Thank you for the response 49er,
What I believe you lack here is an understanding of and vision of how technology can be leveraged to solve these problems. I hope you and many others catch this vision soon. The lives and prosperity of many depend upon that!!
It will take an interdisciplinary team approach to do this. Is the sleep medicine community up to that? They need to be! If not lets replace them!
I disagree with you concerning the need for multiple night studies to diagnose. First night effect is well documented. As well I have noted by looking at my own data for several years now that the tendency to obstruct or loose breathing stability can be a sporadic thing albeit often cyclical in character.
I believe that what happens in the lab is unique to the lab. It is what happens in the home that makes or breaks the person's health. We need to change how we test, titrate, and monitor the treatment of Obstructive Sleep Apnea and for the sakes of very many. We need to gird up our loins and get the job done soon. Those unwilling to help need to be gotten out of the way.
The extremely low performance of the current sleep medicine community drives people away from diagnosis and treatment. So lets make sure that the performance levels rise. Peoples lives and prosperity depend upon that!!
Todzo
49er wrote:Todzo,
A sleep study over several nights to diagnose apnea is totally unnecessary and a waste of money. And in borderline cases, many physicians will prescribe a pap machine to see if the person improves.
Getting an effective titration is another issue. Some people have had a great experience and others have not. Obviously, something needs to be done but in my opinion, as I have previously mentioned, your ideas would be extremely expensive and time consuming, and as a result, not feasible in my opinion.
49er
Todzo wrote:If the sleep testing were:
In the native environment of the person so that the test would actually represent a true picture of how the person normally sleeps
Were done over several nights since no one sleeps the same any two nights, weeks …
Were made to be much less intrusive in terms of comfort and fit
Of much more reasonable cost
Then many more lives, jobs, marriages, support for children, basic health, and economic prosperity would be saved.
Right now I think the sleep medicine community is it's own worst enemy. As they diagnose and treat disease we all know that they very often fail. Each failure creates a dissatisfied customer and too many of those will kill any business. And we all suffer. We are placed in danger on our roads. Our lives are at stake. Our jobs. Our marriages. The support of our children. Our basic health. The health of our economy and our future.
Rather than girding up their own loins and dealing forthrightly to change what is not working they blame the people they are supposed to be serving for what is indeed their own failure to deal with the problems in the way they do business.
Well shame on them for all of that. Let us see the sleep medicine community change that. And if they will not then let us see that others get the opportunity to do what they apparently cannot.