QUOTE(debmidge @ May 14 2007, 06:28 AM)

I've heard this hard-hearted statement before and it's baloney!
I read this differently. I don't think it's meant to be hard-hearted. On the contrary, it's stating as an unfortunate fact the kind of thing many of us here had to go through. It's a comment on the failure of our medical system.
So many of us here ended up diagnosing ourselves because the doctors in charge did not even consider celiac as a possibility. Many others were misdiagnosed for years before their doctors figured it out.
In theory, yes, of course, the doctors ought to be able to immediately pinpoint what might be wrong with us, order the correct tests, and give us the correct advice. BUT THEY DON'T.
Our only alternative is to do the research ourselves, and diagnose ourselves. No, we don't have medical training. No we shouldn't have to resort to this. But if we don't, we are left with either delayed diagnoses, or worse, wrong diagnoses.
What is really scary is that there is bound to be someone who will (possibly correctly) diagnose himself with celiac--and have something worse, like stomach cancer, that goes undiagnosed.
Thankfully, we have the internet resources today where we can google our symptoms, and most, if not all, of the possibilities will pop up. We may not know a disease exists, but we can easily find it anyway with a simple search of symptoms. Given that, and the fact the doctors in this country are not trained to find
causes of problems but instead are trained to administer drugs to mask symptoms, IMHO it is our unfortunate responsibility to take charge of our own health. That means we have to be on top of what our symptoms are,
and what those symptoms might mean,
before we make an appointment with the doctor. Otherwise, the doctor will likely not take us seriously, and give us a prescription to quiet our symptoms and make us shut up and go away so he can get to his next patient as quickly as possible.
I wish it weren't like this, but most of the time, this is how it is.
Should we have to be responsible for diagnosing our own problems? In theory, no. In reality, yes.
I don't know about you, but I'm no longer going to abdicate the responsibility of my own health to someone who is likely to screw it up; I and my family (and most of you, I bet) have been the victims of far too many medical screw-ups for me to trust them any longer. Not that I will never go to the doctor again. But I will go to the doctor armed with as much knowledge as I can get from the Internet, so that I am on equal footing (or better) with the doctor. It's my health and LIFE, not his, that are at stake.