#diagnosis of kidney stones
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Kidney stones are deposited on the urinary system as hard mineral and salt formations, also known as nephrolithiasis or urolithiasis. Small stones may pass unnoticed, or larger ones inflict considerable pain and complications.
#symptoms of kidney stones#Complications of Kidney Stones#preventive measures for kidney stones#diagnosis of kidney stones
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Discover dietary guidelines to prevent and manage kidney stones. Our expert advice helps reduce risk factors and supports effective management of existing conditions. From hydration tips to tailored meal plans, we provide comprehensive support for kidney health
#diet for kidney stone patients#diet to prevent kidney stones#foods that prevent kidney stones#kidney stone diet chart#kidney stone disease diet#kidney stones foods to eat#symptoms of kidney stones#diagnosis of kidney stones#causes of kidney stones
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related to lrb
i had kidney stones when i was 10yo. but when a 10yo girl starts complaining of intermittent stomach pain and blood in the toilet, medical professionals will laugh and say “congrats on becoming a woman, go buy some pads and go home.”
well. as you may imagine, kidney stone pain is significantly different than traditional cramp pain, and also significantly worse. like unimaginably bad. like genuinely being run through with a sword, being slowly twisted, for hours and hours at a time.
so being told “this is just your life once a month for the next 30-40 years” was perhaps the most terrifying thing i had ever heard at that point. and i remember, for the first time in my life, saying “i would rather kill myself” and meaning it 100%.
i got home from the hospital - again, 10 years old - and immediately started googling hysterectomies.
#anyway.#when the pain remained too severe to function they took me back to the hospital#and that time they did a CT scan#and i received proper diagnosis and treatment.#but the few days there where i thought kidney stone pain was going to be in my life forever#i was sincerely like. if i don’t get a hysterectomy As Soon As Possible i will literally kill myself.#and . as you may imagine . they don’t give 10yos hysterectomies. so it was looking bleak.#izzy.txt
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so i guess i probably have interstitial cystitis
#this is the diagnosis i was least hoping for#if it was small kidney stones like i thought they coulda just blasted them with a laser and wrote me a flomax rx and sent me on my merry way#instead i get diagnosed with chronic piss your pants disease#interstitial cystitis#chronic pain#personal
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Troubled by Kidney Stones? Here's what to do!
Kidney stones are a common and painful condition that affects many individuals. Formed over time due to the accumulation of waste substances in the body, kidney stones can cause severe discomfort and lead to urinary tract infections. In this article, we will explore the formation of kidney stones, their effects on the body, and the potential remedies offered by Ayurvedic medicine. Section 1:…
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#Fitness#Kidney health#Kidney stone removal#Kidney stone risk factorsTypes of kidney stones#Kidney Stones#Men health#Nephrolithiasis#Pain managementDietary recommendations#Renal calculi#Stone prevention#Symptoms and diagnosis#Treatment options#Urinary system#Urinary tract health#Urology#women health
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PHC health care facility
Was having soar throat since yesterday afternoon. In Evening felt feverish. Some kind of coughing also started. What you call खराश in English? Today went to PHC or Urban Health Centre, nearby our home. Took 2 minutes to reach by scooter. Had a shock when at counter I was asked to give Rs10. In fever and heavy head along with soar throat I had went hurriedly, without any thing in pocket. In…
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#Apolo hospital#cost of treatment#diagnosis#Government Health facility#government health system#Health#kidney stones#Medical treatment#PHC#ultrasound#X-ray
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Kidney Stone Treatment in Bhopal - Dr Neeraj Gupta
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Are you suffering from kidney stones Meet Dr. Neeraj Gupta. kidney stone treatment in Bhopal. options may include lifestyle changes, medication to relieve symptoms, dietary adjustments to prevent future stones, and in some cases, procedures like shock wave lithotripsy, ureteroscopy, or surgery to remove or break up larger stones.
#bets kidney stone surgeon in bhopal#kidney stone diagnosis in bhopal#kidney stone specialist in bhopal
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Kidney Stone Treatment in Ranchi, Jharkhand from Kidney Specialist
Get your Kidney Stone Treatment in Ranchi at the hands of the best kidney stone specialists in Ranchi, Jharkhand. Open stone surgery, lithotripsy, and ureteroscopy are available for kidney stone removal in our hospital in Ranchi.
