Mike started a discussion about this at
http://www.sleepguide.com/forum/topics/npr-web-chat-on-sleep-apnea .
The issue here is sleep doctors and other medical professional and DMEs who believe you should follow their instructions blindly and let them control your therapy. There is a rapidly growing body of well-informed patients who are proving they can make big improvements in their therapy by being fully involved. A major aspect of being fully involved is having a fully data-capable machine (and better yet the manufacturer's software) to monitor apneas, hypopneas, snores, and mask leak. To improve their therapy, these patients are making adjustments to their CPAP settings.
With a little experimenting with settings and monitoring the results, most of us have made significant improvements in our therapy.
What do you do when you are faced with a medical professional who doesn't want you to be so involved and does not want you to change your settings? I am proposing the statement below as a "battle cry" to be presented over and over to these professionals by their assertive patients.
"Sleep doctors and other sleep medical professionals need to come out of the dark ages for their own sake and that of their patients.
The market is moving in the direction of patients being fully involved in their therapy. Look at how medical professionals treat diabetes. They educate and empower their patients. Their patients take blood samples; read blood glucose levels; interpret the results; adjust their medications; give themselves injections of insulin (!); and adjust their diet and exercise.
CPAP is much simpler and less invasive than diabetes treatment, but just as important to good health. Educate your patients. Encourage them to learn how to read data from their data-capable CPAP machines. Empower them to prudently modify their CPAP settings.
You jeopardize your medical practice by letting your patient base become frustrated and hostile toward your "gold standard" sleep apnea treatment. Don’t be left behind. Empower your patients to take control of their own therapy and improve their lives."
I had to quit my first sleep doctor because he and his associates were adverse to patients with this attitude. I am happy to say that I found three other doctors who are comfortable with me being responsible for my own therapy and making changes to my CPAP machine settings.
Regards,
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