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Believing In Medical Treatments That Don't Work

Hugh Pickens writes "David H. Newman, M.D. has an interesting article in the NY Times where he discusses common medical treatments that aren't supported by the best available evidence. For example, doctors have administered 'beta-blockers' for decades to heart attack victims, although studies show that the early administration of beta-blockers does not save lives; patients with ear infections are more likely to be harmed by antibiotics than helped — the infections typically recede within days regardless of treatment and the same is true for bronchitis, sinusitis, and sore throats; no cough remedies have ever been proven better than a placebo. Back surgeries to relieve pain are, in the majority of cases, no better than nonsurgical treatment, and knee surgery is no better than sham knee surgery where surgeons 'pretend' to do surgery while the patient is under light anesthesia. Newman says that treatment based on ideology is alluring, 'but the uncomfortable truth is that many expensive, invasive interventions are of little or no benefit and cause potentially uncomfortable, costly, and dangerous side effects and complications.' The Obama administration's plan for reform includes identifying health care measures that work and those that don't, and there are signs of hope for evidence-based medicine: earlier this year hospital administrators were informed by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services that beta-blocker treatment will be retired as a government indicator of quality care, beginning April 1, 2009. 'After years of advocacy that cemented immediate beta-blockers in the treatment protocols of virtually every hospital in the country,' writes Newman, 'the agency has demonstrated that minds can be changed.'"

467 comments

  1. good news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Further proof that the O admin really does believe in the scientific method.

    1. Re:good news by novakyu · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And do you know what one of the complaints against Bush's No Child Left Behind was?

      That it required pedagogical methods to be scientifically proven [1].

      Teachers didn't like that because then they couldn't use anecdote-based or other methods that they would prefer than methods that were "scientifically proven".

      Expect similar complaints from the doctors (after all, if they were really scientists, they would've gone into research; there's a reason they chose the career that they chose), and yes, the "O admin" believes in the scientific method just as much as the Bush administration did—it's just the left-wing distortions in the media that made you think somehow Bush stood against scientific progress (remember last year, Bush proposed a relatively generous science budget, but it never got past the Democratic congress).

      [1] From Department of Education website, "It only funds curricula and teaching methods that are scientifically proven to work."

    2. Re:good news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you insane? Now instead of manipulating doctors and patients to change minds, the drug companies will have to manipulate the new evidence based system, and then they will have, de facto, made law. Repeat after me, once for every hour you will have to work to pay for the bailout: "Government can't run my life. More laws won't solve anything. From now on I will think for myself."

    3. Re:good news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Further proof that the O admin really does believe in the scientific method.

      Really?

      How much do you think that Obama administration really affects this? There are numerous officials to take care of this stuff, some of the highest ones picked by Obama I think, but how much do the president or those handpicked by him really affect things like this? They seem like a result of many years of study from numerous officials and scientists and just happen to come to effect during a certain president.

      Don't get me wrong, I support Obama (or at least like him. Don't know if I can be counted as a supporter as I live in whole another country, etc.) but every time the government does anything in the USA - to better or worse - /. seems to report "Obama administration made this and this...".

      How much of all those things can really be traced back to the president? At least this early when a lot of projects (researches, etc.) he has started can't possibly have finished.

    4. Re:good news by Frnknstn · · Score: 1

      A pity you weren't in school under the 'no child left behind' program. You might have fared better at your reading comprehension.

      From your posted link, paragraph 1 line 1: 'This law is historic. The bipartisan spirit of change is unprecedented.' The story continues with phrases like 'Democrats and Republicans united'. How, then, can you claim any part of the bill for any particular party?

      The next issue: The testing of medical procedures and drugs is a fairly simple process: Double-blind test, control group, large sample sizes. Simple ideas, but nessisary components of the scientific method. These principles are significantly harder to implement in a school. How do you account for varying teacher skills? Is the grade population of 100 really a big enough sample size, when children will have to be further divided by economic status, past academic levels etc?

      Other problems: Are the teachers trained in the scientific method? If the schools are refused extra funding to perform the trials, how can they pay for the expense of running the trials?

      It is almost as if you don't know the difference between a generic methodical approach, as required by the law, and the scientific method itself.

      The next issue: Doctors will have at least some training in the sciences and the value of scientific trials. Their reactions may not be perfect, but we can expect them to be better than the fouth grade teachers who are tasked with improving the reading skills.

      Next: Bush did stand against scientific progress (for example, on the stem cell issue), but even if he didn't, that is irrelevant to the grandparent post claimed; he claimed that Bush's government stood against the scientific method, which isn't required or used in the 'No Child Left Behind' act.

      And finally, there is no overarching liberal bias in the media, there is no Jewish conspiracy, 'The Protocols of the Elders of Zion' was a hoax and a forgery, and Dan Brown is neither a reliable commentator or a good novelist.

      --
      If it's in you sig, it's in your post.
    5. Re:good news by SacredNaCl · · Score: 1

      What this really is -- The beginning of government mandated health care rationing. Anyone who really thinks otherwise is deluding themselves. This is going to spark a way for health insurance, with government health insurance plans for veterans, the elderly, and the poor being the first, but not the last to be subject to denials of care based on a list generated by congress (*at the behest of insurance companies).

      I've dealt with this stupidity before. I have a rare and progressive neurological disease called neurosarcoidosis. A change in my state laws gave insurance companies a blanket pass for denying coverage of experimental treatments and care. With no approved treatment for neurosarcoidosis, they thus began to deny every single claim for treatment.

      --
      Freedom is merely privilege extended unless enjoyed by one and all.
    6. Re:good news by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      That it required pedagogical

      Careful, using bad words like that get you fired

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    7. Re:good news by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      A pity you weren't in school under the 'no child left behind' program. You might have fared better at your reading comprehension.

      It would have made no difference to his ability, but he would probably have got a higher grade.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    8. Re:good news by madprof · · Score: 1

      Bush stood for scientific progress...and yet was against medical research using stem cells

    9. Re:good news by novakyu · · Score: 1

      Bush stood for scientific progress...and yet was against medical research using stem cells

      Bush was a politician. But then, so is Obama. Expect politicians to cater to their main constituents. These days, such little things like "principle" is out of fashion anyway.

      As far as this whole attitude of either administration towards science goes, I'm just pointing out that both administrations are exactly the same—a lot of lip service, and not a whole lot of change.

      As for the whole stem cell issue goes, you know, being against funding of stem cell research with federal dollars isn't the same thing as being against scientific progress. Either way, the federal budget for scientific research remains the same, so the funds that weren't spent on stem cell research were spent on some other hopefully worthwhile projects.

      One could almost argue that such hot topics as stem cell research shouldn't be funded by the federal government, given their ability to attract private funding—after all, doesn't the whole argument about why we should have federal government funding for science in the first place begin with how basic science research cannot attract enough funding (otherwise why not just let capitalism and market economy, the most efficient resource allocation mechanism known to men, do their job)?

  2. aprilfools by ShakaUVM · · Score: 3, Funny

    ...will be retired as a government indicator of quality care, beginning April 1, 2009

    April Fools!

    Actually, beta blockers are GREAT for you.

    1. Re:aprilfools by davester666 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Great. I took one and now I can't access gmail.

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    2. Re:aprilfools by thegnu · · Score: 1

      Great. I took one and now I can't access gmail.

      Well I took a placebo, and now Windows 7 won't boot.

      --
      Please stop stalking me, bro.
    3. Re:aprilfools by shadowbearer · · Score: 1

        Fortunately, they don't always work. For instance, I just did a system upgrade to jaunty jackalope, and everything is still working just fi

      --
      It's old. The more humans I meet, the more I like my cats. At least they are honest.
  3. And next up by m0s3m8n · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Just wait. Next up will be treatment based on life expectancy and quality. I see this becoming an issue based on my experience working for a group of Eye docs (retinal specialists). I often see very elderly (and often demented) patients receiving very expensive treatment of eye conditions. do they need the treatment - sure, to preserve their sight. Does the treatment improve their quality of life - maybe. So who decides, the patient or family, or BIG government?

    --
    Conservative, mod down for violating /. political norms.
    1. Re:And next up by gerf · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Isn't it Japan that was looking to fine people for being overweight, since it would cost the government more for health care? And don't they stop treating cancer patients in some European countries if they're too old?

      While the idea of universal free happy healthy health care sounds sugary sweet, there are some dire consequences of handing our individual health to governmental control.

    2. Re:And next up by bargainsale · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This is in fact the way things work now in the UK.

      There is a pretend-independent government committee called NICE (yup) which decides which treatments are to be made available through the free-at-the-point-of-delivery government health service, the NHS.

      They do indeed make heavy use of QALYs, "Quality-Adjusted LifeYears" in much this way.

      Although the way NICE works in specific instances has led to a lot of very justified criticism, there seems to be no realistic alternative to something like this if you have a tax-financed system that the sick don't pay for directly. There just isn't enough money to do everything possible for every patient.

      I don't know the right answer. I work for the NHS (as a retinal specialist too!) and have had endless grief getting funding for some treatments for my patients; on the other hand, I've worked in systems where the first question you have to ask is not "what does this patient need?" but "what can this patient afford?" and I prefer the former despite all its problems and stupidities.

      --
      Aberrations have appeared in my destiny prognostication engine!
    3. Re:And next up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      What you said has nothing to do with the article at all. You just wanted to say "BIG government." Buzzword buzzword! Lions and tigers and bears!

    4. Re:And next up by JohnFluxx · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The scientist in me likes the ideas of NICE. If an operation neither extends life nor increases quality of life, then what's the point in the operation?

      Of course, it never works perfectly, but I'd be interested in what the critisms against NICE are?

    5. Re:And next up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I often see very elderly (and often demented) patients receiving very expensive treatment of eye conditions. do they need the treatment - sure, to preserve their sight. Does the treatment improve their quality of life - maybe. So who decides, the patient or family, or BIG government?

      This isn't about BIG government telling you you can't take homeopathic remedies, or OTC cough medicine, or sit under a pyramid. This is about government funding research that reveals snake oil as snake oil. If the $8 bottle of robitussin is no more effective than lemon tea, what reasonable consumer would buy the robo? Hooray, I say, for a government that encourages open and honest markets.

    6. Re:And next up by Jazu · · Score: 1, Troll

      First, they came for the treatments that didn't work, and I said nothing.

      Next, they left all the old people to die.

      --
      My joke got modded as Insightful and my insight got modded as Funny.
    7. Re:And next up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      If the $8 bottle of robitussin is no more effective than lemon tea, what reasonable consumer would buy the robo?

      Dude. Robitussin is so much more trippy than lemon tea.

    8. Re:And next up by u38cg · · Score: 1

      Well, Lord knows they could change the name, at least; it reeks of Orwellian doublespeak. Not to mention the associations with the last book of CS Lewis's Cosmic Trilogy.

      --
      [FUCK BETA]
    9. Re:And next up by syntaxglitch · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Although the way NICE works in specific instances has led to a lot of very justified criticism, there seems to be no realistic alternative to something like this if you have a tax-financed system that the sick don't pay for directly. There just isn't enough money to do everything possible for every patient.

      Who says it has to be tax-financed?

      In the USA, much health care is funded by insurance companies that essentially serve the function of averaging medical expenditure among a group of people. The net result of this is that an individual with insurance has every incentive to spend as much as the insurance while let them, because the costs will distribute to all policy holders. When everyone does this, insurance policy costs keep going up. The insurance companies, trying to get costs back down, have incentive only to pay as little as possible, not prioritize approved treatments by QALYs or any other similar metric.

      Then, due to all that, you end up with people who are uninsured or otherwise unable to afford health care ending up with emergency conditions, receiving expensive treatment, and being forced into bankruptcy. This also drives up cost (as the hospitals are forced to absorb the cost of treatment) and harms society (a financially ruined citizen accomplishes less and pays less tax).

      And thus, we come to this, the worst of all possible worlds.

    10. Re:And next up by aurispector · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I work in a health-related field where a lot of practitioners are focused more on the dollars than the patient's best interest. Unfortunately, this is human nature. The only thing you can really do is try to find the ones that aren't just trying to sell you stuff.

      I think government mandated standards can be harmful in some cases. Practitioners must have the flexibility to treat as they see fit, since not everyone fits the same mold and it's not always clear what's going to work. I've seen instances where insurance companies (who dictate treatment simply by refusing to pay) require certain treatments be tried before others - and savvy doctors turn it into a factory business forcing patients through treatment protocols en-mass even when it's obvious that treatment won't work.

      There is a lot of perpetuated mythology regarding treatment protocols - people do things simply because it's always been done that way. There are also legal ramifications for the doctors - if something is considered to be the standard of care, you can (and will, in today's litigious society) be sued for NOT doing a particular treatment. It's an extremely complex set of issues.

      The mark of a good doctor is one who puts your best interest first and any system we devise needs to encourage that.

      --
      I have mod points. The reign of terror begins now.
    11. Re:And next up by ZombieWomble · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And don't they stop treating cancer patients in some European countries if they're too old?

      This is a fairly ubiquitous practice - most cancer treatments are nasty. Invasive surgery, chemotherapy and radiotherapy all potentially have significant negative impact on quality of life. If someone has the option of a certain number of relatively comfortable years, or a few additional years filled with serious complications, many doctors will recommend the latter option, and this is sometimes reflected in treatment options.

    12. Re:And next up by Conan+The+Accountant · · Score: 3, Informative

      NICE is an acronym and stands for The National Institute for Clinical Excellence.

    13. Re:And next up by tepples · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If an operation neither extends life nor increases quality of life, then what's the point in the operation?

      True, but if there is a choice between an operation that extends life and one that increases quality, which does the provider pay for?

    14. Re:And next up by b4upoo · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I can testify that knee surgery is sometimes a wonderful cure. I suffered terrible pain for years and two new artificial knees are better than the originals in many ways and they never,ever hurt at all.

    15. Re:And next up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      True, but if there is a choice between an operation that extends life and one that increases quality, which does the provider pay for?

      That isn't really how QALY works. Loath though I am to suggest Wikipedia, their explanation is reasonably good.

    16. Re:And next up by PutonBackBurner · · Score: 1

      Yes we can look at other countries and point out their system flaws, but the real question is how does that system compare to our own Health Care system and its problems? What would be the criteria for such an evaluation? Why do we assume a national system would be like other countries? Is handing our heath care to the government any better than handing it to a business?

      It seems unscientific to look at one flaw and throw out the whole system. If we take that approach we would need to apply the same method to our own Health Care System.

      Though, I am not convinced that either is the solution. I am not convinced insurance supplied by a business, whose purpose is to make money, is always going to make their decisions based on my best interests. (Wall Street anyone?) I am not convinced a government system can be better, but as someone said, we trust them to handle nuclear weapons.

      I am a little biased. I could not afford health care for 7 years. Fortunately at that time I did not have kids, as I do now. My mother whose has had several years of health problems has run out of insurance. Supposedly a 'life-time' insurance policy...

      I don't know the solution, but I think we need study the issue closely and objectively.

      Sometimes I get the impression that some opinions are based on fear rather than substance.

    17. Re:And next up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Any third party payer system whether governmental or private is subject to the same problems. Health care providers have financial incentives to inflate treatment options and the payers have financial incentive to deny treatments. At least in a government system the payer's financial incentive to deny treatment is remote and vague.
      That is why in the US medicare fraud is rampant while private insurers are often sued for denying payment for seriously ill patients.
      Sadly I view with suspicion claims by physicians, hospitals and other health care providers that they are only concerned with the patients welfare. Any kind of fee for services has strong incentives for the seller to inflate the services provided.

    18. Re:And next up by similar_name · · Score: 5, Informative

      So who decides, the patient or family, or BIG government?

      Under our current system, insurance companies decide. It seems disingenuous to imply that patients have the choice and that the current system(private insurance companies) pays for every treatment than anyone could ever want/need. There are plenty of people who have been denied claims. I also don't understand why you can't still have private insurance if there is national health care. Did the advent of Blue Cross/Blue Shield make it impossible to get Aetna?

    19. Re:And next up by BarryJacobsen · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If an operation neither extends life nor increases quality of life, then what's the point in the operation?

      True, but if there is a choice between an operation that extends life and one that increases quality, which does the provider pay for?

      It depends on if the extended life years are Quality Life Years or just extended life. For example an operation that would keep the patient alive, but in a coma would have a low Quality, so it would be lower in priority than an operation that would give sight to a blind person - which while not changing the length of their life (ignoring any differences in life expectancy between the sighted and the blind) increases quality significantly.

    20. Re:And next up by iYk6 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Not to mention the risks. Cancer treatments can kill people, and surgery is always dangerous. Elderly people are the most likely to die from such treatments.

    21. Re:And next up by BarryJacobsen · · Score: 4, Informative

      I can testify that knee surgery is sometimes a wonderful cure. I suffered terrible pain for years and two new artificial knees are better than the originals in many ways and they never,ever hurt at all.

      The knee surgery being referred to is the kind where they don't replace anything, just dinkering around in there - I believe. They aren't arguing that artificial knees don't work.

    22. Re:And next up by cptdondo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      As opposed to not having health care at all?

      Having universal gov't health care doesn't stop the wealthy from buying more health care than anyone else; it provides health care for the 30% or so of Americans who have none.

      It would also control some of the ridiculous cost spirals. Doctors have no idea how much treatment costs; I've asked how much a certain procedure might cost and I'm always met with a blank stare. All the doctors know is that they get a kickback from the lab/hospital/etc for ordering some test. They don't really care if it's necessary or useful.

      I'm familiar with both Japanese and European health care systems. The Japanese system provides universal care to everyone. It's basic and no-frills, but it covers nearly all.

      The European System (actually Czech Republic) is much the same way. Its focus is on quality of life; they are less likely to provide life-extending care if it means being tethered to a hospital bed. They'll tell you to go home, have some beer, and enjoy what life you have left. They might even send you to a spa or a hot-springs at state expense.

    23. Re:And next up by jonwil · · Score: 1

      What about the model here in Australia? Everyone gets public hospital stuff funded through Medicare (people earning over a certain amount and dont take out private health insurance have to pay an extra levy for Medicare on top of normal income taxes but for most people its basically "free").

      If you want better care (less waiting time for elective surgery, private rooms, choice of doctor, ancillary benefits like cover for glasses, physiotherapy, podiatry, chiropractic, dental etc) you have a choice of a large number of private health insurance plans and providers that all provide different levels of cover (with the better cover being more expensive). There is also a system where if you take out private health insurance for the first time later in life, you pay more than if you take it out when you are young and keep it for your whole life.

      Best of both worlds, people who dont want (or cant afford) to pay for better care get minimum standards of care (some would say that those standards arent good enough but thats no fault of Medicare) and those who want better care can choose to pay for it. And its not like the public system is crap, our government here is investing big dollars in a new state of the art public hospital to serve as the major central hospital for the state.

    24. Re:And next up by JWSmythe · · Score: 1

      It would depend on which you had.

      It sounds like you had a serious condition that actually warranted surgery.

      I'm not a doctor, but from what I know, these appeared to be the invasive surgeries where they do some light mystery work (lavage is a rinsing with fluids). Any invasive surgery opens the risk for infection. When they make a hole in a person where it doesn't belong, bad things can happen.

      I have back problems, the worst stemming from a car accident, where I was twisted (turning the wheel, looking to where I wanted to make the car go to) when the impact occured. Picture putting your hands at 3 and 9 on the steering wheel. Turn the wheel 180 degrees to the right. Turn your head 45 degrees to the right. In that position, imagine an impact hard enough to bounce your head off the steering wheel and headrest, even with the seatbelt worn properly. I had a bruise on my face, the back of my head, and a concussion for over 12 hours.

      My doctor was an "accident doctor". It was clear that he treated people with therapy that was good for his income, but not necessarily helpful to the patient. We did sit down and have some well informed discussions (hey, it was on the insurance company dime, why not).