#Kidney Stone Diagnosis#Kidney Stone Doctor#Kidney Stone Hospital in Ranchi#Kidney stone risk factors#Kidney Stone Specialist Doctor#Kidney stone symptoms#Kidney Stone Treatment in Ranchi#Kidney Stones#kidney stones form#kidney stones treatment#lithotripsy#Open stone surgery#ureteroscopy
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What Are Kidney Stones?
Introduction Kidney stones are a common health issue that affects millions of individuals worldwide, causing them to struggle. The kidneys develop hard mineral deposits, which can be extremely painful and uncomfortable. Dehydration, a diet high in sodium and sugar, and specific medical disorders, are a few of the causes of kidney stones, which can vary in size and composition. The definition and…
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#calcium stones#Complications#cystine stones#Diagnosis#diet and lifestyle changes#Kidney Stones#natural remedies#Prevention#struvite stones#surgical procedures#Symptoms#Treatment#uric acid stones#urinary tract#urology
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Lexington Renal Care
Provides comprehensive care for patients who are facing kidney disease, kidney transplant hospital in Lexington, KY transplants, dialysis, and hypertension. Our patients are our highest priority. We understand that each the patient is unique and individual needs will be considered when deciding on treatment options.
#Nephrolithiasis Pain Diagnosis Medicine#kidney problems detected blood test in lexington#Kidney Disease & Diagnosis in Lexington#Chronic Kidney Disease Tests in Lexington#Tests to Measure Kidney Function near me#kidney stones treatment Lexington care#Physicians for renal calculi Ttreatment in Lexington#Treatment for renal stone disease#Proteinuria Causes#Symptoms#Tests & Treatment in Lexington#High creatinine levels test in Lexington#kidney transplant hospital in Lexington#KY
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Med school teaches a lot about handling various conditions with all kinds of medication and equipment etc. but so little on what to do when there isn't access to any ( in the middle of the highway in a movie bus/car with a first aid box consisting of a few band-aids. Or in the middle of a forest or a remote lake or beach.)
So what can we do in these situations when people look at you (as a known healthcare professional).
Eg: a case of anaphylaxis and no epi-pen, case of ureteric colic due to a kidney stone. Or something very acute.
There are a couple of ways to look at this. The first is from a first aid sense, the second from a broader medical sense.
The first aid sense:
One of the best things you can do is take a Wilderness First Aid course or get your Wilderness EMT. I know it seems like you'll be learning a lot you already know, but I promise- first aid (and particularly wilderness first aid) is so so different than the kind of medicine you learn in med school. These courses teach you to make decisions in contexts where you're thinking about safety of a group, how and when to go for help, and what basic things you can do about the most common illnesses and injuries in a wilderness or remote setting. Mostly, it gives you permission to improvise in a way that med school doesn't.
The broader medical sense:
This one is tougher to fit in a tumblr post, because I've been studying this my whole life and honestly I know there's still so much to learn. Think of low-resource medicine as an entire medical specialty. You could fill an entire residency program with the information you would need to provide high quality medical care in low-resource environments.
In order to improvise, you need a lot of knowledge about the subject area. You need to know how bodies work, and you need to know how and why they break. Med school is great for this.
You also need to know how to figure out how a body has broken. Hopefully, you got a class or two about physical exam skills. This is a great jumping off point. A lot of these skills were perfected in the 1930s-1970s, so getting a physical exam (AKA physical diagnosis) textbook from this era will give you a much deeper dive into how to figure out how a body has broken without a CT scan or a lab test.
Then you're just going to need to amass knowledge. One of the best ways to do this is to, as you encounter medical problems in your patients, ask yourself: "What did we do before we had the current treatment for [illness or injury]?". Talk to older doctors and ask them what treating __________ was like when they were going through residency. People love to talk about this stuff. If you can find someone who was in residency in the 1960s or 1970s, you're in for a real treat.
I would also highly recommend you find textbooks like Improvised Medicine by Kenneth V Iserson (designed for doctors) or Where There Is No Doctor by David Werner (designed for lay people who need primary care). Also, because a lot of low-resource care is nursing care, I recommend Barron's The Complete Guide to Home Nursing by Diana Hastings. All of these are available on Internet Archive if you want to sample them before you buy.
