Are Annual Exams Really Necessary?
Reposted from VetStreet, BY DR. ANDY ROARK DVM, MS
In a much-discussed New York Times article titled
"Let’s (Not) Get Physicals," a physician reporter named Elisabeth
Rosenthal argued that annual physical examinations for human patients are
pointless. She cited a Canadian government task force recommendation to abandon
annual physical examinations because they are “nonspecific,” “inefficient” and
“potentially harmful” (in that they may lead to unnecessary tests). The task force
said examinations should be replaced with intermittent screening tests for age-
and risk-specific conditions (mammograms, Pap tests, etc.). Dr. Rosenthal
argued that this logic is sound in the United States as well.
Scrutiny of annual physical examinations for people does not
come as a surprise. Health care costs are soaring, and research consistently
shows annual physicals don’t save lives. Most treatment is started because a
patient feels sick and comes to the doctor — not because of findings in a routine
examination.
So, do these human-side rumblings mean that we should
re-evaluate the annual or biannual examinations that veterinarians recommend
for pets? Are those trips to the vet with seemingly happy, healthy pets really
worth the stress and effort for all involved? I’ve asked myself those questions
repeatedly. Here are the key points I always return to.
Patient Risks and Lifestyles Change
The strongest argument I have heard for continuing annual
physical examinations on the human side of medicine has nothing to do with
taking temperatures, running lab tests, listening to chests or asking patients
to turn their heads and cough. The single most important reason for a physical
examination is making time to review patients’ medical histories and to discuss
health risks associated with their individual lifestyles and activities.
Likewise, these discussions in regard to pets have great
benefit, I believe. Vaccination decisions, food choices, exercise routines,
parasite control products and behavioral training measures should all be based
on each pet’s lifestyle. The activities that your pet participates in, the
environment where he or she lives and his or her specific health risks all
change over time and with age. These issues need to be reviewed with a
veterinarian on a regular basis to help ensure long-term wellness.
History Is Important
Understanding what is “normal” for a pet is of great importance
when veterinarians are faced with potentially abnormal findings. When I treat
patients who have not been to a veterinarian for extended periods of time, I
find myself wondering things like “Is this pet losing weight? If so, how much?”
and “Are these blood chemistry levels increasing?” The unfortunate truth is
that if no one has investigated or recorded these values previously, I don’t
have any basis for comparison. That makes finding meaningful health trends more
difficult. Having routine examinations helps establish a normal baseline for
each pet, making it much more obvious when something happens that is abnormal.
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