      I've spoken with several doctors about it since then. Some are well informed on the treatments, and work in the best interest of the patient. Some enjoy their paycheck, and look to get you under a knife as soon as possible.

      The good, well informed ones have told me what the surgical options are. It boils down to "You could go in for surgery to repair the muscle damage. It is invasive. You will hurt for quite a while after from the surgery itself. It very likely won't improve anything.". Stretching, exercise, and some light "as needed" drug therapy (muscle relaxers and OTC pain killers) do work for me.

      A lot of the surgery done causes a lot of pain. When that pain subsides (which can take a while depending on the surgery) the pain level may end up just as bad as it was. The placebo effect of it is, you know how bad the pain can get (just after surgery), so the resumed regular pain isn't quite so bad any more. Maybe the pain wasn't "that bad" to start with, so the much more severe abuse makes the patient realize that. Maybe the pain goes away with "I went through all that, it'd have better done something for me."

      A friend of mine has serious back problems. He has gone through numerous surgical treatments. He sends out emails to his family and friends on a regular basis, and one of his most recent ones said something like, "It's been a year since my last surgery. The pain is almost down to the way it was when I started."

      My lower back has problems too. All of the doctors who reviewed my information agree, when it gets worse, it will need surgery. Not now. The "needs surgery" area doesn't hurt as bad as the "doesn't need surgery" area. I should avoid lifting cars above my head for prolonged periods, and be careful when leaping over tall buildings. :) It's slowed down my superhero business, but I can still save kitties trapped in trees. :)

      Another friend had a similar situation to my lower back, in which she did have the surgery. It is a quantifiable problem. The disk is seriously inflamed, has been inflamed for a long period, and won't go down without further treatment. Otherwise, it risks rupture. She was at the risk of rupture point, and she does feel better now.

      So, if you had a spine problem, where a disk or vertebrae was actually damaged, sure it will likely help. If "it hurts", with no quantifiable problem, it may not.

      The same with knees, or other joints. If they replaced your knees, I would assume they were badly damaged. I don't want to make any assumptions about it, because I don't have enough in

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    25. Re:And next up by Joce640k · · Score: 1

      What if there's not enough money to put everybody's best interests first? That's the problem.

      Compromises HAVE to be made. There will ALWAYS be a (not-insignificant) percentage of the population complaining that the health system is crap.

      --
      No sig today...
    26. Re:And next up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That happened to me. I had a sore on my lip and I went in to have it swabbed to see whether it was a cold sore (Herpes Simplex.) They swabbed it but they recommended a blood test as well. They couldn't tell me how much it would cost, though, and they couldn't tell me whether or not my insurance would pick up any of the cost. Being fairly confident that it wasn't actually a cold sore, I declined the blood test. (The only reason I thought that it might be is that I could have picked up oral HS as a child; my mother gets cold sores.) The swab test came back negative and I still don't know how much the blood test would have cost.

    27. Re:And next up by Joce640k · · Score: 1

      Maybe they need to promote more skeptical TV programs on Discovery Channel.

      --
      No sig today...
    28. Re:And next up by Kral_Blbec · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      So who forks up the cash for those 30%? O nm, its the same ones who already pay for almost all the amenities to the poor and/or lazy.

      To note about the Czech Republic. I lived there for several years. It is hardly a capitol for quality of life. I know some doctors who prescribe smoking a pack a day to patients. Quality medical advice there.

      Also note, they are so despite for doctors that if you go to medical school in the country, it is completely paid by the government on the condition you stay in the country for a few years, even if you are foreign.

    29. Re:And next up by sjames · · Score: 2, Informative

      That's where quality adjusted life years comes in. You look at years of life weighted by quality of life for each option and choose the greater. It's an attempt to codify the idea that most people would rather live 2 more healthy years than 4 years wracked in pain.

    30. Re:And next up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If someone has the option of a certain number of relatively comfortable years, or a few additional years filled with serious complications, many doctors will recommend the latter option...

      Wait, so additional years with serious complications is a good idea??

    31. Re:And next up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not very many people have any scientist in them. And even then it often departs quickly when things start to get personal.

    32. Re:And next up by MaggieL · · Score: 1

      This just in: the wealthy buy more of *everything* than anyone else.

      Stop them now!

      --
      -=Maggie Leber=-
    33. Re:And next up by sjames · · Score: 1

      The article is talking about arthroscopic surgery where they snip out bits of cartilage thought to be causing pain. According to the study results, that works no better than sham surgery.

      At some point the knees degenerate enough that the risks of knee replacement become worthwhile (such as your case). Since the thing that hurts is removed and replaced with insensate metal and polymer, naturally that ends the pain. TFA didn't study knee replacement at all.

    34. Re:And next up by Kibblet · · Score: 1

      The robitussin doesn't work for CHILDREN. The referenced articles did not state anything about adults. I've not seen research that said anything to the contrary -- I wouldn't mind it, though.

    35. Re:And next up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The net result of this is that an individual with insurance has every incentive to spend as much as the insurance while let them, because the costs will distribute to all policy holders.

      Which would, of course, be totally different with socialized medicine...

      Then, due to all that, you end up with people who are uninsured or otherwise unable to afford health care ending up with emergency conditions, receiving expensive treatment, and being forced into bankruptcy. This also drives up cost (as the hospitals are forced to absorb the cost of treatment) and harms society (a financially ruined citizen accomplishes less and pays less tax).

      In blunt terms, you mean poor people, who would not be contributing very much in tax anyway.
      Or (for anyone who's recently seen the people in the emergency room) illegal immigrants who are an even more universal drain on services.

      I don't want my government to be caretaker+provider for all my needs. If the government can provide the best education possible then "take off the training wheels" it would be a far better approach.
      Put everyone on an even playing field (well, as near as possible) then let them fend for themselves.

    36. Re:And next up by sjames · · Score: 5, Insightful

      O nm, its the same ones who already pay for almost all the amenities to the poor and/or lazy.

      WOW that was a loaded sentence. First you call life saving medical care an amenity then you paint one third of the population as lazy all in one stroke.

    37. Re:And next up by plasticsquirrel · · Score: 1

      ...In the USA, much health care is funded by insurance companies that essentially serve the function of averaging medical expenditure among a group of people....

      The one goal of a private enterprise, including an insurance company, is to maximize profits. It's nice to think that they have other goals or morals, but in the end, nothing they do will go against their pursuit of higher profits. Your post makes it sound as though insurance companies are victims of the health care industry, who are only doing their best to help everyone, and that's a good laugh.

      No tax-financed health care system could possibly be worse than what we currently have, and there are plenty of examples of countries in which they are clearly far better than our own.

      --
      Systemd: the PulseAudio of init systems
    38. Re:And next up by u38cg · · Score: 2, Funny

      I'm well aware of that, thanks. My point is calling an institute whose main job is to decide who gets cancer drugs "NICE" is pretty bad marketing; it makes people suspicious and paranoid. Maybe it should be called the Klinical Kosts Komittee.

      --
      [FUCK BETA]
    39. Re:And next up by cptdondo · · Score: 4, Informative

      From your nic, I assume ze jsi cech. I'm not sure where you live, but try the health care here in the US. When my kid broke his arm, my insurance refused to pay for the doctor, as it was "elective surgery", the doctor was not one of our preferred providers, and we did not get prequalified.

      I guess we could have set his arm ourselves, or perhaps let it heal crooked....

      For this we were billed $7,000....

      One of my relatives is a doctor in the CR. As everywhere, there are good doctors, and bad doctors. All in all, the care I've received in the CR and Japan rivals that in the US, at a much lower cost.

    40. Re:And next up by sonicmerlin · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You're a selfish tool who is unappreciative of the advantages he was blessed with, and unwilling to share them with the less fortunate. I hope one day you realize that.

    41. Re:And next up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly. By the way, "evidence based medicine" is just another word for taking decision-making away from the patient and the doctor into the hands of the "managers", i.e. clueless health administrators. More management, more government control. Sweeeeet.

    42. Re:And next up by Nutria · · Score: 1

      It's an attempt to codify the idea that most people would rather live 2 more healthy years than 4 years wracked in pain.

      That's as invalid an assumption as that of Bible-thumpers assuming that no one wants to go to Hell, even though many religions don't have a Hell, and atheists, obviously, know it doesn't exist.

      For example, my uncle tried all sorts of painful cancer treatments while seriously juiced on morphine, and was in constant pain, but wanted to live for his friends, and to watch his nieces/nephews grow.

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    43. Re:And next up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Big government" only decides if "big government" is footing the bill. If you want to have unnecessary surgery on your own dime, be our guest. If you want to have on the government's dime, guess again.

    44. Re:And next up by WgT2 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You used a subtle, but clear distinction, that affirms the GP:

      many doctors will recommend the latter option

      ...but they cannot require it... nor do our laws.

      I will say that the article's use of "evidence-based medicine" is heartbreaking - implying evidence isn't currently used... which I don't believe.

    45. Re:And next up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      smells like a rat. administrative rat. government rat. Especially with the word excellence in it!

    46. Re:And next up by anagama · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The problem is, any public health care system devised in the US is going to be one that benefits the insurance industry. The only way to cut costs is to CUT OUT the insurance industry from the process. I could be supportive of such a plan, but I have absolutely no expectation that will happen. Universal health care in the US will simply be forced subsidization of the insurance industry.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    47. Re:And next up by modmans2ndcoming · · Score: 1

      Or BIG insurance?

      seriosuly...no Universal plan that has a chance of passing (even medicare for all) will get the government involved in medical decisions.

      Glad to see that you trust a profit motivated corporation to make medical decisions for most people than the individual, his/her doctor, of their family.

      BTW... Evidence based medicine is something the professional community has been pushing on their members for the last 10 years. Government codification of best practices are simply that... experts in the profession communicating what is best practice for professionals. Best practice publications is what makes them professionals.

    48. Re:And next up by omris · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's true, but in terms of medical services, it had a few more consequences. If you're rich and you buy a car, I can still get a car. We are not about to run out of cars.

      The same is not true of, for example, MRIs or surgery. We ARE frequently at the limit for how many surgeries can be performed. So if you are rich and you want an MRI someone else might not get one, or might have to wait longer.

      In a service industry like medicine, where our resources are stretched fairly thin as it is, the concept of getting more because you're willing and able to pay for it can actually translate to someone else getting less.

    49. Re:And next up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are an idiot. I say we perform unnecessary surgery on you.

    50. Re:And next up by GNT · · Score: 1

      Having universal gov't health care doesn't stop the wealthy from buying more health care than anyone else; it provides health care for the 30% or so of Americans who have none.
      ***
      Yes -- it does stop you and me *and* the wealthy from getting extra care in-country. See canada,Uk. You then have to jump borders, and only the wealthy can do that.

    51. Re:And next up by DarkOx · · Score: 0, Troll

      This discussions always ignore on MAJOR problem. America subsidizes the R&D for medical around the world. Our Insurance companies are indeed victims of the medical industry as are individuals. Americans pay more for drugs and experimental procedures almost universally because there are no price controls and few single entities, like a government, with enough buying power to dictate costs. Yes costs also get pushed up by emergency and indigent care, yes they get pushed up by people delaying care for to long because they can't afford it, those things alone are not the drivers.

      What this will do is either severely curtail the R&D going on in the medical field or raise costs enough on other nations that their care levels go down, taxes go up or both.

      The truth is you have to be pretty poor in America to not be able to afford reasonable quality care, as in an HMO plan. Really you can get basic coverage for 10K per year for a family of four. My guess is a good number of uninsured people could come up with that money and they DECIDED to allocate it another way.

      Still these are probably people with 45K salary's who after a couple child credits don't pay any taxes. Subsides are always fungable all that's going to happen is these people will drop the HMO if they had it and run out and get cell phones and cable tv. The others are going to continue with the cell phones and cable and gain health care. This all comes at the expense of the middle class. The rich won't be paying at least not proportionally. They have to many tax shelters available to them. America's problem is its tax code. It is completely unfair to the middle class. Even when we are not havening are taxes raised directly criminals like our tax evading Treasury secretary appointed by our Communist President are busy with quantitative easing. Guess who that helps? Super rich banking organizations that need to get rid of bad debt cheaply, and super rich people who can afford to hold things like precious metals rather than cash; and then pay employees with cheaper dollars. Mean while the money the rest of us have our money devalued.

      Then the middle class get to pay the highest tax rates "in real/opportunity cost terms" so it can be gifted to a bunch of dead beats.

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    52. Re:And next up by GNT · · Score: 1

      Additionally, since all such systems are socialistic, prices are not set by market mechanisms but by bureaucrats, and the resulting inability to calculate future profits is a big detriment to the creation of new treatments and new devices.

      Computers double their price performance every 18 months. Medicine is on a 15 year doubling schedule. There's no question what the cause of the difference between the two. Fascist FDA, Socialist Medicare/Medicaid, and [mostly] useless NIH.

    53. Re:And next up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They do indeed make heavy use of QALYs, "Quality-Adjusted LifeYears" in much this way.

      Sounds good on paper, but sets a dangerous precedent. Let's throw genetic testing and maybe IQ into the mix and head down the nightmare path where you don't get treatment because it's not 'worth it', in your case, adjusted for contribution potential. Add the most unpopular and dishonest government the UK has seen in four decades and, voilÃ, we can REALLY start getting rid of those troublesome 'undesirables' :)

      Gattacca, anyone?

    54. Re:And next up by modmans2ndcoming · · Score: 1

      Go watch "Sick Around the World". It is a PBS frontline investigation of healthcare systems around the world. Canada, the UK, Germany, Switzerland, Japan, and Taiwan are covered....

      I think you will find Germany and Switzerland to be a very good system as it is fully private from insurers to hospitals. the only government intervention is paying for coverage for those who can not afford it... but those people are very low because the coverage is inexpensive.

    55. Re:And next up by GNT · · Score: 1

      Criticism of NICE -- Namely that it denies valid treatment to patients that desire it for reasons of government budgets. If you pay attention to the UK papers, every week is another outrage from that agency.

      So, tell me again people, why are we for this?

    56. Re:And next up by RyoShin · · Score: 1

      Then, due to all that, you end up with people who are uninsured or otherwise unable to afford health care ending up with emergency conditions, receiving expensive treatment, and being forced into bankruptcy. This also drives up cost (as the hospitals are forced to absorb the cost of treatment) and harms society (a financially ruined citizen accomplishes less and pays less tax).

      In America, by a federal (I believe) law, every hospital must treat an emergency patient regardless of ability to pay; part of that law states that if the patient can't pay, then Uncle Sam will pick up the bill.

      We're already a socialist country (to a point), except we try to hide it and the benefits of a socialist system are only experienced by the few (the extremely rich or the extremely poor). I often wonder how many tax dollars and lives could be saved/improved if we had a system where everyone could get free, regular check-ups, so problems could be identified earlier and avoided.

      (Don't get me wrong, I'm neither socialist nor capitalist--I just think our current system is broken.)

    57. Re:And next up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, they're arguing that artificial knees don't work any better than 'just dinkering around'. In other words, artificial knees don't work.

    58. Re:And next up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What are those dire consequences?


      Abdicating the very same notions of personal responsibility that people who generally oppose government health care support?


      Spending money on futile treatments out of some misguided sense of equality when, here in the real world, medical dollars spent prolonging the life of a 78 year old terminal cancer patient could go towards saving the lives of, say, dozens of children in sub-Saharan Africa?

    59. Re:And next up by BakaHoushi · · Score: 1

      Again, he said MOST people.

      You can argue this point, as well, but it's a statement that inherently says that some may disagree.

    60. Re:And next up by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      In America, by a federal (I believe) law, every hospital must treat an emergency patient regardless of ability to pay

      Yes, sort of. The hospital must stabilize the emergency condition. That statement is not necessarily equivalent to treating the problem. There is an interesting perception amongst a lot of people, including policy makers that should know better, that access to an Emergency room = a reasonable facsimile of universal access to medical care. MOST medicine doesn't take place in the ER (or hospital for that matter).

      part of that law states that if the patient can't pay, then Uncle Sam will pick up the bill.

      Not really. Sort of. But don't count on it. What happens is that that Medicare often adjusts payments to hospitals on a bewildering array of factors, including the amount of uncompensated care the hospital performs (as well as how many goats were sacrificed last year and whether or not the hospital was in the vicinity of a volcano).

      The hospital NEVER gets full pay for a given patient. And, as an added attraction - the patient does get billed. Do recall that medical bills are one of the leading reasons for personal bankruptcy in the US (too lazy to find a citation, exercise left to the student).

      Like yourself, I'm convinced that the situation is the US is at least "broken". It's the most gawdawful kludge (the nice word) of public / private / socialistic / moralistic / greed driven theories and practices ever assembled in one country. I'm usually OK about all of this until I wake up in the middle of the night with thinking about the old adage "If you think the problem is bad now, just wait until we've fixed it"...

      Sigh. I'm going for a walk.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    61. Re:And next up by CodeBuster · · Score: 1

      Although I am an American and have never used NHS care I have always been troubled by the "no supplemental private treatment" policy of the NHS (no doubt an attempt by the government to gain monopsony power for themselves as the single buyer of all or most health care services). Why should people not be able to pay additional expenses out of their own pocket if they are willing and able and NHS doesn't cover a treatment which, "doesn't yield enough quality life years to be worthwhile if the public pays"?

    62. Re:And next up by MaskedSlacker · · Score: 1

      I object to your faulty epistemology. Atheists assume hell does not exist because there is no evidence (the rational ones) or just because (the irrational ones). As a negative cannot be proven, so it cannot be known to be true.

    63. Re:And next up by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      The FA does imply that 'cough medications' (Robatussin being singled out as a brand) doesn't work in adults. AFAIK, the author is probably right, but pushing the envelope on "evidence based medicine". Looking at the Cochrane Collaboration data on the subject, we find, as usual, that we don't really know much of anything.

      And, before the grammer nazi's pummel me, I will stop using so, many, damned commas.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    64. Re:And next up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If there's government insurance and private insurance, will I be allowed to opt out of government healthcare (and not be required to pay taxes to support the government healthcare) if I purchase private healthcare?

    65. Re:And next up by onionlee · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It isn't that evidence isn't used when considering treatments. In fact, there were studies in the 90s that supported the use of beta-blockers. The problem is that when later evidence shows up to prove otherwise - ie that it does not make a difference - the medical community has adopted the usage of such as standard procedure. Hard to change, no matter the evidence.

    66. Re:And next up by derspankster · · Score: 0

      I had my right knee scoped two years ago for torn meniscus. Worked great. Getting the left knee done this coming Monday. I guess the relief I've gotten is all in my head though. Oh well.

    67. Re:And next up by Nutria · · Score: 1

      but it's a statement that inherently says that some may disagree.

      The problem is that when QALY is codified into near-impossible-to-change bureaucratic policy, choices that must be made by the individual shift to The State.

      And, as any good libertarian /. reader knows, that's a Bad Thing.

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    68. Re:And next up by cduffy · · Score: 1

      Because not taking budgetary reasons into account, one ends up with the most expensive healthcare system in the world, and (for poorer patients) lousy quality to boot? What does it matter if it's paid for via private insurance rather than taxes? The end result is still the same.

      That said, I have personal reasons to be dissatisfied with the current state of affairs: My wife would likely have died of appendicitis shortly after we married had my employer not started offering health insurance just months before; she's from a poorer family, and their traditional solution to any such condition was to try to wait things out despite the pain; if insurance had not been available, she would have stayed home to avoid the risk of a second unpayable $11,000 emergency room bill (the first one, from before we married, stemmed from a simple but misdiagnosed case of food poisoning; attempts to confirm the initial, incorrect diagnosis involved two spinal taps). If we hadn't gotten her to the doctor when we did (without the many hours of waiting in line if the ER failed to triage the case correctly) -- and if the first doctor we saw hadn't been able to order imaging to identify the problem, it would almost certainly have burst, resulting in a condition with a much lower survival rate. I don't consider this situation (in which life-or-death decisions are made on the basis of current employment status) indicative of a reasonable state of affairs.

