The one that got me thinking, however, was a study of more
than a million Medicare patients. It suggested that a huge proportion had
received care that was simply a waste.
The researchers called it “low-value care.” But, really, it
was no-value care. They studied how often people received one of twenty-six
tests or treatments that scientific and professional organizations have
consistently determined to have no benefit or to be outright harmful. Their
list included doing an EEG for an uncomplicated headache (EEGs are for
diagnosing seizure disorders, not headaches), or doing a CT or MRI scan for
low-back pain in patients without any signs of a neurological problem (studies
consistently show that scanning such patients adds nothing except cost), or
putting a coronary-artery stent in patients with stable cardiac disease (the
likelihood of a heart attack or death after five years is unaffected by the
stent). In just a single year, the researchers reported, twenty-five to
forty-two per cent of Medicare patients received at least one of the twenty-six
useless tests and treatments…
In 2010, the Institute of Medicine issued a report stating
that waste accounted for thirty per cent of health-care spending, or some seven
hundred and fifty billion dollars a year, which was more than our nation’s
entire budget for K-12 education. The report found that higher prices,
administrative expenses, and fraud accounted for almost half of this waste.
Bigger than any of those, however, was the amount spent on unnecessary
health-care services. Now a far more detailed study confirmed that such waste
was pervasive…
Virtually every family in the country, the research
indicates, has been subject to overtesting and overtreatment in one form or
another. The costs appear to take thousands of dollars out of the paychecks of
every household each year. Researchers have come to refer to financial as well
as physical “toxicities” of inappropriate care—including reduced spending on
food, clothing, education, and shelter. Millions of people are receiving drugs
that aren’t helping them, operations that aren’t going to make them better, and
scans and tests that do nothing beneficial for them, and often cause harm…
What Ray recommended to his car-owning listeners was the
approach that he adopted as a patient—caveat emptor. He did his research. He
made informed choices. He tried to be a virtuous patient.
The virtuous patient is up against long odds, however. One
major problem is what economists call information asymmetry. In 1963, Kenneth
Arrow, who went on to win the Nobel Prize in Economics, demonstrated the severe
disadvantages that buyers have when they know less about a good than the seller
does. His prime example was health care. Doctors generally know more about the
value of a given medical treatment than patients, who have little ability to
determine the quality of the advice they are getting. Doctors, therefore, are
in a powerful position. We can recommend care of little or no value because it
enhances our incomes, because it’s our habit, or because we genuinely but
incorrectly believe in it, and patients will tend to follow our recommendations…
Why not take a look and see if anything is abnormal? People
are discovering why not. The United States is a country of three hundred
million people who annually undergo around fifteen million nuclear medicine
scans, a hundred million CT and MRI scans, and almost ten billion laboratory tests.
Often, these are fishing expeditions, and since no one is perfectly normal you
tend to find a lot of fish. If you look closely and often enough, almost
everyone will have a little nodule that can’t be completely explained, a lab
result that is a bit off, a heart tracing that doesn’t look quite right…
Overtesting has also created a new, unanticipated problem:
overdiagnosis. This isn’t misdiagnosis—the erroneous diagnosis of a disease.
This is the correct diagnosis of a disease that is never going to bother you in
your lifetime. We’ve long assumed that if we screen a healthy population for
diseases like cancer or coronary-artery disease, and catch those diseases
early, we’ll be able to treat them before they get dangerously advanced, and
save lives in large numbers. But it hasn’t turned out that way. For instance,
cancer screening with mammography, ultrasound, and blood testing has
dramatically increased the detection of breast, thyroid, and prostate cancer
during the past quarter century. We’re treating hundreds of thousands more
people each year for these diseases than we ever have. Yet only a tiny
reduction in death, if any, has resulted…
H. Gilbert Welch, a Dartmouth Medical School professor, is
an expert on overdiagnosis, and in his excellent new book, “Less Medicine, More
Health,” he explains the phenomenon this way: we’ve assumed, he says, that
cancers are all like rabbits that you want to catch before they escape the
barnyard pen. But some are more like birds—the most aggressive cancers have
already taken flight before you can discover them, which is why some people
still die from cancer, despite early detection. And lots are more like turtles.
They aren’t going anywhere. Removing them won’t make any difference.
We’ve learned these lessons the hard way. Over the past two
decades, we’ve tripled the number of thyroid cancers we detect and remove in
the United States, but we haven’t reduced the death rate at all. In South
Korea, widespread ultrasound screening has led to a fifteen-fold increase in
detection of small thyroid cancers. Thyroid cancer is now the No. 1 cancer
diagnosed and treated in that country. But, as Welch points out, the death rate
hasn’t dropped one iota there, either. (Meanwhile, the number of people with
permanent complications from thyroid surgery has skyrocketed.) It’s all
over-diagnosis. We’re just catching turtles.
Every cancer has a different ratio of rabbits, turtles, and
birds, which makes the story enormously complicated. A recent review concludes
that, depending on the organ involved, anywhere from fifteen to seventy-five
per cent of cancers found are indolent tumors—turtles—that have stopped growing
or are growing too slowly to be life-threatening. Cervical and colon cancers
are rarely indolent; screening and early treatment have been associated with a
notable reduction in deaths from those cancers. Prostate and breast cancers are
more like thyroid cancers. Imaging tends to uncover a substantial reservoir of
indolent disease and relatively few rabbit-like cancers that are
life-threatening but treatable.
We now have a vast and costly health-care industry devoted
to finding and responding to turtles. Our ever more sensitive technologies turn
up more and more abnormalities—cancers, clogged arteries, damaged-looking knees
and backs—that aren’t actually causing problems and never will. And then we
doctors try to fix them, even though the result is often more harm than good.
Courtesy of a colleague
The discerning reader will notice a strong similarity between this and http://childnervoussystem.blogspot.com/2015/05/overkill.html. The blogger is getting older.
The discerning reader will notice a strong similarity between this and http://childnervoussystem.blogspot.com/2015/05/overkill.html. The blogger is getting older.
From a colleague: I stand with Mark Cuban, get tested every 3 months. Use a lab specializing in Lyme & heavy metals.
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