I'm sure Collins had plenty of insight into various treatments and such. I see no reason or evidence to assume that him having surgery was a mistake. Players have had the surgery before and still played football it just didn't work out in his case.
Originally Posted by: steveishere
Going to have to dispute the - "insight that collins had into various treatments and such; and no evidence surgery was a mistake."
Injury date Sun, Sep 18, 2011
Surgery Date Thu, Sep 29, 2011
"A tough break after an initial CT scan of Collins' neck came back negative. Collins underwent surgery Thursday night that involved cervical fusion, having two vertebrae fused after an MRI revealed a herniated disc.
Collins was released ahead of the 2012 season and was advised to end his pursuit of football."
I am looking at this as a bystander. And am not privy to his medical reports.
So we see we had a negative CT scan; and if I recall he had 0 symptoms, an MRI revealed a herniated disc.
Surgery was performed and his career was over.
Ive stated my strong statements about this in the past but I will do it again.
1. We have to ask what coercion was used on collins to give him only 11 days to choose career ending surgery over alternative care.
2. And to go along with the above. 11 days - I wonder how much conservative care collins was offered and done during this time. Again to a patient with no symptoms.
http://www.chirogeek.com/000_MRI-Abnormalities_Asymptomatic-Pats.htm#1 suggesting that people with no symptoms will 30% of the time show a disc bulge.
and other such stats.
In the past I linked an article saying the average cost for cervical disc surgery was 130ishk. So lets say collins surgery was around that or more.
So 130k for treatment to someone with no symptoms; that has the potential to permanently affect someones life let alone end his professional football career and not giving or suggesting this patient seek conservative care first.
The above just blows my mind ... and we as a society accept this as the norm.