    69. Re:And next up by c6gunner · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Having universal gov't health care doesn't stop the wealthy from buying more health care than anyone else

      It does, here in Canada! If I need any serious medical work, I have to get it done in the US. If you guys start socializing too ... where the hell am I supposed to go then? Cuba?

    70. Re:And next up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      In a service industry like medicine, where our resources are stretched fairly thin as it is, the concept of getting more because you're willing and able to pay for it can actually translate to someone else getting less.

      Ideally the money flowing into the system would become capital, encouraging investment in new equipment and services.

      Sadly, like many other fields, the business owners have forgotten what capitalism means, and have siphoned off their companies' capital to pad their own pockets. Besides, why spend 10 million dollars to build another MRI when you can claim time in your MRI is scarce and double the price?

    71. Re:And next up by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      And don't they stop treating cancer patients in some European countries if they're too old?

      Why not stop treating heart and lung cancer patients if they're unwilling to stop smoking?

      Dr. Claudio de la Rocha, a chest surgeon who does all lung cancer operations in Timmins, has taken a stand. "Nobody goes under the knife without having quit smoking," he says, tapping his desk with a forefinger.

      It's not known how many doctors reject tobacco users. A Winnipeg family physician, Dr. Frederick Ross, made headlines last year when he gave his patients three months to stop smoking or find another doctor.

      And surgeons in Melbourne, Australia, have refused to give smokers heart or lung transplants, or life-saving bypass surgery, citing medical and moral grounds.

      De la Rocha says that about one in five smokers coming to him are denied surgery; they're unwilling, or unable, to give up tobacco.

      Some are outraged by the very suggestion that they butt out. De la Rocha says angry patients have answered him with a one-finger salute and slammed his door so hard, the diplomas on his wall rattled.

      "I've had people where I thought, `My God, is this guy going to jump across the desk?'"

      Others quietly leave his office, promising to try quitting, and they don't come back.

      De la Rocha requires smokers to abandon their habit three to six weeks before a procedure, and he cites sound medical reasons for that.

      Studies show that smokers don't do as well as non-smokers on the operating table. Tobacco users are prone to risky complications, such as lung infections and blood clots, resulting in heart attack or stroke.

      Smokers also consume valuable health-care resources, de la Rocha says. If society is going to spend thousands of dollars to treat them, it's only fair to ask that they "take the first step" and quit their risky habit.

      And there's worry that bad outcomes, aggravated by smoking, could tarnish a surgeon's reputation, de la Rocha says. In the United States, there's extensive monitoring of surgeons' performance, with "report cards" separating the profession's stars from its screw-ups. A trend toward increased accountability is building here, too, making smokers less desirable to have as patients.

      Performance report cards "are coming down the pipe," de la Rocha says, elaborating on why he has rejected smokers. "If my reputation is on the line, it stands to reason I would take that step."

      According to the Ontario Medical Association, he is well within his rights.

      The stop-smoking ultimatum "could be a reasonable thing to say," says Dr. Ted Boadway, executive director of health policy for the OMA and a family physician for 13 years. "You have to look at the risks involved, and every surgeon has to make a decision."

      Boadway says he isn't aware of other Ontario doctors refusing to treat smokers, but he has personally dropped patients because they were addicted to drugs or alcohol.

      Their problems were "insoluble as long as they continued their behaviour," he says. "You put a huge amount of effort into these folks. And every doctor has their breaking point."

      Doctors are free to drop smokers from their patient list as long as they steer them toward appropriate care from some other source, says Dr. Graeme Cunningham, head of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario.

      Doctors ending their relationship with a patient need to give the departing person "a menu of choices," he says. This could be as simple as a list of other doctors expert in treating a patient's particular disease, or hospitals where help is available.

      There's no requirement to actually find another doctor for a patient who is sent away, and no policy on whether smokers should be denied treatment because of their addiction.

      You're either part of the problem, or part of the solution.

    72. Re:And next up by Idiomatick · · Score: 1

      How about you work on survival. Then pretty necessary surgeries (fixing blindness). Then worry about expensive eye surgeries improving vision.

      At the moment the US isn't doing the first one for a lot of people. After you got that down you can move on. And so you know, most free health-care systems work on a quality*quantity of life system. 85 year old with vision problems? Sorry. 22 year old bleeding from the head? Get him a hospital bed. This isn't how it works in the US right now which frankly scares the rest of the world.

    73. Re:And next up by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      The scientist in me likes the ideas of NICE. If an operation neither extends life nor increases quality of life, then what's the point in the operation?

      [_] Money, you ignorant clod! :-)
      [_] Placebo effect (the doctor's doing something for you so at least you feel like you're being treated)
      [_] Soylent green. We keep the donors live nowadays so we can harvest more ...
      [_] Remember how to somebody with a hammer, everything looks like a nail? To a srgeon, "If in doubt, cut it out!"
      [_] I have the CowboyNeal Health Plan ... I plan to save on medical expenses by dropping dead from an overdose of pizza.

    74. Re:And next up by RobinH · · Score: 1

      Additionally, since all such systems are socialistic, prices are not set by market mechanisms but by bureaucrats, and the resulting inability to calculate future profits is a big detriment to the creation of new treatments and new devices.

      Well, that's not entirely true. What happens in Canada (and one of the reasons it's successful up here) is that the Canadian health care system still has to pay competitively enough to compete with what the medical professionals could make in the US. As prices for medical care goes up in the US, Canadian doctors leave and move there, and the Canadian government has to increase the rates (just enough to keep the rest from leaving, of course).

      I can tell you that there's no shortage of BMWs in Canadian hospital parking lots.

      Giving some thought to what would happen if the US implemented a universal health care system, I think the two countries would still have to compete for resources, which would keep pay reasonable (or at least they would pay what the average Canadian or American is willing to pay for said care, in the form of taxes). However, if the two countries got together and agreed to create a "duopoly" where they fixed the prices in OPEC fashion, then the doctors would have a problem.

      Of course the health professionals could still leave and go overseas, but there are higher barriers to that than jumping between the US and Canada.

      Ultimately though, if the price fixing does happen and continues, fewer people will choose to be doctors, and the governments will be forced to pay more to recruit more. The problem with this is that if you're the government, and you're just trying to get through the next 4 or 5 years, you can reduce the price now, and the problem of fewer doctors won't manifest itself until after your term if over. Likewise, if you need to increase the number of doctors, increasing the pay won't have a positive affect until after you're out of office. So I see this as a serious problem.

      --
      "I have never let my schooling interfere with my education." - Mark Twain
    75. Re:And next up by Asic+Eng · · Score: 1

      Well to be fair - people in Japan do get older than in other places, so they have to draw the line somewhere... The CIA factbook lists life expectancy by nation here: https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/rankorder/2102rank.html I think it is interesting that the US with rank 50 scores lower than most of the other wealthy nations. Japan is on rank 3 btw - the average Japanese has a 4 year longer lifespan than the average American. Not that I believe that health care is the only contributing factor there or that quality of life equals length of it, but I'd like to see some supporting information for the claim that universal health care could have dire consequences. Lots of other countries clearly manage just fine with it - that doesn't mean it's the best option, but it's clearly a viable one.

    76. Re:And next up by RobinH · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And don't pretend the US isn't a socialist nation. I spent 5 years in the US. You guys have a national program that pays farmers to *not farm* to increase the price that the rest of the farmers get for their produce. You also just gave $700 billion in hand outs to failing corporations. You give national subsidies to the states for building the highway system, but tie social policy to it (the states have to implement a minimum drinking age of 21 to qualify for the funding).

      The US still pays for the poorest people to get free medical care even though middle income people can't afford it. That's much worse than the Canadian system (having used both). In Canada, the people who run the health care system have to eat their own dog food. Their kids use the system that they run. Do you think the people who run the Medicare system in the US use that system?

      --
      "I have never let my schooling interfere with my education." - Mark Twain
    77. Re:And next up by More+Trouble · · Score: 2, Informative

      If there's government insurance and private insurance, will I be allowed to opt out of government healthcare (and not be required to pay taxes to support the government healthcare) if I purchase private healthcare?

      The only proposal currently on the table is requiring that everyone have insurance. There's no discussion of what insurance you have to have, tho one might argue that there ought to be minimums, e.g., you can't get insurance that doesn't provide for catastrophic care, no matter how stupid you are.

      The benefit of requiring everyone to have insurance is that doctors are legally required to render aid if withholding such aid would lead to death, permanent harm, etc. That costs doctors and hospitals, and those costs are passed right along to those who are insured.

      Now, the other stupid thing about the US health system is that they (we?) pay more as a country than the rest of the world, for considerably worse care. Where is all that extra money going? Some can be explained by all of the uninsured people who get more or less no early or preventative care (since they can't pay for it), waiting until they might actually die before doctors & hospitals are obliged to intervene.

      But the reality is that most of the useless money is going to insurance companies in the form of profits. And that's not likely to change any time soon, since all of the health care reform discussion is simply about requiring everyone to purchase insurange.

    78. Re:And next up by dgatwood · · Score: 2, Informative

      I would not be surprised if this article were wrong about that conclusion. The article is definitely wrong about the conclusion regarding sinus infections.

      Ever since I was a kid, I've been prone to sinus infections. Every couple of years, I'll have one. They have never---and I do mean never---gone away on their own. I've left them for well over a week just to see. Never happens. By contrast, when I take antibiotics, whether that is after four days of symptoms or eight, the symptoms decrease dramatically within just a few hours after the start of the first round. Even if the infection would have gone away after a few more days (and I'm not convinced it would have), taking an antibiotic still means you get three or four days of your life back, and that alone is sufficient reason to consider such treatment.

      Further, the doctor's view is dangerous. Doctors don't prescribe antibiotics for strep throat because of the symptoms. They prescribe antibiotics for strep throat because if left untreated, strep infections can turn into scarlet fever (which can cause kidney damage) or rheumatic fever (which has a 2-5% mortality rate). Failing to prescribe antibiotics if strep is suspected is madness.

      Even in the case of sinus/ear infections, his few is dangerous. My ear infections have gotten painfully close to rupturing my ear drum. If I did not take antibiotics, there is a very good chance that I would have hearing damage today. As a musician, that would be a bad thing.

      Now if you want examples of bad medicine, take a look at statin drugs. Heart doctors notoriously prescribe these to people with even moderate cholesterol levels to bring their levels down. While clinical studies do show that in patients with severely elevated cholesterol, heart attack risk can be reduced by some statins, other statins have been shown to increase the risk of heart attacks and strokes.

      Also, the side effects are much more common than they lead you to believe and are severe and debilitating. Both my grandparents have experienced textbook adverse reactions to statin drugs (peripheral neuropathy in both, sleep issues in one, confusion/anxiety/cognitive disruption in one). These side effects are very real.

      Worse yet, studies show that these drugs don't reduce overall deaths because for every death they prevent from heart disease or strokes, you get an increase in deaths from other causes, including cancer. So basically it reduces quality of life while failing to actually increase the typical length of life....

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    79. Re:And next up by mrmeval · · Score: 1, Troll

      So you'll send the government with it's guns to stick in someones face if they don't 'share'. If you were not a coward you'd steal from the rich and give it to the poor and take any consequences this would garner you.

      --
      I'd go on a Vegan diet but the delivery time from Vega is too long. --brownkitty
    80. Re:And next up by fyoder · · Score: 1

      Yep. I knew an octogenarian who was lucky to get effective treatment (surgery and chemo) for bowel cancer. A doctor noticed she still had the constitution of a horse and decided to go ahead, but there was serious discussion of not going ahead based on age. Those treatments can kill anyone who is fragile to begin with.

      What concerns is me is how many otherwise hale and hearty elders are being denied effective treatment on knee jerk consideration of age?

      --
      Loose lips lose spit.
    81. Re:And next up by muridae · · Score: 1

      Several years back, and sorry I can't find the link to it right now, there were several studies showing that OTC cold medicines of all sorts were ineffective for children under 3. The conclusion was that their bodies had not developed the proper pathways for the drugs to take effect.

      Now, how would those same drugs work on adults? At the OTC doce, not well. For one, DXM is a weak cough suppressant. Codeine is better, codeine and atropine is the works. The OTC dose of DXM is, by my experience, a placebo dose. It does nothing for a cough that needs fixing, and only helps you ignore the milder ones. The 12 hour powdered pills of it, however, when taken every 4 to 6 hours, do a lot more. For my money, though, I call the doctor once the cough gets near 'rib breaking level' and get the strong stuff. 2 days later, and if the cough isn't gone at least I feel better.

      As for an antihistamine or antihistamine/decongestant combo helping a cough. . . I'm not even a med student, and I can tell they are testing the wrong medicine. Here's another ground breaking study, APAP doesn't cure a cough. Neither does ibuprofen. Give me grant money to prove it, please.

    82. Re:And next up by lethargic8 · · Score: 1

      Yes you are right, we already are footing the bill when poor people wait till the they are sick enough that it is against the law for the ER to deny them care.

      It has been empirically proven that preventative treatment is phenomenally cheaper then curative treatment. Having a system where the poor could get health care before their health degrades into a medical nightmare will save us money in the long run. Sometimes doing the right thing is also the fiscally responsible choice.

    83. Re:And next up by lethargic8 · · Score: 1

      I would love to see some evidence of this ridiculous assertion. Moore's law does not apply to every field in life and there is a huge difference between doubling the number of transistors and creating a new treatment, then going through rigorous test to ensure the new treatment doesn't kill people.

      Just because this is /. doesn't mean Moore is god.

    84. Re:And next up by nbauman · · Score: 1

      This is a good explanation of NICE for Americans.

      http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/03/health/03nice.html

      The Evidence Gap
      British Balance Benefit vs. Cost of Latest Drugs
      By GARDINER HARRIS
      Published: December 2, 2008

      RUISLIP, England -- When Bruce Hardy's kidney cancer spread to his lung, his doctor recommended an expensive new pill from Pfizer. But Mr. Hardy is British, and the British health authorities refused to buy the medicine. His wife has been distraught.

      "Everybody should be allowed to have as much life as they can," Joy Hardy said in the couple's modest home outside London....

    85. Re:And next up by thebiss · · Score: 1

      Note well, the study is regarding cough medicines for CHILDREN, and not adults.

      - It says nothing about Guaifenisin efficacy for adults.
      - The headline neglects the details which allow us to read the inverse: 20% of children do require antibiotics to treat ear infections, and others have repeat cases.

      When it helps 1 in 5, it's hard for me to say they are worthless. Just overproscribed.

      --
      Beware: I believe all are created equal, and have the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
    86. Re:And next up by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      I often see very elderly (and often demented) patients receiving very expensive treatment of eye conditions.

      If you're completely mental is there any point being able to see?

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    87. Re:And next up by ildon · · Score: 1

      It's one thing when the doctor gives the patient a choice and the patient can either agree or see another doctor. It's another when government dictates the decision for them.

    88. Re:And next up by pease1 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And you assume the US Government can actually manage such a program? How good have they done with Social Security? Medicare? Can anyone name a US Government program to citizens the size of this that is run efficiently? The trust to those in DC to run and control our lives is nothing short of incredible, given all the complaints of the past four years.

    89. Re:And next up by KingAlanI · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Government healthcare doesn't necessarily need to swing the banhammer on nongovernment care in the country.
      It *can* and *is* set up that way in many areas, but it's not an inherent feature to the concept.

      Government covering a solid minimum for everybody, and letting rich people buy more/quicker healthcare - makes sense (is still fair to everyone, and doesn't do as much to irritate rich people who want to utilize their wealth in this manner)

      --
      I listen to both RIAA and non-RIAA stuff if I like the music, tangential business/politics nonwithstanding.
    90. Re:And next up by Zerth · · Score: 1

      A lot of the surgery done causes a lot of pain. When that pain subsides (which can take a while depending on the surgery) the pain level may end up just as bad as it was. The placebo effect of it is, you know how bad the pain can get (just after surgery), so the resumed regular pain isn't quite so bad any more. Maybe the pain wasn't "that bad" to start with, so the much more severe abuse makes the patient realize that.

      .

      I know a guy that has something like that. He's a bit unlocky, having had a few tool-related accidents(sawed off the fleshy part of his thumb, spilt acid on himself, etc).

      Whenever a doctor asks him to rate the pain on a scale of 1-10, 10 being the worst pain ever experienced, he has to qualify his ratings with "a 10, for me, is having my arm skin charred and driving myself to the hospital in a manual-shift car". Otherwise, they tend to not give him enough pain killers when he says the pain is only a 4.

      So yah, I can see how experiencing worse pain can make less pain feel better. Like thumping your head against the wall so it feels better when you stop:)

    91. Re:And next up by novakyu · · Score: 0, Troll

      You're a selfish tool who is unappreciative of the advantages he was blessed with, and unwilling to share them with the less fortunate. I hope one day you realize that.

      Or you are a selfish tool who is unappreciative of the advantages that the rich are already sharing with you (especially in terms of income tax, for which the rich pay more than 30% of their income and the poor pay none) and are demanding ever more and more.

      I hope one day you realize that—preferably before the rich break the shackles of slavery you have placed on them.

    92. Re:And next up by Slashdot+Parent · · Score: 1

      As for an antihistamine or antihistamine/decongestant combo helping a cough. . . I'm not even a med student, and I can tell they are testing the wrong medicine.

      I can make a case for a decongestant helping a cough, especially at night.

      1. Congestion+lying on back=post-nasal drip.
      2. Mucus enters upper respiratory system
      3. Body responds by coughing.

      Do I get a cookie?

      --
      They don't grade fathers, but if your daughter's a stripper, you fucked up. --Chris Rock
    93. Re:And next up by FormOfActionBanana · · Score: 1

      Yeah, "dire" consequences of actually applying limited resources where they will do the most good.

      --
      Take off every 'sig' !!
    94. Re:And next up by FormOfActionBanana · · Score: 1

      In a system where the octogenarian pays for the services rendered, it doesn't matter; anybody can spend their money how they like.

      If you want to live in a society where heath care resources are shared for the benefit of everybody, it is insane to spend massive amounts of resource to modify sick people who are about to die.

      All people die. The purpose of medicine is to improve life, not to prolong death. When someone is reasonably near death and sick, it is often more sensible to comfort them and provide pain relief rather than apply expensive therapy designed to restore people to productivity.

      It all sounds so awful, but we can't deny this.

      --
      Take off every 'sig' !!
    95. Re:And next up by Solandri · · Score: 3, Informative

      It would also control some of the ridiculous cost spirals. Doctors have no idea how much treatment costs; I've asked how much a certain procedure might cost and I'm always met with a blank stare. All the doctors know is that they get a kickback from the lab/hospital/etc for ordering some test. They don't really care if it's necessary or useful.

      Actually, the doctors order all the tests because if they don't, and the patient happens to have some disease that would've been detected by that test, they'll get sued for malpractice, and their malpractice insurance rates will go up, and/or they could lose their license to practice. Having universal health insurance wouldn't stop this, it would actually make it worse since the doctors would know the tests would be paid for. (Unless you put some bureaucrat in charge of deciding which tests are necessary, taking that decision out of the hands of the doctor who sees you.)

      The only other ways to stop it are to tighten up the requirements to file a malpractice suit (which would make the lawyers unhappy), or for the government to provided some sort of universal malpractice insurance. But then you'd get the same arguments being raised for/against universal health insurance, but applied to rich doctors instead of poor people (e.g. bad doctors being allowed to continue practice). Personally I think getting people's opinions on both is a great way to detect whether they truly want to fix the health care system, or if they just have an agenda they want to push and have picked health care as their vehicle.

    96. Re:And next up by winwar · · Score: 1

      "I will say that the article's use of "evidence-based medicine" is heartbreaking - implying evidence isn't currently used... which I don't believe."

      I'm sure evidence is used. But it isn't GOOD evidence. If you prescribe antibiotics for a viral infection the patient will almost always get better....