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As of October 15, 2024, CDC has released more than half of the anticipated 7.8 million entries of V-safe free-text entries. ICAN’s analysis of the entries released so far reveals almost 12,000 reports of kidney pain, kidney stones, or kidney infections.
As many of you already know, V-safe was developed by CDC for individuals to report symptoms after COVID-19 vaccination. This month, we decided to look at V-safe reports of kidney issues.
We know from other vaccines that vaccination can negatively affect kidney function, causing harm far from the injection site. Sadly, it doesn’t occur to most people that an injection in their arm can harm a distant system of their body. But as ICAN has reported again and again, all body systems can be impacted by vaccination.
A 2024 study found a “strong causal relationship” between COVID-19 vaccination and kidney diseases such as acute interstitial nephritis (inflammation of kidneys) and podocytopathy (injury to special cells in the kidney). A 2022 study found a correlation between acute kidney injury (AKI) and COVID-19 vaccination and that “AKI following the COVID-19 vaccines led to poor prognosis, with 19.78% death in the Pfizer-BNT group, 17.78% in MODERNA, and 12.36% in JANSSEN.”
The V-safe app entries—most made in just the first few days and weeks following vaccination—reveal many reports of kidney pain, the abrupt development of kidney stones, and hospitalization for kidney infections. Here are a few examples:
“Infection of Kidneys and UTI. Blood in urine and kidney stone on left kidney.”
“I’m in the hospital right now Because I’m still peeing blood they think it’s kidney stones.”
“Kidney stone requiring emergency surgery, ureteral stent placement and subsequent removal; UTI.”
“Intermittent stabbing, pulsing pain around left kidney.”
“Severe flank pain (I think it’s a kidney stone) I’m in the ER”
“Diagnosis with new onset kidney stone”
“Severe kidney infection back pain fever”
Readers will not be surprised to learn CDC doesn’t recognize kidney issues as adverse events related to COVID-19 vaccination, despite CDC’s access to this same V-safe data in real time as the vaccines were rolled out. ICAN will continue to do CDC’s job for it and bring attention to these dangerous and sometimes life-threatening conditions.
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It took me nearly 15 years to get my endometriosis diagnosis and comprehensive treatment, but I recognize I’m super privileged in being able to access care where I live from one of the top doctors in endometriosis research(specifically endometriosis in adolescents, but his research spans all age groups). I want to share some of the things I learned, along with study sources he linked me to, so others can advocate to their providers for the care they need. So without further ado:
✨ What I Wish I Knew About Endometriosis 15 Years Ago ✨
No amount of pain is “normal”
Don’t get gaslit into thinking “everyone” who has periods goes through pain. Seek treatment - you deserve better.
Diagnosis/treatment is kinda a pain, even with a doc who takes you seriously
The general course of action for diagnosis/treatment will be attempt treatment through OTC painkillers (Tylenol, Midol, etc), attempt at least 1-2 forms of hormonal birth control(typically oral contraceptive/birth control pill or the ring/patch/shot), then decide with your doctor whether to pursue either further hormone treatments, such as GnRH(which suppress estrogen/can help stop progression of endo) or an IUD, and/or surgical intervention where they go in and find/remove the existing lesions.
Surgery for me took a couple hours, and I had an IUD placed during the operation(at recommendation of my doc). Full recovery was around 2 weeks. Its worth noting right now you can technically only be diagnosed through surgery.
You may have to mix-and-match to find the right solution.
Only 33% of people with endometriosis in a recent controlled study saw significant improvement by IUD alone, as compared to IUD with supplementary hormonal treatment(like oral birth control or hormone inhibitors). Source: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1083318812002379
Some options may actually make it worse. Keep an eye on your symptoms.
Studies show that estrogen based treatments can potentially exacerbate endometriosis and promote endometrial growth, so treatments without estrogen or with specific types of estrogen are more recommended. Source: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5683134/
Its Got Hella Comorbidities
Fibromyalgia, scoliosis, arthritis, thyroid disease, migraines, chronic fatigue, and bowel disease(IBS, crohn’s, celiac, etc), and more are all potential associations/comorbitities. It’s also worth noting that having any of these in your family history may also put you at higher risk for endo. As my doc said - you’re not guaranteed to get all, or even any, of these, but they’re things to keep an eye out for. Sources:
IBS: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9357916/
IBD/Crohns: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32629225/
Celiac: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24992792/
Thyroid: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10234359/
Migraine: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38436302/
Painful Bladder Syndrome: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3015716/
EDS: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0002937824001637
Arthritis: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35258592/
Scoliosis: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/9238674/
TMJ: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10144081/
Kidney Stones: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9108729/
POTS: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3413773/
Fibromyalgia: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30682223/
Chronic Fatigue: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6537603/
Sjogren’s Syndrome: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39083399/
Bonus Advice
No published studies exist showing any increase/decrease of symptoms between usage of different menstrual products. Do whatever makes you most comfortable!
