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@kmeci

I fired a pulmonologist for the same reason, combined with his erroneous recommendation that I have a bronchoscopy (lung lavage), which turned out to be an unnecessary surgical procedure. I learned through my journey with MAC and bronchiectasis that a bronchoscopy was not necessary and should not be the first step in getting a sputum sample from asymptomatic (non-coughing) patients. This pulmonologist put me through an unnecessary, risky surgical procedure that a respiratory therapist was subsequently able to obtain the necessary sputum with a 20-minute therapy session. And the pulmo was the second pulmo to recommend a bronchoscopy. I hope this post might cause others to inquire about alternative methods of obtaining sputum samples beside a risky surgical procedure.

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Replies to "I fired a pulmonologist for the same reason, combined with his erroneous recommendation that I have..."

Kathi - Thank you for that helpful reminder. It happens way too often because medical offices are not properly staffed with the needed professionals as a cost-cutting measure.

I was lucky that my original pulmonologist had played his "seniority" card and been able to keep 2 pulmonary nurses instead of medical assistants on his staff. His nurse was able to walk me through a 10% saline treatment to get the sample.

The added benefit - the clinic/hospital practice was able to see that this actually resulted in lower overall costs. All 3 of their pulmonology practices have both pulmo RN's and RT's on staff, which has cut referrals for hospital testing and hospitalizations!

Sue