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2) From age 50 - 70 I usually will do a DRE q2 years. I will do the DRE more often if any acute change in symptoms or if pt wishes. Some patients wish to move the DRE to q3 years if yearly PSA testing is normal.
And how often does that happen? ;-)
Unless they have a family history, I talk screening risk/benefit over with the patients and let them decide what they want.
I don't do DRE's either. #1 my fingers are too short and I can't reach the prostate #2 I don't think I would know what I was feeling if I could reach that far anyway.thats what i've been doing but a colleague said basically "omg you don't do DREs !!!"
Rare, but it happens. Usually it is the "I had a friend with metastatic prostate cancer and never want to go through that" kind of story. Same way I have some women who would prefer to get a pap every 12-18 months even if the guidelines would let them space them further apart.
I was only kidding. I do things pretty much as you do. I use the PSA pretty judiciously. I think I've only ordered a handful in, say, the last year. There's a place for DRE. No one likes them: neither the doctor nor the patient. But it's free. That's pretty darn good if you're going for high-value care. In the right setting it can be an important part of the exam. In my book it's the same to say "I don't do DREs" as it was when an attending I had one time told us "Everyone you admit gets a DRE. I don't care what they're admitted for. They get a DRE."
Of course, anus is substituted with a longer A-word. 😉Well, in the hospital, the usual reason for doing a DRE is to rule out occult GI bleeding. Hence, the old saying: "There are only two reasons not to do a rectal: either the patient doesn't have an anus, or you don't have a finger." 😉
FWIW, when I ask men if they want a DRE, I usually jokingly add, "It's no extra charge!" Most of them still say no. 🙂
And how often does that happen? ;-)
Of course, anus is substituted with a longer A-word. 😉
I've only done one DRE so far in residency and it was mandated by some "state policy" for someone living in a group home. Also have only drawn one PSA, at a patient's request, because of family history. And, of course, it was mildly elevated so I had to order a second which also was elevated which ended up in a urology consult and a PSA that eventually resulted back to normal. Sigh.
I don't do DRE's either. #1 my fingers are too short and I can't reach the prostate #2 I don't think I would know what I was feeling if I could reach that far anyway.
There's just some things I won't do, for the patient's pride.Um, NO
Asking a patient to get on all 4's, unless they're trying to precipitously deliver a baby in fetal distress, is not going to happen.There's just some things I won't do, for the patient's pride.Asking a patient to get on all 4's, unless they're trying to precipitously deliver a baby in fetal distress, is not going to happen.
How do you even explain that to a patient? Excuse me sir, not only am I going to stick my finger up your butt, but I'm also going to do it while you're on your hands and knees. *glove snap*
If you can justify your screening methods based on current guidelines / recommendations (sometimes trumped by your medical group's algorithms etc), then you should be covered.
For prostate CA screenings, I personally use the AUA recommendations (http://www.auanet.org/education/guidelines/prostate-cancer-detection.cfm)
1) I do not routinely screen age less than 50 unless they have symptoms, a family history of prostate CA, and/or wish to start screening early after discussing the risks / benefits
2) From age 50 - 70 I usually will do a DRE q2 years. I will do the DRE more often if any acute change in symptoms or if pt wishes. Some patients wish to move the DRE to q3 years if yearly PSA testing is normal.
3) From age 50 - 70 I will discuss the risks benefits of PSA testing. I find that:
- almost all men with a family history and/or symptoms of BPH want to have the PSA testing done.
- almost all men who have been having PSA testing done for the last 5-10 years wish to continue with the screening
- very few men who have not been tested in the past, have no family history, and are asymptomatic wish to have the PSA testing done.
I actually had a patient request one. That was the whole reason for his visit. He had no family history and no symptoms, but literally would not leave the office without one.
Interestingly enough, this was on a Valentine's Day. The working theory was that he was just very, very, very lonely.
i recently was coerced by the patient's look of "you dont do my yearly DRE u a bad MD"