My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

AIBU?

Aibu- diagnosis detectives on BBC- must be a set up

101 replies

30yearstomorrow · 14/09/2020 22:46

So just watches diagnosis detectives. Young women,s case...put on a lot of weight, hair loss...now I’m no medic or nurse but said to DH flippantly before they started their doctor’s discussion...polycystic ovaries. 3 specialist and numerous tests later...polycystic overlies...really?? Did it really need a bunch of “detectives” to figure this out when it seemed a likely cause to a laywomen....Aibu to say they have set this program up to be ground breaking when they’re actually dealing with stuff standard GPs should pick up. I’m shocked they made out this was difficult to diagnose.

OP posts:
Report

Am I being unreasonable?

117 votes. Final results.

POLL
You are being unreasonable
14%
You are NOT being unreasonable
86%
30yearstomorrow · 14/09/2020 22:48

Or Aibu to not realise just how crap the average GP is at diagnosing this that it took 8 years!!

OP posts:
Report
DramaAlpaca · 14/09/2020 22:50

Funnily enough I thought PCOS immediately as well.

Report
Merryoldgoat · 14/09/2020 22:51

You’d think. My PCOS was undiagnosed for 8 years. CLASSIC symptoms but scans misread, no blood tests etc.

I moved. New doctor. Diagnosed first day.

I agree it should be obvious but lots of people have shit doctors and many are unwilling to challenge them or change.

I don’t put up with shit anymore. My current surgery is fantastic. I wouldn’t want to move because they’re so good.

Report
user165423256322 · 14/09/2020 22:53

I think it's more about shit doctors who don't listen and inefficient systems that fail people.

Report
LemonLymanDotCom · 14/09/2020 22:54

I thought exactly the same. A quick search online of her symptoms would have probably led to the same answer. I get the impression from what was said at the end that everyone, inc her mother, has just made her doubt herself. Either that or she’s never heard of Google

Report
EDSGFC · 14/09/2020 22:56

Same as the lady last week - diagnosed, eventually, with Ehlers Danlos Syndrome when her symptoms were classic. More shockingly she was already being tube fed yet apparently undiagnosed with any condition. How was she so badly let down by the NHS?

Report
30yearstomorrow · 14/09/2020 22:57

I was just p***off that they didn’t say that it should have been picked up and obvious cause to investigate and how it is often missed- that would be more educational...but it was all along “ look what our really clever detectives have found out....that poor young women has been let down badly and they made no comment on it

OP posts:
Report
purpleme12 · 14/09/2020 23:00

Yes I think they should have said something about how it should have been picked up sooner

Report
30yearstomorrow · 14/09/2020 23:00

I didn’t see last weeks...I was so looking forward to this program but seems like its an oversell...my mum died young of a really rare condition ( one of the NORD ones) and she could have done with this approach..i thought it would be ground breaking...hmmm...

OP posts:
Report
30yearstomorrow · 14/09/2020 23:04

Merry old goat...glad you got sorted eventually...what is it with women’s conditions and GPs!💐

OP posts:
Report
Merryoldgoat · 14/09/2020 23:09

@30yearstomorrow

Merry old goat...glad you got sorted eventually...what is it with women’s conditions and GPs!💐

My surgery has 6 GPs who are all women. They’re the best surgery around and they’re fantastic. They’ve just brought on a man who is equally lovely.

They all care, are competent and are efficient.

Now I know what a good doctor looks like I’ll not accept anything else.
Report
EDSGFC · 14/09/2020 23:12

I was so shocked at how people with, maybe not common but certainly not 1 in a million type diseases just haven't been diagnosed properly in the NHS.

There was a man maybe in last week's one who had a skin problem - it was so bad he'd actually been in hospital with sepsis due to infections caused by it. He'd literally scratched his skin off and was suffering so badly - it was diagnosed as eczema but the itching and soreness was due to infection. Once he was on the correct antibiotic he started to improve and can now treat his eczema. The poor man nearly died and his life was a misery because no one could diagnose a skin infection????