For OTC pain management, Tylenol or Aleve may be your best bets over Advil, based on their anti-inflammatory nature.
He also recommended probiotics pretty heavily, since digestive issues(ie bad period poops) are super common. Any with >10Bn active cultures are good!
(Disclaimer: I am not a doctor, just someone that learned a lot and wants to share)
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I'm the WORST at prompts. But something whumpy... I need that so badly. I dunno, maybe throw one of them off a high place. I'd take anything that hurts one and makes the other worry. 😭
I haven't written much whump before so I hope I delivered!
When Buck and Tommy first started dating, Buck knew the risks of being with another first responder. He had mentally prepared himself for the possibility of a helicopter crash or Tommy getting trapped during a rescue. He didn't want those things to happen, but at least he had experience with such scenarios.
What he wasn't expecting, though, were the awful words the doctor had just uttered: "Stage 3 kidney cancer." Buck felt as if his heart had stopped beating right then and there. "No!" he silently screamed. Not this... not now. They were so happy together. Buck had just moved into Tommy's house, and they had all sorts of plans to renovate and redecorate. They were going to plant a little garden and had talked about getting a pet. This couldn't be happening.
Tommy was so big, strong, and capable. Tommy, his Tommy, couldn't have cancer. Buck couldn't stop the tears from streaming down his face.
Tommy, on the other hand, remained stone-faced, expressionless. His voice was steady as he asked, "What's the prognosis? What are my treatment options?" He paused for a moment, then added, "Just give it to me straight, is this the end? Am I gonna die?"
Buck knew that his boyfriend was a straight shooter, but hearing him ask that so matter-of-factly sent a chill down his spine. He choked back a sob, trying to compose himself for Tommy's sake.
The doctor's expression softened slightly. "Mr. Kinard, while stage 3 kidney cancer is serious, it's not necessarily a death sentence. The five-year survival rate for stage 3 kidney cancer is about 53%. With aggressive treatment, many patients can go into remission."
Buck found little comfort in those words. "53 percent," he thought, his heart sinking. "So almost half don't survive." He knew Tommy was a fighter, but those were not good odds. And just what exactly did "aggressive treatment" mean? The uncertainty was almost as scary as the diagnosis itself.
Tommy remained stoic, his face masking the emotion that Buck new lie beneath the surface. Buck knew Tommy well enough to know that he was terrified. "And the treatment? What does that look like?" he asked, his voice unwavering.
As the doctor began explaining the potential treatment plans - surgery, radiation, chemotherapy - Buck felt completely overwhelmed. Their life had been completely turned on its head in a matter of minutes. Everything they had planned, everything they had looked forward to, now seemed trivial in the face of cancer.
Buck tried to focus on the doctor's words, knowing he needed to understand what lay ahead. But his mind kept racing. He had to be strong for Tommy, he knew that. But in this moment, he had never felt weaker in his entire life.
A wave of guilt washed over him as a selfish thought crept into his mind. He felt like the universe was taunting him. Cancer again. Cancer had affected his life before he was even born. He was born because his brother had cancer and he couldn't save him. And here cancer was again, threatening the happiness he had built with Tommy.
He glanced at Tommy, marveling at his composure. How could he be so calm when their world was crumbling around them? Buck wanted to be that pillar of strength for Tommy, but he felt like he was barely holding himself together.
Buck reached out and grasped Tommy's hand, squeezing it tightly. To his relief, Tommy squeezed back, a small gesture that spoke volumes. In that moment, Buck made a silent vow. No matter how tough things got, no matter how weak he felt, he would find the strength to be there for Tommy every step of the way. They would fight this together, just as they had faced every other obstacle in their lives.
