care.

More than 40 percent of the cases studied involved more than one of these factors.

Although all the cases reviewed in this study involved patients coming back for -- and receiving -- follow-up care, the cases did have the potential for "moderate to severe harm," the authors said.

It's not clear if these findings would extrapolate into other primary care settings, especially ones that aren't part of a larger health care network, the authors said. (Even in this study, the authors found different patterns in the VA network versus the private system.)

The authors did not say what proportion of total diagnoses were in error, said Dr. Doug Campos-Outcalt, chairman of family medicine at the University of Arizona College of Medicine, in Phoenix.


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