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In Italy, it takes only two to three weeks to get diagnosed with celiac disease. In the United States, however, it typically takes nine to 15 years. Why is there such a huge discrepancy? And what are the legal ramifications for practitioners who overlook celiac disease and non-celiac gluten sensitivity, causing patients unnecessary pain and suffering?
On this episode, Nadine explores the legal issues surrounding celiac disease as well as the potential reasons for delayed diagnosis in the US. She also explains the differences between universal healthcare and the for-profit system and how each appears to influence celiac diagnosis.
Listen and learn what medical practitioners need to know about celiac disease and gluten sensitivity in order to avoid being sued for malpractice, the value of standardization in celiac testing and follow-up care, and how you can get involved in advocating for universal coverage.
What's Discussed:How the US health insurance system works
Why Nadine is an advocate for a single-payer system
Celiac disease diagnoses around the world
The excuses practitioners use to avoid diagnosing celiac disease
Symptoms Nadine encountered as an ER nurse that may have signaled celiac disease
Why practitioners should be concerned about malpractice suits if celiac disease goes undiagnosed
Why celiac disease needs to be part of differential diagnosis for every patient
Indicators of celiac disease and non-celiac gluten sensitivity
Maladies suffered by patients whose celiac disease went undiagnosed
Why standardization of testing and follow-up care is a necessity
The story of Nadine's 70-year-old celiac patient
Why celiac patients should consider advocating for universal coverage
The differences between celiac diagnoses under universal vs. for-profit insurance systems
Physicians for a National Health Program
Health Care for All Oregon
Mid-Valley Health Care Advocates
Additional Resources:"Economic Benefits of Increased Diagnosis of Celiac Disease in a National Managed Care Population in the United States" from the Journal of Insurance Medicine
Connect with Nadine:Contact via Email
Books by Nadine:Dough Nation: A Nurse's Memoir of Celiac Disease from Missed Diagnosis to Food and Health Activism
By Nadine Grzeskowiak, RN BSN CEN4.7
5555 ratings
In Italy, it takes only two to three weeks to get diagnosed with celiac disease. In the United States, however, it typically takes nine to 15 years. Why is there such a huge discrepancy? And what are the legal ramifications for practitioners who overlook celiac disease and non-celiac gluten sensitivity, causing patients unnecessary pain and suffering?
On this episode, Nadine explores the legal issues surrounding celiac disease as well as the potential reasons for delayed diagnosis in the US. She also explains the differences between universal healthcare and the for-profit system and how each appears to influence celiac diagnosis.
Listen and learn what medical practitioners need to know about celiac disease and gluten sensitivity in order to avoid being sued for malpractice, the value of standardization in celiac testing and follow-up care, and how you can get involved in advocating for universal coverage.
What's Discussed:How the US health insurance system works
Why Nadine is an advocate for a single-payer system
Celiac disease diagnoses around the world
The excuses practitioners use to avoid diagnosing celiac disease
Symptoms Nadine encountered as an ER nurse that may have signaled celiac disease
Why practitioners should be concerned about malpractice suits if celiac disease goes undiagnosed
Why celiac disease needs to be part of differential diagnosis for every patient
Indicators of celiac disease and non-celiac gluten sensitivity
Maladies suffered by patients whose celiac disease went undiagnosed
Why standardization of testing and follow-up care is a necessity
The story of Nadine's 70-year-old celiac patient
Why celiac patients should consider advocating for universal coverage
The differences between celiac diagnoses under universal vs. for-profit insurance systems
Physicians for a National Health Program
Health Care for All Oregon
Mid-Valley Health Care Advocates
Additional Resources:"Economic Benefits of Increased Diagnosis of Celiac Disease in a National Managed Care Population in the United States" from the Journal of Insurance Medicine
Connect with Nadine:Contact via Email
Books by Nadine:Dough Nation: A Nurse's Memoir of Celiac Disease from Missed Diagnosis to Food and Health Activism