      Patients don't like being told there is no useful easy treatment.

    97. Re:And next up by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      The government making choices about people's lives is horrible. The free market doing it is worse.

    98. Re:And next up by winwar · · Score: 1

      "It would also control some of the ridiculous cost spirals."

      Why? Everybody in the health system causes high prices. But nobody wants to take responsibility.

      The real question is HOW we want to ration healthcare. Not whether to do so. But nobody wants to have that discussion either....

    99. Re:And next up by KingAlanI · · Score: 1

      if the people facing the big tax bill could opt out, yes that would be rational for them, but it would defeat the whole damn point. :)

      --
      I listen to both RIAA and non-RIAA stuff if I like the music, tangential business/politics nonwithstanding.
    100. Re:And next up by winwar · · Score: 1

      "Additionally, since all such systems are socialistic, prices are not set by market mechanisms but by bureaucrats, and the resulting inability to calculate future profits is a big detriment to the creation of new treatments and new devices."

      Ever heard of Medicare and Medicaid? Rather popular program with rates not set by the market.

      Ever heard of health insurance? Rather propular programs with rates not set by the market.

      We don't need new treatments and devices for the sake of them, we need new treatments and devices that WORK and are COST EFFECTIVE. There is a reason for the increasing health care costs....

    101. Re:And next up by winwar · · Score: 1

      "Criticism of NICE -- Namely that it denies valid treatment to patients that desire it for reasons of government budgets."

      Which is a bad criticism. ALL healthcare is rationed. The only real choice is whether we want it randomn or evidence based.

      And nobody says you can't pay for denied care yourself.

    102. Re:And next up by winwar · · Score: 1

      "By contrast, when I take antibiotics, whether that is after four days of symptoms or eight, the symptoms decrease dramatically within just a few hours after the start of the first round."

      The placebo effect is a great thing. Or maybe you had a bacterial infection.

      But antibiotics for a viral infection is worthless.

      BTW, strep can be a bacterial infection. Which is why they use antibiotics.

    103. Re:And next up by BlackSabbath · · Score: 1

      Or you are a selfish tool who is unappreciative of the advantages that the rich are already sharing with you

      chuckle,chuckle :-)

      especially in terms of income tax, for which the rich pay more than 30% of their income and the poor pay none

      Hahahahaha :->

      I hope one day you realize that—preferably before the rich break the shackles of slavery you have placed on them.

      HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH!!! $->

      That was the funniest troll I've ever read dude! Seriously!

    104. Re:And next up by KingAlanI · · Score: 1

      "Under our current system, insurance companies decide."

      If you weren't already at +5, I'd make one of those "mod thus guy up" posts.

      The argument you just knocked down is one of the things I keep on hearing form the anti-UHC people. I might just use your retort if I get into such an argument in the near future. :)

      --
      I listen to both RIAA and non-RIAA stuff if I like the music, tangential business/politics nonwithstanding.
    105. Re:And next up by DaveGod · · Score: 1

      The scientist in me likes the ideas of NICE. If an operation neither extends life nor increases quality of life, then what's the point in the operation? Of course, it never works perfectly, but I'd be interested in what the critisms against NICE are?

      Namely that in some cases people need treatment that is actually quite effective at both extending life and increasing the quality of it, but that treatment is incredibly expensive.

      Of course, NICE has some good counter arguments. It's not a case of saving money, it's a case of someone else telling them that they have a finite amount of money to spend - if one treatment is approved, something else may have to go. A very good argument, but of no comfort at all to the one who's going to die earlier than necessary.

      There are some seemingly bizarre situations, like in some cases people have offered to remortgage their homes thus the NHS only has to contribute a reasonable amount. This usually still doesn't fly, because NICE either approves or disapproves treatments. Again, those denied are pretty justified in being extremely upset that for all the taxes they've paid , they don't get treatment because they were picked by the wrong disease.

      Part of NICE's function is to reduce how much they get ripped off by the pharmaceutical companies. Just like in any business, someone has to control the costs. Unfortunately, here it involves lives. To be honest, sometimes an ill person has a suspiciously expensive-looking and well-coordinated campaign to get a drug approved.

      Frankly NICE has an awful job. Their best hope is to minimise misery, and they have the inherent problem that people will hate them when they say no, but don't even notice when they say yes.

      Ultimately the problem is people deserve the treatment but healthy people are only willing to pay so much in taxes.

    106. Re:And next up by ptbarnett · · Score: 1

      Ever since I was a kid, I've been prone to sinus infections. Every couple of years, I'll have one. They have never---and I do mean never---gone away on their own. I've left them for well over a week just to see. Never happens.

      I read this article (and others about the same subject) and had the same response. I know when I have a sinus infection, because the symptoms are unambiguous. And a broad spectrum antibiotic is the only thing that will end it. I don't take antibiotics unless I need them -- for personal reasons. My doctor knows why, and never questions me when I think it's time.

      But, I've been fortunate: I was at my dentist's office one day when he discovered that another patient's sinus infection had basically destroyed the roots of several teeth in his upper jaw. His doctor's PA (physician's assistant) had been giving him various antibiotics, but never followed up to be sure that it worked. The poor guy apparently had a sufficiently high pain threshold, and he never realized that something was really wrong.

      Even in the case of sinus/ear infections, his few is dangerous. My ear infections have gotten painfully close to rupturing my ear drum. If I did not take antibiotics, there is a very good chance that I would have hearing damage today.

      I've never had a rupture: as a child, my doctor lanced my eardrum several times to relieve the pressure before that could happen. I finally spent a few months with temporary tubes in my ears and it broke the cycle. My father wasn't so lucky: his ears ruptured several times and had significant hearing damage. I have some damage: I have a hard time hearing high frequencies, which makes it really difficult to understand someone in a high-noise environment.

      It's just plain irresponsible to not treat a known bacterial infection with antibiotics. They are a large contributor to the rapid increase in life expectancy in the past century.

    107. Re:And next up by sjames · · Score: 1

      All of that is why multiple studies are required to confirm results and to better qualify results. You may be one of the minority cases where the antibiotics are actually useful, or there might be an alternative you've never tried that would work better. Further studies could narrow things down to identify the minority who are helped (it's nearly never zero) and suggest criteria for determining who is in that minority.

      A good case in point is the article you pointed to. In that one, Pfizer (the maker of Lipitor) reports that people switched from their expensive drug to a generic have more heart attacks and strokes. Of course, the study also isn't strong enough to draw a conclusion. Even Pfizer says so.

    108. Re:And next up by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      So who decides, the patient or family, or BIG government?

      Neither, the HMO. Look, I understand large bureacracies are bad. But it has yet to be demonstrated that a government buearocrat is worse than a private sector one. Try to get customer service at a utility company for instance. And private companies have an order of magnitude higher administration costs (20% on average) to Medicare (2%)

      But the alternative to universal health care isn't a free market. It's a privately run HMO-based bureacracy (choose from a member of the oligopoly!). And universal health care doesn't preclude private treatement any more than Social Security precludes private 401ks/IRAs. And, like Social Security, it provides a safety net when your retirement fund/private insurance provider goes belly up.

      --
      Your ad here. Ask me how!
    109. Re:And next up by stonewallred · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Just 10k a year. Wow, that's cheap. Let me look at my 1000.00 dollar a month budget and figure out how to work that in. 475.00 rent 50.00 car insurance 41.00 internet (college student with both campus and on line classes) 30.00 a week gasoline 55.00 a week grocery bill 50.00 cell phone oops, run out of money How about you sending me the money to afford health insurance since it is such a small amount in your world?

    110. Re:And next up by muridae · · Score: 1

      Only if you'll settle for ones made from flax seed. I hear they have lots of natural mucilage.

    111. Re:And next up by stonewallred · · Score: 1

      I have an extreme tolerance to narcotics/opiates. I tell the doctors this and they act like it is no big deal. I did have a kidney stone where I had an older doctor come in and order 4mg of IV dilaud. He ended up giving me 12mg IV over a three hour period to stop the pain. I walked out of the hospital within 20 minutes of the last 4mg. Unfortunately, it is a rare doctor that will do so, most say they have given you all they can prescribe due to the DEA and their draconian drug laws. Pain bad enough for me to be in a doctor's office or emergency room is very bad pain indeed.

    112. Re:And next up by Kral_Blbec · · Score: 1

      Having a health care system where the poor couldnt spend half their income on alcohol and smokes would help even more. I dont think I have ever met anyone under the poverty level who doesnt smoke.

    113. Re:And next up by Kral_Blbec · · Score: 1

      I've been in 3 hospitals in the CR, only one was anything close to being acceptable. The others were just filthy. I work in healthcare now, and what they did there would scare me to be a patient.

      And no, I'm not Czech but i love the country.

    114. Re:And next up by jc42 · · Score: 1

      Here's another ground breaking study, APAP doesn't cure a cough. Neither does ibuprofen. Give me grant money to prove it, please.

      Ah, but here's where our current system has a problem. If you have the right credentials, you probably can get grant money to do the tests - from the drug companies. Their contract will give them "editorial" (i.e., veto) power over publishing the results. And negative (or no-effect) results rarely get published. In the few cases that publication is allowed, the media (including the scientific media) generally considers "no results" conclusions to be uninteresting and not news. And the companies' marketing departments have worked out ways of making even no-effect results sound like praise. "Our product is as effective at half the dose of our competitors" is quite true, after all, when they're all placebos.

      What I found interesting about this story is that they're actually publicizing and acting on no-effect results of studies. This is something rather unusual in medical research. Not to say that it has never happened, of course, but it's a lot harder to find such stories than it is to find "miraculous new treatment" stories, in both the medical and the public news.

      I don't expect it to continue. There are too many profitable products at stake.

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    115. Re:And next up by Nutria · · Score: 1

      The government making choices about people's lives is horrible. The free market doing it is worse.

      "You" are delusional if you believe that the current US economy is a free market.

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    116. Re:And next up by Jookey · · Score: 1

      The choice is not between BIG government and the patient/family. The choice is between government which is accountable to the voters and BIG medical insurance companies that are accountable to shareholders NOT THE PATIENT. There is a term for people like m0s3m8n. m0s3m8n is a chump. We in the US pay three times as much for health care than they do in France and yet we do not have any health care. Insurance companies only provide insurance to healthy people. And when you get sick they weasel out of payment due to pre-existing conditions. If you have any sort of chronic illness your only choice is to work for a company that provides health care. Apparently m0s3m8n thinks that McDonalds employees deserve to die. The problem stems from the belief that universal single payer health care requires everyone to live in the gulag in soviet Russia. m0s3m8n I hope you die of cancer

    117. Re:And next up by doktorjayd · · Score: 1

      so...

      are you saying that the british universal healthcare system _prevented_ mr. hardy from purchasing it himself?

      didnt think so.

      just because pfizer can come up with an expensive new drug ( that is their business you know ), doesnt instantly provide rationalisation to purchase it.

      any evidence of what the benefits to this expensive new drug were?

      i'd say that if mr. hardy had kidney cancer, which had spread to his lungs, his days are pretty well numbered as it is, so handing over a metric assload of cash to pfizer in order to extend his life by a matter of (probably only) weeks would be sheer self indulgent madness.

      it comes down to this: would mrs. hardy like to be the one to pick and choose which services to deny others in need from the healthcare system in order to cover the cost of the expensive medication?

    118. Re:And next up by JWSmythe · · Score: 1

          I have a very good tolerance for a lot of drugs. Probably not as good as yours though. I'm normal and functional on normal dose of things, where most people would be lethargic, or taking a nap.

          The funny one is that I have a very high tolerance to nitrous oxide. My dentist has my file marked so there's no question on this. They turn it on, I barely feel anything, and can hold a coherent conversation with it up to "max". The first time I went to him, we went through the drill of "this is how you breathe" two or three times before he realized that I really had a high tolerance for it. I guess it's a really good thing too.

          When I moved across the country once, I put everything in a moving van. I unpacked all my household stuff, and then brought my tools and stuff to a friend's place. My car stuff included my 15 pound NOS tank. It fell over just before I got to his place, and the release valve cracked. I went in to get it and my tools out, and noticed I was feeling a little lightheaded just as I walked in. The whole back of the truck was full of NOS that had been released over the last couple minutes. I turned and got out real quick into fresh air and waited for my head to clear. I took a deep breath of fresh air and held it to go back in to remove the tank.

          I've heard of people suffocating by releasing NOS tanks in enclosed space. Usually they were attempting some recreational use, and the next person to find them is the one who calls the coroner. Hey kids, anesthesia is best left to the professionals, who can stay coherent when you're not, and have you hooked up to a blood oxygen sensor. :)

         

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    119. Re:And next up by JWSmythe · · Score: 1

          I only have one word. Ouch!

          He'll have to just get used to giving higher numbers to explain other pains so he can get the proper treatment. He'd probably rate something like a gunshot wound as a 7 or 8, while other people would pass out or rate it as an "OH MY GOD IT HURTS!"

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    120. Re:And next up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      don't they stop treating cancer patients in some European countries if they're too old?

      I think their policies are just fine!

      -- Jack Kervorkian, M.D.

    121. Re:And next up by Zerth · · Score: 1

      Wow, you must sprinkle heroin on your cornflakes like sugar or something...

      Isn't dilaudid an order of magnitude more effective by weight than morphine?

    122. Re:And next up by egork · · Score: 1

      E.g. in Germany you can choose your health insurance plan once you earn more than 42Kâ a year. I guess the idea of a compulsory insurance is to have healthy workforce in the country, which per definition earn less.

    123. Re:And next up by moosesocks · · Score: 0

      I'm well aware of that, thanks. My point is calling an institute whose main job is to decide who gets cancer drugs "NICE" is pretty bad marketing; it makes people suspicious and paranoid. Maybe it should be called the Klinical Kosts Komittee.

      Cry me a river.

      Presented with two individuals, but only enough resources to treat one patient, the committee gives the treatment to the patient more likely to survive.

      This does suck if you're the one more likely to die, but sounds pretty fair to me.

      (I'm also a little sick of the "ooooh! scary communism" bullshit. It's irrelevant, and detracts from reasoned debate. The USSR was a mismanaged and corrupt government; however, this does not necessarily mean that every action taken by that government was inherently evil. I have no qualms about driving a Volkswagen or drinking Fanta, despite the fact that both were created by Nazis)

      --
      -- If you try to fail and succeed, which have you done? - Uli's moose
    124. Re:And next up by Acer500 · · Score: 1

      Having universal gov't health care doesn't stop the wealthy from buying more health care than anyone else;

      It depends. In my country (Uruguay, SA), which currently has a left-leaning government (president is an oncologist, and belongs to the Socialist party), they chose to "level down": they gave universal access to the formerly paid-only mutual health system to every worker, by decree, paying a nominal fee to the mutual system.

      Before that, we already had "universal" health care, but in a three-tier system where

      - The poor had access to the hideous public healthcare, where doctors are usually decently trained but lacking the most basic of tools and no money;

      - The working class had access to a relatively good "mutual" service - see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Welfare_state - where you can get the best doctors and access to the best tech, as long as you're willing to wait, and don't ask for it very often;

      - And the rich or privileged had access to apparently-better-than-US-style health insurance which in practice means not having to wait for doctors or tech (choosing to see any doctor you want in about 24 to 48 hs, etc, etc), access to the best infrastructure but not largely different from the mutual system except for the waiting time.

      Now the government thought it would be a good idea to make everyone stand in the "middle" tier, the mutual system, which means that the third of the population that were formerly badly helped by public healthcare now become a burden on the mutual system, and banning private healthcare (such as the one I had recently become a member of) so that the "rich"*, too, have to use the mutual system (the very rich can still choose to pay, a lot more than before for better healthcare, and not as easily as before). The mutual system, which was never in the best finances to start with, is starting to collapse: the end result is awful healthcare for everybody.

      An analogy would be Obama decreeing: "Americans deserve the best healthcare! Everybody can get free healthcare from John Hopkins!" (substitute with good hospital of choice). Do you think John Hopkins would be able to cope? The end result would be awful waiting times and/or bankruptcy. It is, of course, a very simplistic analogy, but not too far from the truth:

      The Spanish hospital (Asociacion Española) had a tremendous influx of new patients and can barely cope, the Medical Union's hospital (CASMU) is now on strike and patients fear for their health, and other formerly on the brink hospitals are going broke.

      *where rich is anybody earning over two thousand dollars. Not kidding.

      --
      There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics.
    125. Re:And next up by wisty · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It's more like an all-you-can-eat restaurant analogy situation than a car analogy situation. Some idiot will always pig out on the lobsters and oysters, even if it makes them sick. Doesn't matter whether it's private or public insurance, people will abuse the system.

      More doctors and nurses can be trained (provided that they have hospitals to train in), and more hospitals can be built (as long as there are doctors and nurses to staff them). MRI machines can be built, just like cars.

      We are only at the limit of how many surgeries can be performed because demand is not price sensitive. People getting the treatment don't care what it costs, because the health insurer (or government) is paying.

    126. Re:And next up by Acer500 · · Score: 1

      Just 10k a year. Wow, that's cheap. Let me look at my 1000.00 dollar a month budget and figure out how to work that in. 475.00 rent 50.00 car insurance 41.00 internet (college student with both campus and on line classes) 30.00 a week gasoline 55.00 a week grocery bill 50.00 cell phone oops, run out of money How about you sending me the money to afford health insurance since it is such a small amount in your world?

      Hello, South American (Uruguay) here. I have the best health insurance you can buy in my country (probably MUCH better than anything you can get there).

      You know how much it costs? U$D 60 a month (for people under 30). It works, as I'm too busy to actually use it (I only used twice for two visits to the doctor since I affiliated last year).

      Oh, and by the way, you think you don't have any room to cut over there? I have news for you... I was a student... and I didn't need a car (still don't - though, oh, I do want one badly). If you don't have good public transport between where you study and where you live, get a good bike (I used to make a 10 mile ride each way, I was in great shape, now that I work 8 to 6 I'm overweight - I actually miss the bike).

      Your internet and cell phone bills are also ridiculous, but I guess that's the US for you, and you don't have other choices on campus or whatever. I pay U$ 10/month cell phone, and never run out of local minutes or SMSs, and can even make a couple long-distance calls a month. And I pay U$ 15/month for my internet connection (not great, 1 mbps ADSL)

      Rent is also ridiculous over there. I pay U$ 150, U$ 450 gets you a really nice, large house over here.

      Apples to oranges, I know, but it's one reason I'm still in my country, when I could be making U$ 5000 or more over there (the day I can figure out to sell myself there while living here, I'll have it made).

      --
      There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics.
    127. Re:And next up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have a co-worker (a registered nurse) who was in a car accident. She had a wire placed in her knee. Over time the wire broke and was causing her excruciating pain. She lived in Canada where they told her she would have to wait for about 4 to 6 months for a surgical slot.

      Luckly her husband who was a resident of Texas called the local hospital in Houston and she was in in less than a week. She said the plane ride sucked but it was better than waiting bed ridden in Canada.

    128. Re:And next up by Ashriel · · Score: 1

      No worries, we're not socializing medicine.

      I believe the plan is to (eventually) offer low-cost federal insurance that allows us to actually get to choose our own doctor. It's not mandatory, either - if we're insured under our employer or wealthy enough to afford our own insurance, we can choose that instead. There's been talk of making insurance mandatory only for children.

      No one is getting free medical care in the U.S. - except those on medicare/medicaid (and that system needs a serious overhaul).

      This article just pertains to step 1 of Obama's plan, which is to reduce costs so that the government can actually afford to offer subsidized insurance.

    129. Re:And next up by Ashriel · · Score: 1

      Life expectancy represents an average statistic - it includes infant mortality and accidental/violent deaths (which occurs in the early 20's more often than not).

      The U.S. has a lot of accidental/violent deaths. Gang violence in the inner cities, 3500 people every month in car accidents, over 1000 people every year from bringing electrical appliances into the bath with them (I shit you not). Hence, the lower life expectancy.

