Well, now after the 2nd set of blood tests...that I am not diabetes 2. Normal.
Whew!
But it's been strange, before this I was reading about low-glycemic foods and diet. My whole brain has been oriented to change and I started change my diet. the probability of it happening is probably real because I eat so unevenly throughout the day. I don't need to lose weight --just continue to make my whole body function normally inside me.
Now I don't want to quite stop.
Ever had a health-related false alarm (ie. breast exam, etc.) where it ..caused you to change your lifestyle, diet anyway later on?





 
					
					 False health alarms change you?
 False health alarms change you?
		

 
				
				
				
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  Reply With Quote Originally Posted by Triskeliongirl
 Originally Posted by Triskeliongirl
					
 Mammography is very, very heavily profit-driven in the USA. Every woman is supposed to have one annually beginning at age 40, so whenever I see my doctor, she will ask me to be re-screened. I think the powers that be finally decided that we can stop getting mammos at age 80, but there's not complete agreement on that. Imaging companies have gotten laws enacted requiring that insurance companies and Medicare reimburse for mammography even when they don't cover most other screening, or any preventive health care. Imaging companies sponsor several charities that encourage women to get mammograms, and collect money (which winds up back in the imaging companies' hands) to provide mammos to uninsured women. Once we've had a false positive, we're supposed to have a re-screen every six months. Considering that statistically every woman who has regular mammos will have a false positive at least once in her life, that's a lot of mammos, a lot of expensive machines and a lot of radiation to vulnerable tissues.
 Mammography is very, very heavily profit-driven in the USA. Every woman is supposed to have one annually beginning at age 40, so whenever I see my doctor, she will ask me to be re-screened. I think the powers that be finally decided that we can stop getting mammos at age 80, but there's not complete agreement on that. Imaging companies have gotten laws enacted requiring that insurance companies and Medicare reimburse for mammography even when they don't cover most other screening, or any preventive health care. Imaging companies sponsor several charities that encourage women to get mammograms, and collect money (which winds up back in the imaging companies' hands) to provide mammos to uninsured women. Once we've had a false positive, we're supposed to have a re-screen every six months. Considering that statistically every woman who has regular mammos will have a false positive at least once in her life, that's a lot of mammos, a lot of expensive machines and a lot of radiation to vulnerable tissues. funny this topic should come up now....
 funny this topic should come up now....
		
