Can a patient choose testing options?

Dr. Weeks’ Comment:  The trend today in America is towards home testing where the patient, as autonomous intelligent consumer, is allowed to consult doctors and then decide for her or himself what tests to do.  I have  helped people fight their  cancer and enhance their immunity for the past 25 years in my practice and without exception, to the best of my recollection, NO oncologists every tested their patient’s serum vitamin D3 level despite the universally accepted fact that low vitamin D3 levels are correlated with cancer.

 

DNA Testing: Do You Have a Right to Test Your Own DNA? FDA Says No!

December 10, 2013

There’s a reason your government is whittling away at your healthcare options and driving costs out of control””and not a good one.

America spends over $2.6 trillion a year (18% of our GDP) on healthcare. At the same time, government is tightening the regulatory reins on nutritional and natural methods to support health””an approach that isn’t lowering healthcare spending, but raising it!

On November 22, the FDA sent a warning letter to 23andMe.com to stop its inexpensive ($99 per test) “do-it-yourself” genetic testing service for health screening and ancestry purposes, because consumers could be “misled” and harm themselves by “self-treating.” For example, the FDA posits that an individual who learns they have a predilection for cancer would, as a result, undergo unnecessary preventive surgery, chemotherapy, and other “morbidity-inducing actions.”

The FDA’s argument is, quite clearly, a straw man: of course patients have to obtain medical advice before making major health decisions””it’s not as if consumers can go under the knife without significant medical consultation! The FDA’s true message is clear: because individuals can’t be trusted to make sound health decisions, they don’t have a right to private information on their own DNA.

It’s also worth noting that FDA action against 23andMe was sparked, in part, by a complaint by UnitedHealth Group, the largest publicly traded health insurer. UnitedHealth isn’t exactly an unbiased observer””they want access to information about your DNA. After all, if individuals were allowed to keep their DNA test data private, they wouldn’t have to share their results with insurers who, for example, could use an inherited health risk to deny insurance or charge exorbitant rates.

The FDA’s stance on DIY genetic testing could very well drive up healthcare costs. Besides premiums being raised on those forced to report DNA results to insurance companies, in-office testing is far more expensive. As tests are priced anywhere from $300 to $3,500, this could significantly add to the overall cost of healthcare.

SOURCE:   http://www.anh-usa.org/do-you-have-a-right-to-test-your-own-dna/

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