    130. Re:And next up by LihTox · · Score: 1

      When the government tries to do this, people can create an uproar and get politicians to back down-- it's hard to do, but it's possible. If a health insurance company does it, what can you do? If it were truly a free market, you could vote with your feet, but
      (a) most Americans get their health insurance through their employer (not a lot of choice there);
      (b) if you're already sick and running into problems with your healthcare, you probably can't switch: other insurance companies will turn you down because of your pre-existing condition; and
      (c) there is a large barrier (I think) for a new company to enter the health-insurance business, so all of the majors can adopt the same policies without worrying that some new company will come along, provide better service, and steal their customers.

      Government responsiveness isn't great but it's wonderful compared to megacorporation responsiveness. (In my opinion anyway: I think one of the defining political distinctions in America is whether corporate rule or government rule sucks less.)

    131. Re:And next up by nbauman · · Score: 1

      Me? I agree with you. I'm just recommending the NYT article as a good explanation of how NICE works. $15,000 for 6 months of good-quality life sounds reasonable to me. (The New England Journal of Medicine had another good article.)

      The NYT had other stories about how U.S. health insurance companies are denying similar treatments here.

    132. Re:And next up by Slashdot+Parent · · Score: 1

      I prefer chocolate chip.

      --
      They don't grade fathers, but if your daughter's a stripper, you fucked up. --Chris Rock
    133. Re:And next up by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Who says it has to be tax-financed?

      Because in that way the government holds the purse strings and can directly stop abuses quickly. As it is the US consumer pays extra due to the excuse of "research costs" even for things like the cervical cancer vaccine where all of the development and even US certification was paid for by the Australian taxpayer. The US consumer is being seriously scammed. Now you could drag a pile of scammers of to prison by drafting draconian laws and waste a lot of effort doing so - or you could set up some mechanism to cut off their revenue stream once they are shown to be obvious scammers. Thus you end up with a heath care system similar to that in a lot of other places with better outcomes.

    134. Re:And next up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're a selfish tool

      Nice, you make a personal attack on someone and get modded up "insightful" for it. Perhaps it's time to give up on this place after all.

    135. Re:And next up by ecksoh! · · Score: 1

      Actually, the US hasn't utilized set-aside subsidies as a method of market control for decades, at least not for corn or soybeans. The major subsidy system in the US is a counter-cyclical payment, where American farmers are paid the difference between the actual price for the commodity and a government-determine floor price, which actually encourages farmers to farm more because they know they'll ultimately get paid the same amount per bushel no matter what, causing a completely different set of problems. The way America handles farm subsidies is almost the opposite of what you think is happening.

    136. Re:And next up by Lorien_the_first_one · · Score: 1

      Given the current animosity towards insurance companies (AIG, anyone?), and health insurance companies in particular, it's hard to see how it could get any worse. They seem to have it pretty good in Europe. The whole idea that health insurance should be employment based is turning out to be a farce, in my opinion. And anyone who has ever been tagged with a "pre-existing condition" is probably thinking of moving to Europe, anyway. Isn't the point of insurance to distribute risk?

      And after reading this article, I'm inclined to think that turning over more power to the government is likely to be better, and/or not much worse than the current regime. But it could take the incentive to profit at the expense of customers away from those who would be tempted to do so. Profit might be an important factor in the administration of good health care. But it's clear that, in this country at least, the scales have tilted clearly in favor of profit over patient health.

      What do you think of that?

      --
      The diversity and expression of human opinion is essential to human survival.
    137. Re:And next up by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Never said it was or wasn't. Just that given the choice, the government at least tries to have our interests in mind, and if the people decide to, can directly affect the government. Corporations will press for profit. They don't have their customers interests in mind, other than just to keep them happy enough to keep being a customer.

    138. Re:And next up by Neuticle · · Score: 1

      All the doctors know is that they get a kickback from the lab/hospital/etc for ordering some test. They don't really care if it's necessary or useful.

      This myth really pisses me off, and I have no idea why it is so pervasive.

      Doctors do not get a kickback for ordering tests, or prescribing drugs. That is not only immoral, I believe it is illegal. The only way that a doctor could benefit financially would be if the doctor somehow personally owned the patent for the drug or the test, which I don't think happens. You get a bill for tests because someone has to pay for the materials and the people who analyze them. Did you think that would be free?

      Doctors get samples to give out to patients who either can't pay, or can't fill a prescription right away. The monetary benefit to the doctor is 0. I suppose if the doctor pinches a few Viagra for personal use, there is a BIT of personal benefit, but they don't get anything for handing them out free or for writing a prescription. They don't even get free pens and clipboards anymore.

      --
      "Cheeze it!" - Bender
    139. Re:And next up by Neuticle · · Score: 1

      Ever heard of Medicare and Medicaid? Rather popular program with rates not set by the market.

      "Not set by the market" is a pretty big problem with those. It's so big it's going to make them implode.

      In my area*, Medicare and Medicaid reimburse doctors at such a low rate that more and more doctors are refusing to take on new Medicare/Medicaid patients, even doctors who do not have "full" practices. It's so low that it's basically worth more to them to spend the time catching up on paperwork. For those doctors who take them out of a sense of duty, in a some cases they end up LOSING money on the visit (what with still having to pay staff wages, other overhead etc).

      And this is all BEFORE taking in to account the planned CUT in payments that were delayed.

      Medicare and Medicaid are FUBAR. For the love of Motorcycle Jesus, we should not pattern a national health care around them.

      *rural Oregon

      --
      "Cheeze it!" - Bender
    140. Re:And next up by Tony+Hoyle · · Score: 1

      One of the problems in the US is that drug companies are allowed to advertise direct to the public - this is not the case in many other countries.

      That leads to people walking into the surgery and saying "I have $DISEASE. Give me $DRUG." - and, as paying customers they often get it too. What should be happening is the patient goes "I have $SYMPTOMS. Cure me." then the doctor chooses the best (supported by evidence as being clinically effective) drug for the job.

    141. Re:And next up by u38cg · · Score: 1

      Uh huh. You're the politician who voted for this organisation. You're up for re-election next year. You voted for an organisation that says no to cancer treatment. You and I understand why, but it should be pretty obvious that any such organisation is a seriously hard sell to the unwashed masses, particularly when we're throwing around the word "trillion" on a daily basis. My only point is that communication around this organisation is extremely badly managed.

      --
      [FUCK BETA]
    142. Re:And next up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nowhere is the problem more severe or evident than in the "treatment" of pregnancy and childbirth. Here we have a completely natural process that results in complications absent medical intervention just one time in three hundred; yet in the hospital complications occur in virtually single case, and surgery is "required" an average of 33% of the time.

      The childbirth industry (the single largest proportion of hospital income) is an excellent example of medical science proceeding in absence of evidence. In fact, there is a huge body of evidence contraindicating many of the procedures that are commonplace today.

    143. Re:And next up by dodongo · · Score: 1

      Or (for anyone who's recently seen the people in the emergency room) illegal immigrants who are an even more universal drain on services.

      Though I don't care for the tone of your comment, I will grant you that if they weren't performing the dangerous, uncomfortable or just downright shitty jobs that no American citizen wants to take, they'd be spending less time in the ER. True.

    144. Re:And next up by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      Computers double their price performance every 18 months. Medicine is on a 15 year doubling schedule. There's no question what the cause of the difference between the two

      It's obvious: geeks are ten times smarter than doctors.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    145. Re:And next up by eugene+ts+wong · · Score: 1

      If I understand the doctor's position correctly, then maybe a good solution is to encourage them to give their own opinions, and then offer suggestions on tests. The idea is that the test could function as a second opinion. The patient decides on his own, if he should take a test. The patient won't be able to sue, because it's entirely up to the patient to decide to take the test.

      We should only be able to sue the doctor for incompetence.

    146. Re:And next up by eugene+ts+wong · · Score: 1

      over 1000 people every year from bringing electrical appliances into the bath with them (I shit you not)

      I'm very interested in why these people do these things. Maybe somebody needs to do a study. If they put a radio near the tub, so that they can control it, then I understand, but why else would they need an electrical appliance so close that it could kill them?

    147. Re:And next up by toddestan · · Score: 1

      Are you sure that NICE is not a backronym?

    148. Re:And next up by MrCreosote · · Score: 1

      "While the idea of universal free happy healthy health care sounds sugary sweet, there are some dire consequences of handing our individual health to governmental control"

      as opposed to handing your individual health to an HMO whose goal is to maximize the return to its share holders, partly by minimizing costs by refusing to pay for treatments. Assuming you can afford to be with an HMO in the first place.

      --
      MrCreosote Meow!Thump!Meow!Thump!Meow!Thump! "You're right! There isn't enough room to swing a cat in here!"
    149. Re:And next up by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      When we talk about sinus infections, we are usually talking about bacterial infections. If an infection isn't bacterial, it's really just a head cold or flu. The symptoms of a sinus infection are different from symptoms caused by viral agents. With bacteria, you have a high fever, while colds rarely cause significant fever in adults. Although influenza can cause a fever, it is accompanied by other symptoms that are not localized to the head (random muscle aches, extreme fatigue, chills, etc.) that you do not get with a bacterial infection. With a sinus infection, you get a fever (sometimes high), your head is clogged, and you may feel somewhat run down after a few days of it, but you basically don't feel sick outside of your head (and possibly throat) unless it moves into pneumonia.

      It also sounds like you mistakenly believe that strep throat is just another term for a sore throat. By definition, strep is always bacterial. The term "strep" is short for "streptococcus", which is a genus of bacterium. It's not that strep "can be bacterial", but rather that it must be. If you use it to refer to anything else, you're using the term incorrectly.

      If this doctor had said that you shouldn't give antibiotics for most sore throats or sinus congestion, I would have agreed; most stuffy heads and sore throats are viral, will go away on their own, and are not affected by antibiotics. However, making such an argument for sinus infections (a term usually reserved for bacterial infections) or strep (a term for a specific class of bacterial infections that can turn into a much more serious and sometimes fatal form if left untreated), the argument crossed a line from being perfectly sensible advice to being just plain reckless.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    150. Re:And next up by WgT2 · · Score: 1

      That is understandable

      My complaint lay elsewhere, this is: in the choice of words. It is very misleading in that it implies grandiose, conspiracy theory level deception by the medical community that just isn't there.

      And having said that, it's actually dangerous because there's already a high level of suspiciousness by the general public... which might explain the synopsis' word usage. (*shrug*)

    151. Re:And next up by WgT2 · · Score: 1

      I'm glad you brought that up. It seems the usage could be accurate after all. Crap!

      I had heard, some years ago, like in the late 1900's, some Jewish doctor in Eastern Europe had a chance to do all or most of the baby deliveries at the hospital he worked in. He took a reference from the Old Testament about the washing of hands, just with running water - not a bowl of (reused) water, and applied it to himself before delivering a baby.

      Wouldn't you know it: the maternal mortality rate DRAMATICALLY lowered. BUT that when the doctor he had taken over for returned, they went back to their old ways, ignoring the evidence.

      Now that I think about it, in general, doctors are the most stubborn persons I've ever met: if they weren't told it in medical schools it just isn't true.

    152. Re:And next up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes -- it does stop you and me *and* the wealthy from getting extra care in-country. See canada,Uk.

      Funny that, because in the UK not only do you have the choice of additional private health care (BUPA for example), I've worked for employers who have offered subsidised BUPA cover for myself and my partner.

      tl;dr: You're full of shit.

    153. Re:And next up by Nick+Ives · · Score: 1

      Corporate subsidies are not socialism. People like to use terms like "Corporate Welfare" but really it's just a form of state capitalism. Protectionism like that is actually to be expected in liberal market democracies because private firms have huge amounts of money and therefore lobbying power.

      Sure the theory is that free societies and markets lead to competition, better quality and more choice for everyone but that's not the reality.

      --
      Nick
    154. Re:And next up by Have+Brain+Will+Rent · · Score: 1

      Mmmmm you know that's a nice thought (about equality in Canadian health care) but it really isn't true. The people who run the health care system in Canada are upper income people. If they want faster/better/unavailable-in-Canada treatment they just travel for an hour and they are in the US where they can buy whatever treatment they want. I know a fairly well off couple and when their kids need care in a hurry they just take a 30 minute drive over the border.

      A few years back I investigated and found I could get a Bluecross insurance policy good for a couple of million $ in care anywhere in the world and it would only cost about twice the annual premiums for health care where I live in Canada - and our health care stops at the border. Now two million might not be all that much but it'll get you a fair bit of care and a lot faster than here in Canada.

      On top of that it is a very large deception when politicians and advocacy groups say we have single tier health care. In my province if you get injured on the job you are almost certainly covered by workmens compensation (now called WorkSafe) and you move right to the head of the line for treatment. There are a couple of other groups that bypass the waiting lists as well - my recollection is that it was police, or prison guards or military personal - it's been a while so I can't really remember which group(s) it was. And when Bourassa got prostate cancer he was across the border getting treated at, IIRC, Johns Hopkins, something like 48 hours after initial diagnosis. And - this is the really cute part - if you aren't a permanent resident of Canada but need health care while here you can just jump over all the queues and buy whatever service you want.

      --
      The tyrant will always find a pretext for his tyranny - Aesop
    155. Re:And next up by Have+Brain+Will+Rent · · Score: 1

      One more comment - you talk about the US middle class not being able to get medical care that is free to the poor. Well it's the same here in Canada. If you are on welfare your dentistry is paid for - not on welfare you pay the whole shot. Need glasses - paid for if you're on welfare otherwise you're on your own. The same for eye exams. Drug costs? If you're low income or on welfare they are basically free but if you're lower middle class you're going to be paying up to $2,000 a year for your prescriptions - even if your life expectancy goes down significantly without them. Make any kind of money at all and you're paying for all your prescriptions, up to several thousand dollars a year - and you're paying for them with after tax dollars because the deduction for medical expenses is set so high that you'd have to be needing some awfully expensive drugs to make it over the threshold. Crutches, wheelchairs, etc. - free on welfare otherwise you better hope you have some cash. Treatment for mental illness? If you're poor you get it, if not then you better have some cash lying around.

      And when my elderly mother went into hospital you could see they just wrote her off - too old to be worth the investment. Not even proper palliative care until I and a friend of hers started raising a stink.

      --
      The tyrant will always find a pretext for his tyranny - Aesop
    156. Re:And next up by be951 · · Score: 1
      From the GP, with emphasis added:

      Really you can get basic coverage for 10K per year for a family of four.

      So, if you're take home is $12,000 a year, your gross should be around $15K, assuming that's wages. If it is scholarship money or a stipend of some kind, I'm not sure how that's taxed, but it is still going to be a pretty low income. Either way it's well below poverty for a family of 4. You should qualify for all kinds of public assistance like welfare, food stamps, AFDC, Medicaid... oh, there we go. Problem solved. Now, if you misunderstood the post you were responding to, and don't have a spouse and kids, you'll be looking at much, much less than 10 grand a year. And you might even still qualify for Medicaid at $12K a year. And many colleges and universities have basic health services available at little or no cost to students.

    157. Re:And next up by LunaticTippy · · Score: 1

      People calling kickbacks a myth piss me off. People believe in this "myth" because it has happened so often

      There is no oversight. I was mortified by how many doctors insist on a particular lab performing a test. There aren't any innocent reasons why they would insist on a particular lab.

      The reason is often financial interest. If you don't believe that it happens all the time you are a fool, or you are in on it.

      --
      Man, you really need that seminar!
    158. Re:And next up by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 1

      Medicare?

      Medicare has a 3% overhead, compared to about 17% for private health care providers - it seems that advertising and CEOs take up a lot of money. The government runs a lot of things efficiently and, more importantly, it runs them fairly.

      --
      That is all.
    159. Re:And next up by pease1 · · Score: 1
      Aged, but the primary points are the same for the future of Medicare; it is a house of cards that will fail many of us just as we need it the most. Our children will not be able to do this AND pay for all the trillions we are spending today.

      Not all that 17% goes to CEOs, there are salaries for many jobs, and that advertising creates jobs too. Government doesn't create new jobs or new wealth, it can't. I guess "fair" might be the day you or I reach the point that some young kid decides we are of no value and should be put down.

      I'd love to hear more examples of the government running things efficiently. Katrina? The Big Dig? Highways and bridges to no-where? Iraq? Mogadishu? (to be fair), Challenger? Columbia? If you are a bit right minded and at least honest, here is a good list, including documentation about waste in the Medicare program.

    160. Re:And next up by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      Well, what's interesting is that IIRC the study suggests that Lipitor reduces the risk of heart attacks more than the other statins even if the other drugs reduce cholesterol levels to similar levels.. This at least hints that some other side effect of Lipitor causes cholesterol to not accumulate as much, and that lowering cholesterol levels is a red herring in most of the studies to date. This is further supported by a study by University Hospital in Toronto that showed that among heart attack patients, the probability of a second heart attack did not vary significantly based on cholesterol levels. (Citation needed.) If high serum cholesterol levels were really the root cause, one would expect a significantly higher risk of a second heart attack in those with higher serum cholesterol levels. The lack of continued correlation within this reduced subset of the population suggests to me that high cholesterol levels are likely a frequent (but not guaranteed) symptom of the real underlying problem, rather than the actual cause.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    161. Re:And next up by Neuticle · · Score: 1

      I'm not saying that doctors never commit crimes (sadly Medicare fraud is all too-common) and didn't mean to imply that kickbacks never happen, but citing two kickback cases 6 years apart is hardly an epidemic. There is oversight, probably not enough, but I think it's safe to say the in the overwhelming majority of cases, a doctor is NOT benefiting financially from ordering a test. Since the perception of many people is that doctors usually DO benefit, I would call that a myth.

      Also, in both those cases, it was labs making sure they got all the tests from a particular doctor, not the doctor ordering unnecessary tests (the lab was then doing further cheating on their own, like un-bundling). Unnecessary tests would still (likely) get rejected by the insurance, where there is plenty of scrutiny. This would result in the doctor getting into trouble fast. What they did was still very wrong, but this is an important distinction.

      As for doctors not having legitimate reasons for preferring one lab over another: Labs are not all the same. Some labs are avoided for known low quality, some for slow service - both of which can vary test to test, and some because they F-up billing or myriad other reasons. It might be that the doctor gets compatible electronic-medical-record results from one lab and paper copies from another that someone has to enter in manually. It may just be that the person who runs a lab has burned bridges with every doctor in the area and people don't want to send business to him/her. I have seen ALL of these happen in just a couple of years working in healthcare.

      --
      "Cheeze it!" - Bender
    162. Re:And next up by sjames · · Score: 1

      I do agree that the current party line WRT cholesterol, diet, and heart disease and how they interact is in quite a sorry state. I agree with you that more likely high cholesterol and heart disease are effects of a common root cause rather than themselves being cause and effect or at the least that high cholesterol is only one of several factors that combine to produce heart disease.

      The relationship between dietary fat and heart disease seems to be similarly confounded. We know, for example that the Inuit eat a great deal of fat (literally, take a slab of fat and eat it) and do not suffer as much heart disease as other people who eat reletively little fat.

    163. Re:And next up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If we had cheap tests, then we could take them all.

  4. Goes to show. by palegray.net · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The human body is pretty darn good at healing itself. There is absolutely no replacement for a decent diet, moderate exercise, and a positive attitude. The last factor alone has been repeatedly shown to boost immune system health over a variety of drug-based treatments.

    1. Re:Goes to show. by Hurricane78 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'd say in fact, especially for us people who like tinkering and tuning complex machines, getting our body to run perfectly should be a pretty easy and fun thing to do.
      The them "species-appropriate" is the key word. What is the perfect food for our machine called body? How do you maintain it? How does the brain work?

      If you look that stuff up, it all becomes so totally obvious. And much simpler to implement.

