Junior Member
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Join Date: Oct 2012
Posts: 83
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Junior Member
Join Date: Oct 2012
Posts: 83
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Originally Posted by elinora
......it is the physician's responsibility to adjust his or her definition of normal health according to each patient
BRAVO elinora - to me, this is the sign of a good physician. I just don't know how many of these type of doctors are out there.
Originally Posted by Anacrusis
Hi elinora...thatīs a good point. In my own case it feels like that is almost impossible - But Iīm still working on finding one who does exactly that .....Anacrusis
Anacrusis
I sincerely hope you will soon be able to find the doctor that is the best for you and your health needs. I am very grateful for my current neuro - and - I do believe that he is still learning about MG via verfiable medical information and my "subjective updates" regarding my health/life with myasthenia gravis. My neuro is a "generalist" neurologist (does not assert to be a specialist in any neurological area).
Before I became this doctor's patient, I was seeing a neurologist who lists MG as one of his "specialties". His rigid approach and expectations from his medical treatment was (to me) at times, perplexing. Upon leaving an appointment one day I was approached by another patient who expressed this same observation. An MG crisis (while under this specialist's care) and subsequent hospitalizaton in a hospital - which he did not have attending privileges to - is what generated my transition from one neurologist to another.
Hang in there, when the time is right, I believe you will find the right physician.
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