“My
doctor gave me amoxicillin a week ago, and my sinuses are still blocked. I need
a stronger antibiotic,” said a guest.
If
a medicine isn’t working the next step is never to find a better medicine but
to discover why it isn’t working. Sometimes there’s a problem that medicine
won’t help.
Sometimes
the patient needs a better exam. Pain on urination usually means a urine
infection, and I’ve seen several patients whose urine infection didn’t go away
after a course of treatment. They didn’t have a urine infection but herpes. It
was obvious when you looked, but the doctor hadn’t looked.
Sometimes
the patient needs to wait. After rubbing cream on an insect bite, patients worry
when it grows to an itchy patch several inches around. I explain that insect
bites generally worsen for two days and then resolve over the following days.
Sometimes
the next step is to stop taking medicine. Treating pinkeye with drops usually
helps, but patients occasionally return to complain that they’re worse. That’s
because the drop has begun to irritate the eye. A few days after stopping, they
feel better.
My
malpractice lawyer warns me to warn you to read this purely for your own
amusement. Only in mathematics can a statement be 100 percent true.
So
if a medicine isn’t working, don’t stay away from the doctor on the grounds
that I said it was OK.