      About the last factor: What you mean is the placebo effect. There were experiments, where people became real swellings, from imagining a bee sting alone. This is still some mechanism that is not fully understood. But I think we can control more of our body trough our mind, than we think. Even optimize our healing.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
    2. Re:Goes to show. by nloop · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The human body is pretty darn good at healing itself. There is absolutely no replacement for a decent diet, moderate exercise, and a positive attitude. The last factor alone has been repeatedly shown to boost immune system health over a variety of drug-based treatments.

      While I agree that a lot of our respective societies health issues are preventable, I am 26 years old, can run a marathon, and rarely ever touch red meat and I call shenanigans on the idea that diet and exercise are a cure-all! I have 140/85 blood pressure (high) despite doing cardio work 5 days a week and eating right. I have knee problems when it's cold, back problems all the time, and suffer from bronchitis every winter from exercise in the cold. Sometimes I feel like a healthy lifestyle is making me fall apart.

      However, my qualm is more with more with scientologists, and that various left field christian sects that refuse to immunize their kids or see doctors. Modern medicine is useful. Really. It is. There is more than diet, exercise, and positive thinking.

    3. Re:Goes to show. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You sound like Bill Maher. Sometimes he gets going about the Big Pharma conspiracy and the importance of healthy eating, etc. and all of his guests start to get uncomfortable and look away...

    4. Re:Goes to show. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > There is absolutely no replacement for a decent diet, moderate exercise, and a positive attitude. The last factor alone has been repeatedly shown to boost immune system health over a variety of drug-based treatments.

      oh rly? I think the folks with a stroke might prefer rapid TPA administration to "It'll be okay! Just take a walk around the ED and eat this apple."

      The person in the car accident with ruptured spleen might like a surgical intervention, too :)

    5. Re:Goes to show. by nine-times · · Score: 3, Insightful

      There's merit in what you say, but on the other hand, I'll take antibiotics when I have an infection. I'll go in for any recommended cancer screenings, and if they find something, I'll be glad for the best medical treatment I can get, because I don't want to rely on diet, exercise, and attitude to fix that.

      There is no replacement for diet, exercise, and a positive attitude, but those things also aren't a complete replacement for medical treatment.

    6. Re:Goes to show. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sometimes I feel like a healthy lifestyle is making me fall apart.

      Extremely high levels of exercise are not a healthy lifestyle. Look at the state of many professional athletes when they retire. Or my family. Most of my siblings played sports at a high amateur level and as we approach middle age their bodies are fucked. I've always done moderate exercise and I'm in much better shape than them now.

      Everything in moderation. Seriously.

    7. Re:Goes to show. by Kokuyo · · Score: 1

      The human body is pretty darn good at healing itself. There is absolutely no replacement for a decent diet, moderate exercise, and a positive attitude. The last factor alone has been repeatedly shown to boost immune system health over a variety of drug-based treatments.

      In light of this artice, what IS a decent diet? Is it five portions of fruit a day, no fat and no salt, as many people with diverse degrees say, or is it rather a good idea to listen to what your body wants to eat even though it may partially contradict common standards?

      How are we, common citizens, to know when and to what extent certain studies are a sham and when to trust them?

      Personally, I've started to keep an eye open for chewing gums and the like containing sugar. I, and my wife, have made the observation that 'sweets' with sugar replacements usually lead to ravenous appetite, making us consume stuff we usually don't consume (again, speaking from experience) after chewing stuff containing sugar. The same principle applies to diet coke (apart from the fact that diet coke tastes like shit...).

      Also, drinking four to five liters of water a day while being on a no-salt diet can lead to very serious consequences, yet going as far back as the Cosby Show it seems that a lot of people believe this to be healthy.

      Frankly, what is a common man like myself to do besides ignoring all diet and health fads and just live the way that makes me feel best?

    8. Re:Goes to show. by nloop · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I utilize periodized training. Weeks on, weeks off, gradual build up to a big race, taking a month of very little exercise to let the body recover. I take my resting heart rate every morning. If it goes up, your body is heading towards a overtrained state, time to take a rest. I'm pretty careful about it. As far as middle aged... take a look at marathon runners. You don't peak until you are in your 30s, people run them competitively long after that. Lance is pushing 40 and is about to race The Tour. Ned Overend, one of the pioneers of mountain biking is in his 50s and races competitively. Train smart and you can go till your 90. I think it's more genetic and I got blessed with high blood pressure and joint problems.

      I also utilize my UID when countering someone.

    9. Re:Goes to show. by tepples · · Score: 0, Troll

      However, my qualm is more with more with scientologists, and that various left field christian sects that refuse to immunize their kids or see doctors.

      Wouldn't those sects be right field?

    10. Re:Goes to show. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am 26 years old, can run a marathon, and rarely ever touch red meat and I call shenanigans on the idea that diet and exercise are a cure-all! I have 140/85 blood pressure (high) despite doing cardio work 5 days a week and eating right. I have knee problems when it's cold, back problems all the time, and suffer from bronchitis every winter from exercise in the cold. Sometimes I feel like a healthy lifestyle is making me fall apart.

      I suggest a regular diet of whisky, plenty of red wine and red meat, then a night with a big-titted blonde. Haven't had a cold in years.

      Damn sure I can't run a marathon like I used to, but I must say I don't miss it...

    11. Re:Goes to show. by neoshmengi · · Score: 1

      The vast majority of people who don't immunize aren't doing it for religious reasons. There's a growing segment of 'educated' people who have 'researched' the issue and have decided that the risks outweigh the benefits.

      Unfortunately there are 'professionals' within the health care system that spout this idiocy, including nurses and chiropractors.

    12. Re:Goes to show. by bloobamator · · Score: 1

      Your health problems are most likely caused by your obsessive over-exercising. Running is overall bad for you. The high-impact shock is ballistic. Try backing off on the exercise a little and switching to something less ballistic, lower-impact. And if you insist on running in cold weather, keep your throat covered.

      --
      "Crude and slow, clansman. Your attack was no better than that of a clumsy child."
    13. Re:Goes to show. by nrook · · Score: 1

      However, my qualm is more with more with scientologists, and that various left field christian sects that refuse to immunize their kids or see doctors. Modern medicine is useful. Really. It is. There is more than diet, exercise, and positive thinking.

      While scientologists have a thing about psychology, I don't think they have any problems with the rest of modern medicine. Are you thinking of Christian Science?

    14. Re:Goes to show. by neoshmengi · · Score: 1

      Actually, there was a study that compared the joint problems of joggers and non joggers over decades. Surprisingly, the joggers had fewer problems.

    15. Re:Goes to show. by BarryJacobsen · · Score: 1

      I also utilize my UID when countering someone.

      Do not misread as "I also utilize my IUD when encountering someone" - changes the meaning dramatically!

    16. Re:Goes to show. by mpeskett · · Score: 1

      In light of this artice, what IS a decent diet? Is it five portions of fruit a day, no fat and no salt, as many people with diverse degrees say, or is it rather a good idea to listen to what your body wants to eat even though it may partially contradict common standards?

      To some extent I agree with you there - don't fear fat/salt/sugar, we need to get some those "unhealthy" things as part of the balance, but left to satisfy our wants to the full we'd eat them to excess because they're so much more easily available now than when our food-instincts were set.

      Caveman types needed fat/salt/sugar to taste really damned good as a motivator to seek those relatively scarce foods out, instead of taking the easier option of eating whatever the nearest edible plant happens to be. Plus, the extra effort of obtaining energy-rich (fatty/sugary) foods would help to balance out the extra calories from eating them.

      The key really is to just be sensible... we know what's healthy or unhealthy, just try to keep it balanced (all things in moderation, but some extra fruit never hurts)

    17. Re:Goes to show. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since they tend to vote democratic, I'm gonna go with, "whaa?"

    18. Re:Goes to show. by JWSmythe · · Score: 2, Interesting

          You're amazingly correct.

          I tell kids, pain is in their head. The sensory impulses tell the brain "this happened". Without the brain processing the input, it never happened.

          Take a kid who just tripped and banged something. Distract them from the pain. Tickle them. Poke them in the arm. Some people just yell "Hey, stop crying!". It distracts them from the pain, and it's either meaningless or just doesn't hurt as bad.

          I've sure you've heard of people who have walked on broken legs, because either they had to, or they were stupid. Sometimes you'll read stories of athletes and druggies doing that. They ignore the pain (mentally, or chemically), so it doesn't exist. Some people meditate. I just focus on ignoring the pain, by focusing on something else.

          Years ago, I cut my leg pretty badly. I could have cried over it. Instead, I gathered supplies to clean and protect the wound. When I poured alcohol on it, the people around me flinched, but I didn't. A few said "Ouch! Doesn't that hurt?!" Sure it hurts, but I was focused on cleaning the wound, rather than thinking about it. It wasn't that bad. About 3" long, 3/8" deep, and had spread 3/8" wide. I had to ask for help pinching it shut, so I could bandage it properly. I've seen people with papercuts scream more, and they weren't bleeding. I prefer to focus on what has to be done, rather than what is wrong. Then I can observe what else is happening.

          I'm not a warm fuzzy meditative holistic nut, that'll drink tea and fruit juice to make the world a better place. I do like to understand the human body, which is an amazing collection of parts, with a little something more that makes us alive. Well, alive if you're reading this. :)

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    19. Re:Goes to show. by lawpoop · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I think that the human organism basis some of its healing on its perception of its role in society. We are a social creature. Every culture has some kind of 'theory of medicine' -- that disease has a cause, which can be treated by certain practices, procedures, and bitter plant concoction ( the taste of 'bitter' is the chemical recognition of alkaloids, or drug compounds, in a plant ).

      If we are receiving 'treatment', or attention from the community when we are known to be sick, then our body's healing response will amp up.

      Likewise, people can die basically 'on command' in certain circumstances, when a doctor or sorcerer pronounces them dead. In some tribe somewhere, if a shaman does a certain ritual called a 'bone-pointing', the person who gets cursed will sicken and die in about three days -- shorter than you would die from thirst or hunger. Likewise, back in the 80s when AIDS was first on the scene, people would sometimes die within days of a diagnosis. Doctors didn't find any physical cause; they just kind of willed themself to death, probably because of the severe social stigma and lack of hope that an AIDS diagnosis meant at that point.

      So I think placebo medicine will be a big insight into understanding human health in the future.

      --
      Computers are useless. They can only give you answers.
      -- Pablo Picasso
    20. Re:Goes to show. by American+Terrorist · · Score: 1

      The problem is most people weren't designed to run marathons. I am not a doctor or expert, but I'm pretty sure running 26 miles with no rest is bad for you no matter what. Running is bad for your knees, if it hurts that much then use an exercise bike.

    21. Re:Goes to show. by nloop · · Score: 1

      See my reply earlier about over training. I'm not. I'm mostly a cyclist, however, I do triathlons so I run just enough to stay in shape for those. All of my running is offroad though to minimize impact and boredom. Have you ever tried wearing a balaclava while exercising in cold weather? It becomes a wet, frozen, smelly, snot rag.

    22. Re:Goes to show. by nloop · · Score: 1
      An excerpt of wikipedia regarding Scientology and medicine:

      These claims began with the 1950 publication of founder L. Ron Hubbard's book Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental Health (DMSMH). Chapter 5 of DMSMH, Psychosomatic Illness, asserted "The problem of psychosomatic illness is entirely embraced by Dianetics, and by Dianetic technique such illness has been eradicated entirely in every case. About 70 percent of the physician's current roster of diseases fall in the category of psychosomatic illness." Hubbard added, "That all illnesses are psychosomatic is, of course, absurd, for there exist, after all, life forms called germs which have survival as their goals." [emphasis in the original.] Later in the chapter Hubbard asserted, "Bizarre aches and pains in various portions of the body are generally psychosomatic. Migraine headaches are psychosomatic and, with the others, are uniformly cured by Dianetic therapy. (And the word cured is used in its fullest sense." [emphasis in the original.] Such claims have often brought the Church to the attention of law enforcement and regulatory agencies.

      And yes, I was also refering to Christian Science, they are the ones who are notorious for not immunizing children or in a few rare cases denying children life saving medical treatments.

      Just goes to show, mixing science and religion doesn't work. Not even in name only.

    23. Re:Goes to show. by American+Terrorist · · Score: 1
      I used to take anti-biotics all the time when I had infections. My nose would be stuffed full of mucus 75% of every winter. Then I stopped taking anti-biotics, and now I only get infections 2 to 3 weeks per winter. I strongly suggest everyone stop taking antibiotics unless their infection is severe or have a compromised immune system.

      Most people use anti-biotics for convenience rather than need. The symptoms are alleviated almost instantly, but it just makes the bacteria stronger.

    24. Re:Goes to show. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have been there (similar fitness level and similar symptoms) and my conclusion, ~10 years later, is that the life style I as a young male considered healthy isn't so healthy after all. Heavy exercising is not healthy and not eating red meat is not a guarantee for a healthy diet. Stretching, yoga and meditation will do you more good than cardio work 5 days a week and running marathons.

    25. Re:Goes to show. by TheLink · · Score: 0, Troll

      AFAIK Lance is an outlier.

      While moderate exercise (even just walking) is scientifically proven to be beneficial to the average person, I'm not so sure about doing marathons, Tour de France and other stuff.

      We could hypothetically say "Spiderman is pushing X and is still climbing walls and swinging from building to building", that's no proof that it will benefit the average person.

      As you say, genes count a lot. Some people recover from certain injuries faster than others even at the same age. There are many people who aren't tough enough for rugby, even if they tried - they'd get some knee injury and that's it. The tough ones are the ones who stay. Self selecting sample.

      --
    26. Re:Goes to show. by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

      The human body is pretty darn good at healing itself. There is absolutely no replacement for a decent diet, moderate exercise, and a positive attitude. The last factor alone has been repeatedly shown to boost immune system health over a variety of drug-based treatments.

      I'd hate to burst your bubble, but germs don't care how happy you are, and your white blood cells don't work harder because you feel chipper.

      The first two absolutely help in much higher quantities than the third, but if I have a disease like Legionellosis bring on the drugs.

      I'd love to see an efficacy study done on happiness or attitude. I wonder how that experiment would be set up.

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
    27. Re:Goes to show. by GNT · · Score: 1

      NO, the last factor has been shown to have no effect whatsoever on the vast majority of body processes, including most specifically the immune system, which is a molecular based processing system which has NO conscious component.

    28. Re:Goes to show. by TheLink · · Score: 0, Redundant

      As the OP says, your body recovers from most infections by itself. Many antibiotics have unpleasant side effects - some can even cause permanent damage.

      So you should only take antibiotics if the disease is significantly worse than the antibiotics. Overuse of antibiotics has caused many of them to become less effective, and so doctors have to resort to the really nasty ones more and more often.

      As an example, if you have a cold, skip the antibiotics even if you have a secondary infection (unless it is really bad - ask the doc - do I really need antibiotics? A good doc will tell you the truth).

      Gargle whisky if you want to kill the bacteria in your throat ;). Or just gargle a warm water+salt+lime+honey solution (which might sting less ;) ).

      As for medical treatment for cancer, if the treatment is extremely expensive, makes you feel like shit for months, only gives you a small chance of a cure, you might prefer to not take treatment (especially if you are older - heck if you are older the treatment could kill you or weaken you so something else kills you).

      Sometimes the best medical treatment is no treatment, or just palliative.

      --
    29. Re:Goes to show. by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      You're definitely on to something there. It's just like when going to give blood. The little prick device they use to extract a couple drops of blood to test the hemoglobin bothers me a lot more than the big old phlebotomy needle, even though the needle hurts more. I realize it's a psychological thing, perhaps having to do with the suddenness of the finger prick vs. gently inserting a needle.

      In any event, I definitely know that while maybe I can't eliminate pain with attitude, I _can_ make it a whole lot worse.

      I recently watched John Carpenters "The Thing", and despite it being a cutting-edge science-fiction/horror movie, Carpenter noted in the commentary track that the scene with the characters using a knife to make a cut to extract blood bothered many people more than the hard-core blood-n-guts effects. One element is that cutting your finger is realistic and everyone's experienced it, as opposed to being eaten by a polymorphic alien, which is a somewhat less common occurrence. But another element is, I think, the same reason the pin-prick dealie bothers me more than many things that actually cause more pain.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    30. Re:Goes to show. by Cyrus20 · · Score: 1

      he did not say that it was a cure all he said that it helps because the body is indeed very good at healing itself. yes a decent diet, moderate exercise, and a positive attitude will not cure everything but for a minor illness or pains there is a good chuck of times that with rest water a good diet and rehab in right way you will heal up just fine.

    31. Re:Goes to show. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >I also utilize my UID when countering someone.

      Since when did a 6 digit /. UID count as small?

    32. Re:Goes to show. by Bender0x7D1 · · Score: 1

      Actually, people ARE designed to run - even marathon distances. There is a paper published in Nature that described how humans actually evolved to be endurance runners. I can only link to the abstract, but you can find news stories about the paper using your favorite search engine.

      I think the biggest reason people believe running is bad for you is the number of injuries that occur when people try to do too much, too fast. They figure they "used to run", and walk around every day, so how bad could it be? It can be really bad. Imagine you hadn't done any stretching for years, and decide to lock your knees and jerk down to touch your toes. Now do it 1000 times. (People generally run more than 1 step.) Would you be surprised if you pulled, or even tore, your muscles? Some people would. Some would even claim that stretching is bad for you. The better answer would be you need to slowly progress towards your goal.

      So, you get people who realize they are out of shape and want to make a grand, bold statement about their newfound desire to be healthy - so they sign up for a marathon. They start training really hard, get injured, say running is bad for you and don't want to run ever again. The problem is that it takes time to properly train for a marathon. A LOT of time. If you don't run at all, it takes about 10 weeks to work up to running a 5k (3.1 miles) and that's training 30 minutes, 5 days a week. Once you are capable of the 5k, you can start a beginner marathon training program that takes about 16 weeks to build up to a marathon. Generally there is only 1 long run a week which might take less than an hour the first week but will eventually take 3-6 hours as the mileage increases. Most people don't want to put in that much time, look for shortcuts, and end up hurt.

      So don't blame running. It is an intense activity and needs to be approached carefully, but isn't inherently dangerous.

      --
      Reading code is like reading the dictionary - you have to read half of it before you can go back and understand it.
    33. Re:Goes to show. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      germs don't care how happy you are

      True.

      your white blood cells don't work harder because you feel chipper

      This appears to be false. Many studies have shown that patient attitude has a profound effect on treatment outcome.

    34. Re:Goes to show. by spineboy · · Score: 1

      Maybe because when you were a child you had more colds and infections, as it is common in kids. Once people get to the age of 12 or so, they tend to grow out of earaches.

      --
      ..........FULL STOP.
    35. Re:Goes to show. by colinrichardday · · Score: 1

      Did they take into account that the non-joggers might have been (on average) more overweight than the joggers?

    36. Re:Goes to show. by localman · · Score: 1

      I think the key in the parent post was "moderate exercise". I know a lot of people who exercise a lot as you describe and have some similar problems. Perhaps we're really not meant to run marathons. I know this sounds like heresy to most athletic folks, but then there's all those blown knees, bad backs, and illness from cold weather exercise to take into account.

      Cheers.

    37. Re:Goes to show. by ffflala · · Score: 1

      The human body is pretty darn good at healing itself. There is absolutely no replacement for a decent diet, moderate exercise, and a positive attitude. The last factor alone has been repeatedly shown to boost immune system health over a variety of drug-based treatments.

      While I agree that a lot of our respective societies health issues are preventable, I am 26 years old, can run a marathon, and rarely ever touch red meat and I call shenanigans on the idea that diet and exercise are a cure-all! I have 140/85 blood pressure (high) despite doing cardio work 5 days a week and eating right. I have knee problems when it's cold, back problems all the time, and suffer from bronchitis every winter from exercise in the cold. Sometimes I feel like a healthy lifestyle is making me fall apart

      I think the GP's point was that modern medicine works best when you're not using it to counter the entirely avoidable effects of a sedentary, poor-diet lifestyle.

