Is It Worth Getting An Annual Physical? It Depends...
By Woodson Merrell, M.D.
I love controversies that question the medical status quo, and so yesterday's front page of the Sunday New York Times Week in Review registered prominently on my radar. In it, Elisabeth Rosenthal --medical doctor and Times reporter-- decries the annual physical exam as "pointless" and possibly even "dangerous" as it can "lead to unneeded procedures."
She describes "batteries of screening exams for apparently healthy people" by doctors "purporting to ferret out hidden disease with the zeal of Homeland Security officers searching for terrorists."
Let's hope your doctor at the very least has the zeal of a homeland security officer. I highly recommend you find a doctor with the zeal of a person who wants to save your life.
In reality, check-up frequency should be based on a persons' health-risk profile. There are a few broad, age-related categories I use when determining whether or not a person needs an annual physical. These are based on a person being basically healthy with no significant chronic problems or major risk factors.