Why Don't Men Go to the Doctor?

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Why Men Do Not Go to the Doctors?
Medicine, as defined by Google, is the science or practice of the diagnosing, treating, and preventing of diseases. It is important to understand the history to really appreciate the development it has gone through. Medicine was first started in Egypt but was perfected by Hippocrates. He was a Greek scholar who introduced medical ethics known as the Hippocratic oath. These same principles are used today. Treatments have further developed into curing diseases that were once deemed a death sentence. History supports the development of medicine yet people, in specific men, today do not prefer going to the doctor because it is a financial burden, it has a perception of weakness, and trepidation.
Medical costs in the US today are rising, as technology is getting more and more advanced. It has become almost essential for both men and women to get medical insurance to help pay the bill. However, the medical insurers are also businessmen and are only concerned with money. They are continually raising their rates to accommodate for the medical costs. The lowest rate for health insurance in NH is $282 dollars a month (webmd.com). That is considered the bronze plan where the consumer must still pay 40% co-pay per check up. That alone is enough to dissuade men from going to the hospital. A typical doctors visit costs about $158 there for about $63 is paid out of pocket, which is a large sum of money to pay for to get a routine check up for a cold. A problem with insurance is that it minimally covers diabetes treatments, kidney dialysis treatments, and even organ transplants. These are huge problems in the US, and for insurance companies to discriminate against these essential treatment results in large amou...

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...ay. That is a significant number of people being checked each day; it would be unwise to not go. Though it may be awkward, scary, and expensive the effects of not going are far worse. Not catching a disease soon enough can lead to worsening of a condition, or potentially, spreading the infection, or even death. Doctors are always on a constant battle against an infection. In Medical Statistics they calculate how many people must be treated to prevent one person from contracted the same disease. If an individual does not go it is that much harder to eradicate a disease. Smallpox and Rinderpest are two illnesses that have been eradicated due to the cooperation of the world population in receiving the vaccines for the disease. Society cannot afford for people to not go to the hospital it greatly increase the risk of personal harm as well as to those who surround them.

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