      As for you personally, marathons are pretty tough on a body and might not be as healthy as you think. After all, the original marathon runner Pheidippides dropped dead the right after he finished his first one. Your knee and back problems certainly do sound consistent with ongoing high-impact exercise.

      As for your high blood pressure, you might be able to make helpful dietary adjustments. For example the study below found that drinking beet juice lowered blood pressure. The results were noticeable within one hour, so it'd be easy for you to test the validity of it.

      http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/7228420.stm

    38. Re:Goes to show. by palegray.net · · Score: 1

      Where in my original post did you see me claim that modern medicine is useless? Putting words in peoples' mouths can make you look like an idiot. Medicine is an extremely valuable part of modern life, but you don't have to treat what you don't suffer from in the first place. Hence, prevention is always the best medicine.

    39. Re:Goes to show. by palegray.net · · Score: 1

      Why do people insist on putting words in my mouth? My point is simple: modern medicine is extremely valuable, but you don't have to fix what you don't suffer from in the first place. Taking appropriate care of your body is the biggest part of avoiding disease in the first place. Unfortunately, most people seem to treat their bodies like crap. No wonder healthcare is out of control.

    40. Re:Goes to show. by palegray.net · · Score: 1

      In my view, there's nothing at all wrong with immunization, and I think parents who refuse to immunize for purely religious reasons are idiots at best, and should be potential cases for social services intervention at worst. What these people fail to understand is that they have a greater responsibility to society to avoid the spread of disease, unless of course they don't plan on ever going out in public. See: Wacky Fundamentalist Compounds(TM).

      Healthcare "professionals" who tout these views need to be fired.

    41. Re:Goes to show. by nine-times · · Score: 1

      I'm not saying I'm eager to take antibiotics. If I have a sore throat, I generally take care of myself, gargle, drink lots of water, etc. for about 3 weeks. If after 2-3 weeks I don't feel significantly better, I go to the doctor and describe the situation, and ask what he advises.

      But my point is, if I have a bad enough infection or persistent enough infection that the doctor prescribes antibiotics, then I don't think eating tofu and jogging 5 miles is going to fix it. Yes, medical treatments require the appropriate context. You shouldn't just give antibiotics or chemotherapy to random people, but that doesn't make them illegitimate or unhelpful. Sometimes the best medical treatment is no treatment, but certainly sometimes the best medical treatment is medical treatment.

    42. Re:Goes to show. by syousef · · Score: 1

      The human body is pretty darn good at healing itself. There is absolutely no replacement for a decent diet, moderate exercise, and a positive attitude. The last factor alone has been repeatedly shown to boost immune system health over a variety of drug-based treatments.

      Sure, there's also no replacement for medical intervention when the body can't heal itself. Or are you forgetting that before modern medicine people died of things that we now treat quite easily, a large proportion of women died in childbirth, and life expectancy was much lower.

      The problem is that the medical profession does not operate as scientifically as it pretends to, and so things are far from perfect. Still a lot better than they were a couple of hundred years ago. Just take a look at your history books.

      --
      These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
    43. Re:Goes to show. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps it's exactly your lifestyle which is causing the issue. If I may suggest a read thru http://www.marksdailyapple.com/ you might find exactly why you are having such issues. And remember, the first guy who ran the marathon died on the spot.

    44. Re:Goes to show. by palegray.net · · Score: 1

      You're coming off sounding pretty pretentious. I made no assertion that modern medicine doesn't have its place; it's a critical part of maintaining a healthy life. I'm certainly not advocating ignoring medical issues, simply pointing out that you don't have to fix a problem if it doesn't happen in the first place.

      A lot of people walk around with the attitude that they can ignore the needs of their bodies and depend on medicine to fix those mistakes. Those views need to change, as prevention is the best medicine.

      I'm a big fan of history, by the way.

    45. Re:Goes to show. by dan14807 · · Score: 1

      Marathoners are often plagued with health problems. Do a little less running and a little more strength training and you'll (surprise) strengthen your body. Marathoning will just turn your body into a skinny little wraith optimized for pounding the pavement for 26.2 miles at a time.

    46. Re:Goes to show. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Running is neither natural nor healthy for your body. If you run marathon distances, it's no wonder you suffer aches.

    47. Re:Goes to show. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you aware that running marathons is NOT actually good for you?

      It's very hard on the joints and the heart. Many marathoners dies at relatively young ages.

    48. Re:Goes to show. by JWSmythe · · Score: 1

          On your idea, have you ever paid attention to the audience at a movie. Sure, some will flinch when the big bad gruesome monster rips the head off the innocent girl, and proceeds to munch on her body like an ear of corn. (speaking of which, I'm hungry.) Every guy in the theater will react, somewhere between flinching and downright crying if a character gets kicked in the balls. For some reason, the girls will smile or laugh. I guess it's all on which side of that action you've been on in the past.

          I've confused a few people. I've both donated blood, and had IV's put in. They always say to look away, but I watch, so I can understand what they're doing. The worst was, when I had eye surgery, I was the first patient of the day, and the stuff in the IV (I don't remember what they administered first) was really cold. They apologized, but there wasn't much choice. Use it, or make an appointment for another time. The IV felt weird, as they slid it into the vein. The feeling of my hand and arm chilling from the inside out was disturbing. Not enough for me to react weird, just enough for me to talk about it. They were entertained. :)

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    49. Re:Goes to show. by Acer500 · · Score: 1

      While I agree that a lot of our respective societies health issues are preventable, I am 26 years old, can run a marathon, and rarely ever touch red meat and I call shenanigans on the idea that diet and exercise are a cure-all! I have 140/85 blood pressure (high) despite doing cardio work 5 days a week and eating right. I have knee problems when it's cold, back problems all the time, and suffer from bronchitis every winter from exercise in the cold. Sometimes I feel like a healthy lifestyle is making me fall apart.

      I'm not a good (counter)example, but I'm 28 years old, pretty sedentary (gym twice a week and only started recently after 8 years of neglect), overweight.. and I've only needed to go to a doctor a couple of times in the last 10 years, and only missed work for medical reasons twice in my lifetime ... I'm far from perfect health, but I do count my blessings (though, if I don't start to pick up and get back in shape, I'll regret it later)

      --
      There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics.
    50. Re:Goes to show. by similar_name · · Score: 1

      I'd love to see an efficacy study done on happiness or attitude. I wonder how that experiment would be set up.

      A few things you might be interested in reading

      Placebo effect

      Neural top down control of physiology

      Depression and poor health

    51. Re:Goes to show. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Numerous studies have shown that patients with a 'positive attitude' do not have better outcomes than patients with a negative attitude about their situation.

    52. Re:Goes to show. by dbIII · · Score: 1

      There's a sport called rogaining (don't laugh, has nothing to do with a US hair treatment), which is running around in fairly wild areas with a map and compass for 8, 12 or 24 hours to go to as many control points as you can in the time. The start and finish times are chosen so it's half in daylight and half at night. Some of the over 60s do incredibly well to the embarrassing point that they would have placed in the open division.

    53. Re:Goes to show. by iacvlvs · · Score: 1

      PLEASE provide references. I get that airy-fairy flaky-reiki new age balderdash all the time and I'd love to have some solid evidence to back up my repudiations.

      --
      GENERATION 25: If you haven't yet, copy this into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation. (Social experiment)
    54. Re:Goes to show. by DuckDodgers · · Score: 1

      I take my resting heart rate every morning. If it goes up, your body is heading towards a overtrained state, time to take a rest.

      Interesting. When I do strength training, my resting pulse will be elevated for a week or more. It takes at least two weeks without strength workouts for my resting pulse to drop back to 60 or so. I train hard, but not hard enough to get tunnel vision or vomit during the workout.

      I know running can be a positive addiction, to to speak, but I don't think genetics are the cause of your joint aches. Force is mass times acceleration, and over five hundred high speed strides every time you run a mile is a tremendous amount of force for your joints to withstand. There's a stereotype that most people are too lazy to keep up a running routine for years on end, but my anecdotal experience is that most people are stopped by joint pain, not laziness.

    55. Re:Goes to show. by syousef · · Score: 1

      You're coming off sounding pretty pretentious.

      Do we really need such childish accusations?

      I made no assertion that modern medicine doesn't have its place; it's a critical part of maintaining a healthy life. I'm certainly not advocating ignoring medical issues, simply pointing out that you don't have to fix a problem if it doesn't happen in the first place.

      Your statement certainly seems to fall along the lines that you should blame people for their own medical conditions. You're forgetting that there is a genetic component to a lot of illnesses associated with an unhealthy lifestyle.

      A lot of people walk around with the attitude that they can ignore the needs of their bodies and depend on medicine to fix those mistakes. Those views need to change, as prevention is the best medicine.

      The problem is its not so black and white. Its easy to say someone should get regular exercise and eat healthy food when the reality is there may be things preventing them from doing so - medical conditions that make excercise difficult, a job that doesn't allow them the freedom to exercise, a lack of availability of healthy food (especially can be true outside of traditional 9-5 working hours when the only thing left open are convenience stores selling junk food). The person may have a metabolism that means they desperately need to lose weight but find it very difficult (Look up Syndrome X, also known as pre-diabetes). If it were easy to lose weight and live healthy, the long term weight loss stats would not be so incredibly bad. Blaming a handful of individuals for being lazy and weak willed is one thing, but when it turns out that the vast majority of people can't main weight loss for 5 years you have to stop and consider that it might not just be weak minds causing this. You call me pretentious but seem to be happy to blame people for their unhealthy state without taking the time to realize they have other pressures to deal with. It is this kind of attitude that allows an entire weight loss industry to spring up that guilts people into making drastic or unwise changes (like replacement shake diets) that also make people sick and place a strain on health care. Unfortunately there is a lot of money to be made conning people.

      I'm a big fan of history, by the way.

      Then you would know that despite some slippage over the last few decades, the human race is doing very well at keeping itself alive and healthy for longer, and that you'll never have a society where no one gets sick.

      --
      These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
    56. Re:Goes to show. by juan2074 · · Score: 1

      If immunization really works, then you need not worry about catching any disease that you have been vaccinated for from those who did not get the vaccine, right?

  5. Medicine is a psudoscience? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    If you think of pseudoscience as a practice that looks like science, but suffers from an ideologically motivated disconnect between evidence and conclusion, medicine suddenly seem to fit the bill.

    1. Re:Medicine is a psudoscience? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some parts of modern medicine, sure. I think we're better off with what we have now than what we use to have though. Sometimes the lesser of two evils really is much much better.

    2. Re:Medicine is a psudoscience? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All non-laboratory science suffers from that to some extent.

    3. Re:Medicine is a psudoscience? by syntaxglitch · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Medicine is more like some unknown mixture of actual science and cargo-cult pseudoscience, both using the same tools and terminologies.

      Separating the two is a nontrivial problem.

    4. Re:Medicine is a psudoscience? by defile39 · · Score: 1

      What we have with medicine as a science is the problem that occurs when you assume that results from clinical trials can be applied uniformly to all patients. They cannot. Different people will respond differently to any given treatment. Sometimes the differences matter - sometimes they don't.

      The problem is exacerbated when you're trying to verify sporadic anecdotal evidence. Take the knee surgery example cited above. For some people, the surgical procedure is incredibly effective at alleviating pain and improving function. For many, it does little good. We don't have a good way of determining who is who yet. We may never have a good way of determining who is who. Should we stop the procedure all together? Should we deny its benefits to those on whom it would work?

      So . . . medicine is not pseudoscience. Medicine is a practice that attempts to use information obtained through the scientific method. The scientific method produces results with limited applicability. It, however, is the best we've got.

    5. Re:Medicine is a psudoscience? by Bearhouse · · Score: 1

      cargo-cult pseudoscience

      I'm not sure that's appropriate...

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cargo_cult

    6. Re:Medicine is a psudoscience? by m50d · · Score: 1

      The term is used to refer to people who use "scientific-looking" methods and terminology (white coats, journals, etc.) while missing the fundamental point of science (testing through controlled experiments, ideally triple-blind), in the same way as a cargo cult constructs things that look like airstrips, radar towers etc. while missing the fundamental point of those things.

      --
      I am trolling
    7. Re:Medicine is a psudoscience? by shrimppesto · · Score: 1

      One can call it a pseudoscience, but it is sometimes the best we can do. It is very hard to achieve scientific rigor in a field where it is so difficult to control your experiment.

      Consider: In other fields, you can build chemical compounds that achieve absurd levels of purity. You can breed mice that are genetically identical to one another. You can place said mice in a controlled environment - you control their diet, their exposure to stimuli, their exposure to pathogens. You can set the protocol for how you do your experiment, when you do it, under what conditions. The entire experiment can take place in a locked lab.

      On the other hand ... In medicine, you cannot breed humans that are genetically identical to one another - each one is genetically unique, and more and more research is beginning to link one's genotype with disease predisposition and therapeutic response. You cannot ensure that your humans have a homogenous set of environmental stimuli, because you can't exactly lock them up. You can't even be sure that they aren't cheating, and taking additional meds behind your back that you know nothing about. The majority of them will have a diverse array of comorbid conditions that pollute your data and make it difficult to draw conclusions. See the problem?

      Ironically, if you were able to perform such controlled experiments, their conclusions would often be poorly applicable, because your studied population (genetically identical disease-free humans living in a cage) would bear NO resemblance to the patient in front of you. You can't study apples and apply the findings to oranges.

    8. Re:Medicine is a psudoscience? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Medicine is more like some unknown mixture of actual science and cargo-cult pseudoscience, both using the same tools and terminologies.

      Separating the two is a nontrivial problem.

      Absolutely agree!

  6. statins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do medications count as medical treatments? Such as how statins do not lower your risk of death? Which is not surprising because cholesterol is a symptom not a cause.

    1. Re:statins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sortof like how your ignorance is a symptom of a failed school system, not a cause.

    2. Re:statins by hrvatska · · Score: 1

      Do medications count as medical treatments? Such as how statins do not lower your risk of death? Which is not surprising because cholesterol is a symptom not a cause.

      I'd be interested why you conclude that. This abastract and this article, and quite a few other sources, offer good evidence that statins lower the risk of death in the general population.

  7. Chiropractic Quacks Next? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Will removing chiropractic from insurance coverage be next? Sure it feels good, but so does a massage for much, much less.

    We can only hope that insurance companies wise up!

  8. A Nit To Pick by darkmeridian · · Score: 3, Informative

    Prescription cough syrups may be useful.The linked article regarding cough syrups only covered over-the-counter cough medications. Prescription cough syrups that contain codeine or hydrocodone seem to work really well but are liable to abuse.

    --
    A NYC lawyer blogs. http://www.chuangblog.com/
    1. Re:A Nit To Pick by nloop · · Score: 1

      The codeine based ones never do anything for me either. Well, they let me sleep, I guess that helps cure a cold. Don't touch the cough though.

    2. Re:A Nit To Pick by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      Last month, I would have sworn I was dying of bronchitis (the bacterial variety). I was coughing so hard that I was almost in tears each time I managed to re-gain my breath. The codeine-based syrup calmed it down enough that I could actually function and my chest muscles could recover. The antibiotics had cleared up the infection so I didn't need any cough syrup at all by the next evening.

      The moral? Don't interpret the awful summary literally. We haven't obsoleted medicine just yet.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    3. Re:A Nit To Pick by bloobamator · · Score: 1

      Absolutely. That codeine is da bomb! It's the only cough syrup that really works.

      When I get bronchitis, which is about once a year right at the end of winter/start of spring, I avoid antibiotics and hit the codeine cough syrup (sparingly) at night so I can sleep without a wracking cough.

      --
      "Crude and slow, clansman. Your attack was no better than that of a clumsy child."
    4. Re:A Nit To Pick by hherb · · Score: 1

      Yes, opiate based cough syrups suppress the cough reflex. You cough less. And if it is just a dry annoying unproductive cough, some may perceive this as symptom relief.

      If however you suppress the cough reflex that allows your lungs to clear the phlegm that otherwise exacerbates the infection, you harm yourself by taking it.

      As an experienced doctor I do not take cough medication myself, and I do not prescribe it to my patients or family members - with the rare exception of those with a dry unproductive cough in the convalescent period that keeps them awake

    5. Re:A Nit To Pick by Zaiff+Urgulbunger · · Score: 1
      Myself, I now use:
      1. one tea-spoon of honey
      2. one or two (or three) spoons of sugar
      3. lemon juice (some!)
      4. boiling water

      ..and whilst this isn't a cough-cure, it does make me feel much much better! Plus, unlike most cough remedies, I can drink as many as I like without worrying about ODing.

  9. Very old news... by eprparadocs · · Score: 0

    Drs. Jack Wennberg of Dartmouth and Al Mulley of Harvard have been doing work in this area for decades. Check of the Foundation for Informed Medical Decision Making for work by Dr. Mulley and for Wennberg just google his name to find his work.

  10. Inefficiency by syntaxglitch · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It's well-established that Americans as a whole pay far too much for health for far too little benefit, compared to other first-world nations.

    Can some of this discrepancy be explained by high availability of essentially useless or even harmful "treatments"?

    1. Re:Inefficiency by defile39 · · Score: 1

      This stat is quoted frequently, but is almost always quoted out of context. Americans pay more for health care than any other "first-world" nation. Americans' life expectancy is not significantly better than many other "first-world" nations (I believe America is around #30 or so for life expectancy globally). HOWEVER, America's overall health and life expectancy for those over the age of 65 is by far the best in the world. Americans pay more for health care . . . but these payments actually produce results.

      The real question is still efficiency. SHOULD Americans pay so much for this benefit? Americans don't live to 65 more than most other countries. That means that all of the payments are benefiting (likely) those with incomes above a certain level. THIS is where the argument should be focused.

    2. Re:Inefficiency by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A lot of it is for semi-futile treatments that we as a society expects. That 80y/o lady on the vent with a DNR that her family countermanded is receiving care at a cost far above that of the effective treatment that is offered to a 20y/o. 40% of the medicare budget is spent in the last 30 days of life.

      Sure, so of that goes to treat diseases and trauma that leads to that death, but a lot is in extreme measures that don't contribute to survival.

      Until we stop, as a society, wanting 'everything done' against medical best judgement, the cost of care will continue to rise.

    3. Re:Inefficiency by nelsonal · · Score: 1

      The other factor that doesn't get mentioned is that Americans have many pleasurable habits that are associated with negative health outcomes. If Americans eat red meat 10x/week, drink heavily, and exercise less than their first world peers, that medical spending (on end of life care) might be buying them more extra time than is captured by naive comparisons.

      --
      Degaussing scares the bad magnetism out of the monitor and fills it with good karma.
    4. Re:Inefficiency by Lonewolf666 · · Score: 1

      I think so. But the real question is why these treatments are offered in the first place.

      Here I think it plays a big role that most patients don't have the knowledge to tell their doctor no if he suggests something stupid or overly expensive. So in essence, the salesman tells the customer what to buy, and for the doctor it often seems easiest to prescribe some pills.

      On the political level, the pharma companies are good at lobbying against regulation that would put stronger restrictions on what insurance has to pay for. Several years ago, such an attempt failed in Germany:
      Under the Schröder government, the health ministry was planning to introduce a list of approved medications, and the statutory health insurance would have paid only for these. The industry lobby managed to squash these plans.

      --
      C - the footgun of programming languages
    5. Re:Inefficiency by Kozz · · Score: 0, Troll

      Yes, that... and Capitalism.

      --
      I only post comments when someone on the internet is wrong.
    6. Re:Inefficiency by azgard · · Score: 1

      Doesn't help. Czech people are even worse than Americans in this regard, and still, we pay lot less in healthcare, and have only slightly less average life expectancy (I believe).

    7. Re:Inefficiency by RyoShin · · Score: 1

      I blame advertising, at least for part of it.

