A feature in Scientific American magazine casts some light on the troubled state of modern medicine.
Health Care Myth Busters: Is There a High Degree of Scientific Certainty in Modern Medicine?
Short excerpt:
We could accurately say, "Half of what physicians do is wrong," or "Less than 20 percent of what physicians do has solid research to support it." Although these claims sound absurd, they are solidly supported by research that is largely agreed upon by experts.
Scientific American often gates its online articles after some time has passed, so I don't know how long it will be available.
Symptom checker programs and Google are good preliminary resources, especially if you want to figure out whether it's worth your time going to the doctor or not for something mild.
If you Google your symptoms, then go to the doctor and insist you have whatever disease came up on top, and tell the doctor ey's wrong if ey disagrees or wants to do further tests, then you become the kind of patient who doctors tell hilarious stories about in hospital cafeterias. These stories are rarely hilarious for the patient involved unless they have a very masochistic sense of humor.
The more honest symptom checkers will give you a list of many possible conditions that could be causing your symptoms. Unless you have something really obvious, most doctors won't be able to do better than a list until they've done tests. Symptom checkers usually don't adjust for your age, your past history, your current medications, or many other things that are very important for serious illnesses, and they can only give a very probabilistic result. They have their place but in a serious condition are no replacement for a doctor.
Any recommendations for those? Google returns a lot of results, and I don't really know of a good way to filter between them. I didn't even know such programs existed!
Hmm, iTriage for Android looks like it has good reviews.