As the doctor continued speaking, Buck tried to prepare himself for the fight ahead. Their future was uncertain and full of challenges. But one thing was clear: he wouldn't let Tommy face this alone. They were a team, and together they would tackle whatever came their way.
When they climbed into the car, Tommy quietly asked, "Are you ok?"
"Am I ok?" Buck replied, incredulous. "Babe, are you ok? This is earth-shattering."
"I know," Tommy said, tears welling up in his eyes. "But you're not stuck with me. I don't want you to feel obligated, and I won't blame you or judge you if it's too much. You didn't sign up for cancer."
"Tommy," Buck gasped, his voice thick with emotion. "I would never leave you. We may not have officially said it yet, but I am here in sickness and in health."
Tommy didn't say a word but pulled Buck into a hug. His eyes met Buck's with a look of determination. It was a silent promise to fight - for himself, for Buck, and for their future together. Because they deserved their happily ever after, and Tommy wasn't about to let cancer take that away from them.
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Crystals and Their Purposes Pt. 1
****DISCLAIMER**** Please if you have any of the ailments below, see a doctor. Don't rely on just herbs and crystals for your illnesses and medical problems, especially when it comes to your heart, lungs, brain, and mental health. Please see a doctor for diagnosis and treatment on top of using your herbs and crystals. Thank you. I just don't want anyone to get sicker or not see a professional. ♥
Amazonite: Helps to eliminate aggravation and soothes emotional processes. Enhances love. Helps with nervous tension. Amber: Teaches us to reach the right decisions. Helps to handle all of life's situations with a skillfully and calmly. Amethyst: Balances our intellectual, emotional, and physical bodies. Promotes strength, stability, and peace. Aquamarine: Helps to tune our spiritual awareness and thought moderation. Can help to protect against pollution. Aventurine: Balances the male and female energies. Aids in working with your spirit guides. Azurite: Eliminates indecision and worry. Helps enter a state of mind for meditation. Bloodstone: Revitalizes relationships. Centers and grounds heart energy. Promotes healthy blood circulation. Boji Stone: Balances the Yin and Yang. Cleans and charges your aura. Removes energy blockers. Promotes healthy cell growth. Calcite: Different colors of calcite placed on different chakras can amplify their energy. Promotes healthy bones. Carnelian: Helps to clear negative energies and sorrow. Helps to protect against fear. Diamond: Brings on strength, endurance, and a loving nature. Promote abundance in all areas of life. Fluorite: Helps stabilize energy and bring order in mental, emotional, physical, and spiritual realms. Garnet: Removes negative energy from your chakras. Adds commitment to purpose. Promotes healthy circulation. Hematite: Amplifies personal magnetism. Focuses mental capabilities. Balances the Yin and Yang. Dissolves negativity. Promotes healthy blood. Jade: Helps to attain devotion to a purpose. Brings on inner peace, self-reliance, and self-sufficiency. Aids in feelings of loneliness, and promotes healthy sleep. Jasper: Helps bring substance and joy to others. Used for safe travels. Used against negative energy. Promotes healthy internal organs. Jet: Absorbs negative energies. Guards, protects, and strengthens psychic awareness. Promotes good health and healing. Kunzite: Helps to align heart chakra to 2nd and 3rd chakras to produce loving communications. Aids in helping to stop compulsive behaviors. Labradorite: Transformation of intuitional pulls and thoughts. Clears and balances the aura. Helps promote a healthy brain. Lapis Lazuli: Connects the physical and celestial realms. Enhances intuitional pulls. Promotes physical and creative potential. Lepidolite: Helps to recognize old patterns so we don't keep making the same mistakes. Assists in openness and honesty. Reduces stress and tension. Can aid in lowering blood pressure. Malachite: Promotes spiritual evolution. Activates all the chakras to stimulate and enhance psychic abilities. Moldavite: Brings on higher dimensional energy. Amplifies the vibrations of the other stones to enhance healing. Can also aid in astral projection. Moonstone: Cleanses negativity from the chakras. Helps to achieve your destiny. Promotes female health. Reduces the symptoms of PMS and period cramps. Promotes healthy child-birth and healthy female reproductive system. Obsidian: Helps to see your own flaws. Helps to ground you to Earth. Shields against negativity. Helps ease grief and sorrow. Onyx: Used as defense and protection against battle, conflict, and psychic attack. Can help to reduce sexual compulsions. Opal: Helps to understand intuition and higher power. Used to invoke psychic visions. Enhances your dream time. Can promote healthy blood and kidneys. Phenacite: Facilitates deep meditation. Brings on the way of love and heavenly being. Helps to cleanse. Rhodonite: Helps to achieve potential. Dispels anxiety. Promotes self-esteem and self-confidence when placed on the 5th chakra. Rhodochrosite: Balances love on all levels physical. Purifies the Root and Sacral chakras. Ruby: Protects you against psychic attack. Brings on intense and vivid dreams. Helps to understand ancient knowledge. Sapphire: Rids you of unwanted or intrusive thoughts. Brings you joy and peace. Helps to fulfill dreams. Brings on wealth. Promotes healthy blood.
