Don't you think that at some point in the future what she envisioned, nearly non-invasive, small sample quantity blood samples, will be the norm for routine blood tests? Simple, fast, cheap and available directly to the consumer. ---Jim
I wonder Holmes’ conviction has discouraged any further innovation for blood testing. If so, that’s too bad.---Pat
From my perspective, any technological advances that occur in the future will be the result of a well-established set of scientific and administrative rules, well known by scientists and practitioners of medicine and not because some medically unqualified person develops a marketing plan as a first step, based solely upon wishful-thinking and a desire to be rich and famous, or merely to "do good".
Medically untrained patients who want to order and interpret their own tests are victims of their own Dunning-Kruger effect. They completely underestimate the complexity of the medical diagnostic process. Statistically, this group will probably suffer the Darwinian consequences of being "the unfittest" to practice medicine.
The legislators and regulators who have allowed health care to be "delivered" by largely unsupervised nurse practitioners (NP's) are conducting a large-scale experiment that depends upon similar lack of understanding of how medical practice works. Nurse practitioners, with a couple of years of training, can deal with simple, common problems using "cook book" protocols. They can treat the simple, most obvious cause of the symptoms, but are clueless regarding the six or seven other serious things that might be presenting the same picture and must be ruled out before merely treating the easy stuff. I mentored an NP from the first class graduated from UC Davis, and supervised NPs in our clinic for about a dozen years. I fired one who repeatedly would not follow my instruction not to suture up hand lacerations until I had checked the wounds for nerve or tendon injury, which would have required referral to a hand surgeon for repair in an operating room.
An elderly friend of mine had fallen four times in the month following Thanksgiving a year ago. His "doctor", actually an NP, examined his bruises and got x-rays and brain imaging. The latter showed brain atrophy, which might have explained the falling. Then she ordered an orthopedic consult, and ignoring the brain imaging report, not a neurological one. I tried for several days to get past the phone operators at the Bay Area clinic (60,000 patients) to talk to a physician supervisor. In the end I demanded to talk to the Medical Director of the practice. Normally, in my day, getting connected to another doctor would have taken less than five minutes, but in this case, after a week or two of deflections, I was given the NP's "supervisor", "Doctor so-and-so". (This would have been the first person I would have talked to who was NOT a phone operator). Who turned out to be not a doctor, but another NP. I explained the situation to her and asked to talk to a physician supervisor, but was again deflected. The Medical Director was "not available" and they "did not know his number".
Eventually my friend, who did not want me to pursue it further, fell in the tub and broke his pelvis. Bedridden, he now needs care 24-7 and has continued to decline.
It's sad to see the film "Idiocracy" come to life before our eyes.
Denis