They don't need the team of drs. Those people could have just asked the general public. I bet many people, through personal experience, would know more than the drs that had been treating them.

Report
Spidey66 · 14/09/2020 23:14

See I would have thought underactive thyroid. I thought PCOS caused excess hair (e.g. facial hair).

Report
Spidey66 · 14/09/2020 23:16

Ps not seen the programme.

Report
Vector5 · 14/09/2020 23:19

I thought exactly the same. 8 years to diagnose something I got in 8 seconds..

Report
MaggieMagpie1 · 14/09/2020 23:19

Unfortunately there is the opposite case sometimes. I was diagnosed at 15 with PCOS going on similar symptoms. At 35, went for further tests as I didn't want to just put up with the symptoms and wasn't being treated as I didn't want children and wasn't a priority. Turns out I don't have PCOS. Don't know what i do have, but it's hormonal so it's "anyone's guess" feel almost worse now, and still no treatment.

Report
Mischance · 14/09/2020 23:19

It was so obviously PCOS that it was impossible to imagine that it had taken years to diagnose this. Poor woman.

And the poor little lass who clearly had psychosomatic problems that needed confidential and gentle handling - I felt very uncomfortable that she was on the TV. Her statement that her pain levels were 10 all the time was clear evidence that her perceptions were distorted by her psychological distress. As the credits rolled it says she was "waiting to see a psychologist" - the poor lass will probably wait a year or more; the service is in total disarray.

Report
Merryoldgoat · 14/09/2020 23:19

@Spidey66

See I would have thought underactive thyroid. I thought PCOS caused excess hair (e.g. facial hair).

Gives you hair where you don’t want it and you lose it from where you do.
Report
30yearstomorrow · 14/09/2020 23:28

Mischance...yes I agree about the other lass...too young to be a ole to really consent to being on tv with those type of issues😔

OP posts:
Report
Sarahzb · 15/09/2020 01:02

Out bloodyrageous It’s not that uncommon. But it's a women’s condition isn’t it...

Report
dentydown · 15/09/2020 05:54

There was a thread on here about women being ignored/misdiagnosed by doctors. Quite eye opening.

Report
Gingernaut · 15/09/2020 05:59

@Spidey66, because PCOS causes high levels of testosterone, it can cause a kind of male pattern baldness.

Hair on your head falling out with thicker more dense hair growing elsewhere.

Report

Don’t want to miss threads like this?

Weekly

Sign up to our weekly round up and get all the best threads sent straight to your inbox!

Log in to update your newsletter preferences.

You've subscribed!

Oblomov20 · 15/09/2020 06:16

How rude. AIBU? Yes you are. It goes on all the time. Patients going to their GP's and being dismissed. For years. And you don't know about this? Hmm

Report
The80sweregreat · 15/09/2020 06:43

I've been fobbed off in the past by GPs so much so I don't bother going to see them and just self diagnose and take some vitamins! They say it's the menopause for most things anyway or just suggest HRT.
Most of them just stare at their computers rather than the patient. You can't get to see a GP now anyway.

Report
JacobReesMogadishu · 15/09/2020 06:46

Dd has recently being diagnosed as coeliac disease, elher danlos syndrome, fibromyalgia and POTS. I also think she may have vit b12 deficiency. She has classic symptoms for all of these but it’s taken 9 years for diagnosis.

In the end it was me who suspected coeliac disease and asked GP to test.

And last week when she saw the rheumatologist I wrote a big list of symptoms and put at the bottom ? Eds, ? Pots. But she’s been fobbed off by numerous GPS and a&e for years.

She had an a&e visit a few years ago with chest pain and palpitations and the dr even remarked how unusual it was for someone her age to have a hiatus hernia......something we now know is down to the EDS, chest pain and palpatations being other symptoms. He never put it all together.

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.