More Fake News

more fake news, advanced respiratory and sleep medicine blog

Politicians are not the only people who have to deal with fake news. Physicians deal with it on a regular basis as well, which is why fake news is the topic of this Advanced Respiratory and Sleep Medicine blog article. The sources of fake news are the same: the mainstream media and the Internet. If you believed advertisements for supplements, FDA-approved drugs, and devices, there would not be a need for physicians. One of those three things can cure whatever afflicts you, whether it's obesity, insomnia, depression, anxiety, wrinkles, or sexual dysfunction. The ads can be convincing. The problem is they prey on desperate people.

Reality check for people with sleep disorders.

After trying years of things that don't work, they will stumble in my door. What greets them is not what they want to hear. It's called reality. There are a couple of questions I answer on a daily basis because there is so much misleading information being advertised. One is alternative treatments to sleep apnea. I dream of the day there is a comfortable easy to use effective treatment for sleep apnea.

CPAP still rules supreme.

There was a nerve stimulator invented a couple of years ago that I really thought was going to replace continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP). The problem is it does not work as well as CPAP. The only results I have seen published were in a group of mostly men that were not very obese (Average BMI of 28) and whose sleep apnea was moderate on average (AHI=29). The AHI improved to 9 one year after the procedure. The procedure was associated with serious adverse events, and almost 1/3 were considered non-responders. The device costs $20,000, and the procedure to put it in costs $30,000 to total $50,000. Oh, and by the way, insurance companies are not paying for it. Still, there are advertisements that paint a rosy picture.

Alternative, costly COPD treatment.

The second question I answer frequently is the use of stem cell transplants to treat COPD. For $7,000 cash, there are clinics that will harvest your stem cells and then give them back to you to help with your COPD. Ironically the physicians working in this clinic are not even pulmonologists. There is not one piece of credible evidence that demonstrates stem cell therapy works for COPD. If there were, insurance companies would be standing in line to pay for it. Two years of treatment with the currently available COPD medications cost more than $7,000. If this procedure worked, I would learn how to do it myself. Unfortunately, it does not.

It seems fake news is part of our society that is here to stay. It is bound to be part of a society with free speech that values the pursuit of fame and financial gain over the truth.

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The Consequences of Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs)

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The Beginning of an Epidemic