#crystals#crystal purposes#crystal witch#witchy#witch craft#crystalblr#witchblr#witchy journal#crystal meanings#crystal help#tarot#tarot journals#astrology#crystal community
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some of Eli Clare's writing about diagnosis feels very relevant to discussions on tumblr right now:
"It’s impossible to grapple with cure without encountering white Western medical diagnosis—ink on paper in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders and the International Classification of Diseases, a process in the hands of doctors, a system of categorization. I want to read diagnosis as a source of knowledge, sometimes trustworthy and other times suspect. As a tool and a weapon shaped by particular belief systems, useful and dangerous by turns. As a furious storm, exerting pressure in many directions.
Simply put, diagnosis wields immense power. It can provide us access to vital medical technology or shame us, reveal a path toward less pain or get us locked up. It opens doors and slams them shut.
Diagnosis names the conditions in our body-minds, charts the connections between them. It holds knowledge. It organizes visceral realities. It draws borders and boundaries, separating fluid in the lungs from high blood pressure, ulcers from kidney stones, declaring anxiety attacks distinct from heart attacks, post-traumatic stress disconnected from depression. It legitimizes some pain as real; it identifies other pain as psychosomatic or malingering. It reveals little about the power of these borders and boundaries. Through its technology—x-rays, MRIs, blood draws, EKGs, CAT scans—diagnosis transforms our three-dimensional body-minds into two-dimensional graphs and charts, images on light boards, symptoms in databases, words on paper. It holds history and creates baselines. It predicts the future and shapes all sorts of decisions. It unleashes political and cultural forces. At its best, diagnosis affirms our distress, orients us to what’s happening in our body-minds, helps make meaning out of chaotic visceral experiences.
But diagnosis rarely stays at its best. It can also disorient us or de- value what we know about ourselves. It can leave us with doubts, questions, shame. It can catapult us out of our body-minds. All too often diagnosis is poorly conceived or flagrantly oppressive. It is brandished as authority, our body-minds bent to match diagnostic criteria rather than vice versa. Diagnosis can become a cover for what health care providers don’t understand; become more important than our messy visceral selves; become the totality of who we are.
...
It is impossible to name all the ways in which diagnosis is useful.
It propels eradication and affirms what we know about our own body-minds. It extends the reach of genocide and makes meaning of the pain that keeps us up night after night. It allows for violence in the name of care and creates access to medical technology, human services, and essential care. It sets in motion social control and guides treatment that provides comfort. It takes away self-determination and saves lives. It disregards what we know about our own body-minds and leads to cure.
Diagnosis is useful, but for whom and to what ends?"
-Eli Clare, Brilliant Imperfection pg 41-42, 48.
#personal#disability#disability pride month#diagnosis#disability justice#anyway something i think is missing from so many conversations about diagnosis is the understanding that diangosis#is rarely collaborative or consensual.#the destructive power of diagnosis can be immense#and the fact that our systems are set up to require it? is so incredibly damaging#and disabled advocacy that seeks to expand access to diagnosis without also trying to abolish diagnosis requirements for things like#monetary assistance. accomdations. access. etc#is not disability advocacy that takes into consideration cross-disability solidarity. it does not take into consideration historical +#current harms of the medical system. it does not take into consideration intersectionality; how race class gender + other identities are#crucial in understanding who is harmed by diagnosis. and who is able to acess benefits#disability advocacy that does not interrogate why these systems require proof and diagnosis and appeals to medical authoirty#is not disability advocacy that will lead to liberation
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