Yes.
This to me is the same line of thinking as "in a meta study, wearing a helmet makes bikers more reckless and prone to injury so it's actually safer to be helmetless".
No, actually it's safest to wear a helmet AND not become reckless.
So similar approach here - its safer to get the imaging AND remain rational in evaluating results & next steps.
So similar approach here - its safer to get the imaging AND remain rational in evaluating results & next steps.