      Until the early 90s (I'm sketchy on the time), there was a federal law that banned the direct advertisement of prescription medication. So you'd see commercials for things like Allivert or whatever that would be extremely vague and mention the general areas it might cover. [*]

      These days, the commercials are out in the open about what it treats and the side-effects it has. Despite the fact that this isn't some sort of impulse purchase, and that ordinary citizens can't even get any without taking many steps, it's advertised on an everyday level. This affects the small group of hypochondriacs or easily misled/worried who think they have need for whatever was advertised, or if someone does have what the Rx covers then they are more likely to demand that exact Rx, even if there's a better or cheaper alternative for them to use.

      American doctors, being American doctors, are often willing to just write the prescription that the patient can't afford rather than get into a conflict and hold other custom...patients up. If you've been in an American doctor office, you'll see all sorts of junk from med companies, ranging from fake plants to wall clocks plastered with logos. Free samples abound. These are not only to entice the docs to prescribe, but also to give citizens one last reminder that X CAN CURE YOU.

      Prescription drugs are prescription because of the idea that they have enough bad side effects and are limited enough in treatment that a person should not be able to get them without a doctor's direct recommendation. Why, then, are they marketed to the populace at large? This only adds to the costs of Rx and causes paranoia and worry amongst Americans. In my opinion, advertising of Rx medication should be illegal except in extremely narrow cases (perhaps like allergy meds in an outdoor's magazine or something) if that.

      This is a case where the state/feds need to step in because a drug company never will; even if there is still a somewhat-ethical drug company out there (ha!), they won't stop advertising because that means parents will start to demand SSRI A--that has bad side effects and won't do shit for most people--more than their own SSRI--which has bad side effects and won't do shit for most people. And then kids get all doped up because parents these days are lazy fucks...

      uh... Sorry, I think I went on a tangent somewhere up there. Anyway, tl;dr, there is nothing positive about advertising Rx drugs, it decreases health-care quality in America, and should be made illegal.

      [*] I don't remember the exact law, so I may be confused about details or this all may be my imagination.

    8. Re:Inefficiency by Idiomatick · · Score: 1

      When you look at offered services, % of people covered and a handful of healthservice benchmarks. NOT life expectancy because of unhealthy lifestyles. The figures are equally pitiful.

    9. Re:Inefficiency by More+Trouble · · Score: 1

      This stat is quoted frequently, but is almost always quoted out of context. Americans pay more for health care than any other "first-world" nation. Americans' life expectancy is not significantly better than many other "first-world" nations (I believe America is around #30 or so for life expectancy globally). HOWEVER, America's overall health and life expectancy for those over the age of 65 is by far the best in the world. Americans pay more for health care . . . but these payments actually produce results.

      America pays more per capita that every country in the G8 -- by a wide margin -- for a shorter life expectancy and higher infant mortality rate. No further context needed.

      In 2000, the World Health Organization rated the US system as #37 overall and #72 in overall level of health. There was criticism of the way those ratings were compiled, tho, so WHO hasn't issued those ratings in some time. Sound like politics to you?

      BTW, there's a ton of information available on US & world health care systems, so there's no need to guess or take the word of some insurance company sponsored shill.

  11. Sinusitis by jonpublic · · Score: 5, Interesting

    My experience with sinusitis definitely confirms this. Every 3 months or so I would come down with another sinus infection. Each time I would goto the doctor and get a prescription for antibiotics. I wasn't asking for antibiotics. I was looking for a solution to the problem. One time the doctor wanted me to switch to a much more expensive antibiotic. Sure enough I ended up getting some nerve damage from the antibiotic. Nothing permanent, but the numbness lingered for over a year.

    What the kicker here is that if the doctor had looked at my chart and said, maybe we should take another approach after the 5 or 6th time, the whole situation would have been avoided.

    I got a neti pot and I haven't had a sinus infection since, I just use the neti pot whenever I feel my head getting clogged up. $20 dollar solution.

    1. Re:Sinusitis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tell me about sinusitis. As a child I've regularly received antibiotic treatment against sinusitis. Without asking for it, merely going to the doctor and stating that the nose is constantly clogged up and that the sinuses hurt. Turned out that it's allergic and because my sinuses are rather narrow they easily clog up and sometimes develop a secondary infection (where antibiotics might be indicated). So after years of suffering I know just pop a few milligrams of ceterizin whenever my nose starts running or clogging up. Costs per year approximately $8.

    2. Re:Sinusitis by Acer500 · · Score: 1

      I got a neti pot and I haven't had a sinus infection since, I just use the neti pot whenever I feel my head getting clogged up. $20 dollar solution.

      Thanks man, I had never heard of the neti pot before. I'll give it a try next time I feel my nose clogged.

      There's an apparently good video here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t8KOsNtpV8w

      --
      There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics.
    3. Re:Sinusitis by Uzuri · · Score: 1

      Unsolicited advice here, but it might be worth checking out.

      Make *absolute* certain that you don't have GERD. It's nasty to think about this, but if you have night reflux, and don't know it, all the, uh... gunk from your stomach gets up into your sinuses, causing nasty infections that are impossible to unseat with antibiotics (because you just keep feeding the problem every time you lay down). I did the infection-prescription-infection-prescription cycle for about 3 years before finding out what *really* was wrong. Now so long as I control my diet, I'm OK. About once a year I'll misbehave and get a hefty bacterial infection that I need to chase out with antibiotics, but I know when it happens, and I know what I need to do to make sure I'm not going to be able to fix it myself before moving on. And I don't even do PPIs to control the GERD now that I've gotten it under control unless I'm having real problems (usually around the Holidays; we can't all be perfect all the time :) ), so no prescriptions at all there.

      --
      I'm a she-slashdotter... but I make up for it by living with my folks.
  12. Ignorance is the best medicine by Hogwash+McFly · · Score: 5, Funny

    As any man knows, if you ignore it for long enough, it will eventually go away. Just like the pain in my tooth and the blood on my toilet paper. I haven't been to the doctor in years, and I am as fit as

    --
    Mother, do you think they'll like this sig?
    1. Re:Ignorance is the best medicine by RyoShin · · Score: 1

      Well, at least we don't need to worry about this /.er. He had some kind soul close enough to help him, and was even thoughtful enough to hit submit before calling the ambulance.

      Get better soon, man of men!

    2. Re:Ignorance is the best medicine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Bah, real men just fall over on the keyboard as they die, hitting the enter key to submit the message on the way.

  13. Broad generalizations do not make good policy by name_already_taken · · Score: 1

    From the abstract linked to about antibiotics not being effective for sinusitis:

    Antibiotics provide a minor improvement in simple (uncomplicated) sinus infections. However, 8 out of 10 patients improve without antibiotics within two weeks. The small benefit gained may be overridden by the negative effects of antibiotics, both on the patient and on the population in general.

    Well, I get sinusitis once or twice a year. I'm one of the 2 out of 10 patients for whom antibiotics are apparently totally necessary. I once had my sinusitis go for over six months with no sign of it abating until I took antibiotics. As an aside, yes, I probably should have gone to the doctor sooner, but it just seemed like a mild head cold until other systematic problems from the infection showed up.

    You'll also note that the paper describes only one type of sinusitis (acute maxillary sinusitis), which the summary then expands to all "sinusitis". So, it's not accurate to say that antibiotics are not effective against "sinusitis", because the flip side is that they are effective and necessary in 20% of maxillary sinusitis patients.

    Obviously fake knee surgery is just fraud unless the surgeon does it for free, but some of the treatments do work for some patients in which the conditions aren't resolving themselves. The question is, which patients and which treatments?

    Inflammation from my low grade sinus infection eventually caused crazy autoimmune problems which almost landed me in the hospital. Antibiotics cured the infection in 10 days, but the secondary conditions took five specialists to figure out (at one point I heard two of them arguing about what I had). I was off work and in pain for about two months while things healed up. Had I seen the doctor early on, a week of antibiotics would have cured the infection before anything else happened.

    From the tone of the summary and article, what I get is that the author thinks maybe health care costs could be cut if we stop treating people who may not respond to the treatment - but the real issue is that some of these common treatments that are not necessary for every patient could be 100% necessary for some of the patients.

    --
    Putting moderation advice in your .sig lowers your karma!
    1. Re:Broad generalizations do not make good policy by rc5-ray · · Score: 1

      The sham surgeries aren't done by fraudulent physicians. There have been studies done for knee pain, where patients are randomly selected for traditional arthroscopy versus a sham surgery, where arthroscopy style skin incisions are created, and then sewn shut. When the patient awakens, they don't know if they had actual surgery or not. This is the study's design, and all patients in the study agree to the randomization process. This is quite different that a surgeon "pretending" to do surgery to bill patient. That, of course, would be fraudulent, unethical, and illegal.

      http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/full/347/2/81

      (Can't make a link!! My coding-fu is weak this morning)

    2. Re:Broad generalizations do not make good policy by originalTMAN · · Score: 1

      So the real question is who should get screwed by the Pareto principle?

    3. Re:Broad generalizations do not make good policy by sjames · · Score: 1

      Consider nasal irrigation with salt water. That's the one and only thing that actually helped my sinuses. Effective is a broad term. Arguably if antibiotics grant a few weeks relief then are needed again but another treatment can keep the problem away, then antibiotics are not effective.

      Of course it's also important to consider that blanket summary statements are rarely the whole story. A study showing antibiotics ineffective for sinuses COULD mean they're never warranted or could also mean that the criteria currently used in deciding to treat with antibiotics are so over-broad that the few cases where they actually are effective are swamped by the noise.

      The key is to find criteria that will isolate those cases where antibiotics are useful. Then further studies are needed to determine if they are the best treatment for the condition or if they should be second line.

      The fake knee surgery was part of a controlled experiment where all of the recipients knew that they would receive one of three "treatments", full debridement, simple lavage, or a superficial incision. No fraud was involved.

    4. Re:Broad generalizations do not make good policy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm one of those who has need for antibiotics for sinus infections. In October a couple of years ago, one Friday, I woke up incredibly dizzy and unable to even stand straight without weaving. And, since I've already been diagnosed with vertigo, I wasn't going to try to do anything more than lay still.

      I stayed home from work, doing what I could to get my ears to drain, assuming that was the problem. Felt perfectly fine on Saturday-Monday. Woke up Tuesday with a very severe headache. OTC meds did nothing for it, and when I gave up on those, it was late enough to my doctor wasn't open any longer, and I headed for the ER, especially with the previous dizziness. ER couldn't find anything wrong and sent me home with standard admonishments (get plenty of sleep/fluids/healthy food).

      The pain was still continuing for the next few days, so I got an appointment for a week and a half later at my doctor's (earliest appointment available), who prescribed me antibiotics. 2 full rounds later (20 days total), I finally felt well again. When my doctor's appointment was near, my sinuses felt swollen and full... more like rocks than empty spots in my skull.

    5. Re:Broad generalizations do not make good policy by quenda · · Score: 1

      the secondary conditions took five specialists to figure out (at one point I heard two of them arguing about what I had). I was off work and in pain for about two months >

      You should have gone to Princeton-Plainsboro Teaching Hospital. It would all have been wrapped up in 42 minutes.

    6. Re:Broad generalizations do not make good policy by Uzuri · · Score: 1

      Trouble with sinusitis is that nobody ever bothers to try and figure out *why* somebody keeps getting sinus infections. Sure, for some people it's just because "Bob in Accounting coughed on me," but if you're having them repeatedly, that's probably not the case.

      Get yourself checked out for GERD (wrote the same thing a few minutes ago to someone else): http://science.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1187755&cid=27571799 There are probably other reasons for repeated sinusitis, too, but you're going to have to find someone else who actually went through that :) I can only pass along my own experience.

      --
      I'm a she-slashdotter... but I make up for it by living with my folks.
  14. Beta Blockers by jamesl · · Score: 2, Interesting

    On the other hand, generic beta blockers (ie. propranalol) are so cheap as to be almost free. The conclusion in the cited article does not call for an absolute ban on beta-blocker therapy: Consequently, it might generally be prudent to consider starting beta-blocker therapy in hospital only when the haemodynamic condition after MI has stabilised.

    As much as we would like to believe otherwise, medicine is still an inexact science.

    1. Re:Beta Blockers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you dare suggest on Slashdot that a complex medical discussion was dumbed down to "What your incompetent Doctors aren't telling you" when published in the paper?

      Are you telling us that the actual topic is nuanced and that those fine points matter?

      Read the editorial that accompanies the original beta-blocker in the Lancet (written by Marc Sabatine). It will point out that patients had a 22% reduction of fatal arrhythmias when treated with beta-blockers. This benefit was offset by a 29% rise in cardiogenic shock. It turns out that the majority of this risk occurred in patients who presented in heart failure - a group in which beta-blockers are contraindicated! This article reinforced that these patients maybe should not get beta blockers while those not in shock might benefit.

      I agree that we need more evidence for much of what we do in medicine. But, this does not mean that which is without evidence (and makes mechanistic sense) is bad or should not be done. I sick of the alarmist crap that seems to be the common denominator of all media these days - much of which is then used as "evidence" of how the health care system is designed to screw you as suggested by the Score 5, insightful comments posted in this /. thread.

  15. This isn't news... by idiotnot · · Score: 1

    It's a combination of three things.

    1. The do-something-even-if-it's-wrong mantra that is so pervasive in today's society. You don't need to look any farther than the various bailouts from the feds for financial institutions and auto manufacturers. It also leads to #2.
    2. If I don't do something, I'm going to get sued.
    3. Placebo effect. After numerous studies showing that Vitamin C does nothing to prevent or shorten the duration of cold symptoms, there's still people who'll pop Vitamin C pills like candy at the slightest sniffle or cough. Thank you, Linus Pauling, and the Vitamin manufacturing world.

    1. Re:This isn't news... by WayneTheGoblin · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Actually, while I'll agree with you that the latest research doesn't support any prophylactic effect from taking vitamin C for colds and the like, I'm going to disagree with your conclusion.

      Vitamin C does have a number of effects that make it worth taking during a cold or flu. Biochemically, vitamin C has a number of roles, such as deactivating histamine, which is one of the causes of feeling sick when you're sick, and it plays a major role in free radical clean up.

      When you're sick, your immunocytes are attacking the invading pathogen with such wonderful enzymes as myeloperoxidase, which take hydrogen peroxide (produced in the oxidative burst) and turn it into HOCl (bleach) in order to kill the pathogen. This process spews reactive oxygen species (free radicals). When the ROSs interact with your cells, they cause damage, which leads to cytokine release and mast cell degranulation. Mast cells are the primary histamine releasers. So, not only is Vitamin C involved in the cleaning up of free radicals (in that vitamin C will quench the free radical, by itself becoming a free radical, albeit a safer and more stable one), but it also deactivates histamine.

      Additionally, if you'd care to do the research, most of the studies showing megavitamin therapy (in the case of vitamin C) to be ineffective have either been performed by those with an interest in showing that it's ineffective (i.e. the drug companies), or had indeterminate conclusions.

      Much more research needs to be done on the subject, but since the only problem with (oral, at least) vitamin C therapy seems to be osmotic diarrhea at more than 2g/day intake, in my opinion, there is no reason not use it for this purpose.

      IAAMedStudent

      --
      I refuse to engage in a duel of wits with the unarmed.
    2. Re:This isn't news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks! That's very useful and helpful to know! I'd mark you up if I could...

    3. Re:This isn't news... by LunaticTippy · · Score: 1

      If vitamin C made much of a difference it would have showed up in one of the hundreds of studies done over the last 40+ years. It hasn't.

      If you think recommending treatments despite plentiful evidence that they do nothing is good medicine you are going to be a shitty doctor. Lack of serious harmful effects is the best thing you can say about Vitamin C therapy? That is pathetic.

      --
      Man, you really need that seminar!
  16. Symptoms versus infection by DrYak · · Score: 5, Informative

    Cough syrups *do* work. ...BUT...

    They don't combat the infection. They alleviate the symptoms.
    They don't kill the bug which is causing the cough, they only make the patient cough less (and thus sleep better, feel more comfortable).

    So if you count the days spent being sick, a cough syrup won't make any difference. On the other hand if you look which makes happier the patient, one should prescribe the cough syrup anyway. (Same goes for lots of other ailment : most of the treatment prescribed by doctors for common illnesses are only to make the symptoms more bearable, not to kill the bug faster).

    There's a saying here among doctors telling that a "cold" last one week without treatment and 7 days with treatment.

    I am more astonished about the prescription of antibiotics. Here around in Europe, there have been large campaign to make the public aware that most common infections (bronchitis, sinusitis, sore throats, ear infections, etc...) are due to viruses and thus there's no point in insisting until the doctor prescribes antibiotics.
    I would have expected that the same reduction in use of antibiotics would have happened in the US too.

    Disclaimer : Although IAAMD, I happen to work in research for the last few years so other medical /.ers should have better knowledge than me.

    --
    "Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
    1. Re:Symptoms versus infection by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The linked study says that cough syrups don't actually help treat the SYMPTOMS any better than placebo.

    2. Re:Symptoms versus infection by Xenna · · Score: 1

      "Here in Europe?" Here in Holland they're very restrictive with antibiotics. In Greece, however, you just point at your throat and make a painful face at the drugstore and they give you a pack of wide-spectrum AB's.

      It's not that simple with sore throats. Some are viral and some (very painful) are bacterial. With the latter AB's work well. I understand in the US they take a sample and analyse it. In Holland they don't seem to think that's worth while.

      During my last two week bout with a bad sore throat, I demanded AB's from my MD and got them. The throat cleared up within a day, fever dropped. When I was young and had regular painful sore throats the AB's always seemed to work as well. Could be placebo I guess, but I don't think so.

      So, my conclusion is that, as usual, Dutch doctors go too far where perhaps others don't go far enough.

      X.

    3. Re:Symptoms versus infection by nine-times · · Score: 1

      During my last two week bout with a bad sore throat, I demanded AB's from my MD and got them. The throat cleared up within a day, fever dropped.

      It could well be that you would have gotten better within a day anyway. I know people say it a lot around here, but it's very relevant here: correlation isn't the same as causation.

    4. Re:Symptoms versus infection by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is better to state it this way:

      A cold will last an entire week without treatment but can be cured in only 7 short days with treatment.

    5. Re:Symptoms versus infection by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      It's not that simple with sore throats. Some are viral and some (very painful) are bacterial.

      Oh, is that what the stupid summary is talking about?

      Because I read that and said 'Um, antibiotics are harmful for bronchitis? Talk about absurdly dangerous medical advice.'.

      Obviously, you should only take antibiotics if you have a bacterial infection, and 'most' bronchitis goes away on its own...but they say that when most of it goes away on its own in such a short time people don't actually see a doctor in a few days. That 'bronchitis' is never even officially diagnosed.

      That's like saying 'most pain' goes away by itself...most pain, in fact, is caused by something specific, and will quickly fade away. That doesn't mean you shouldn't see a doctor if you have inexplicably leg pain for a week because 'most pain' goes away by itself.

      By the time people get to a doctor about their bronchitis, after four or five days, it has usually become clear it is not a cold or a simple flu. At that point it is likely to be some sort of bacterial infection, although it might be a flu that their body cannot fight off.

      Obviously, it's idiotic to prescribe antibiotics for the later, but they're being prescribed for everyone who shows up for one simple reason: Antibiotics are cheaper than tests to see what sort of infection it is.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    6. Re:Symptoms versus infection by interstellar_donkey · · Score: 1

      Great. I can only imagine what we have in store.

      Want to feel great?

      Placebos 50% off! No prescription necessary! Safe and discrete super fast shipping!

      --
      The Internet is generally stupid
    7. Re:Symptoms versus infection by Xenna · · Score: 1

      True. But before that it wasn't improving at all. Sadly, I don't have the resources to do a double blind test with my own health.

      I think the viral varieties usually come with cold-like symptoms and coughing. That feels quite different.

      X.

    8. Re:Symptoms versus infection by nine-times · · Score: 1

      A lot of time viruses don't improve at all until they do.

      In my experience (not being a doctor, but being sick), a sore throat accompanied by a fever is probably a virus and may last a couple weeks. When I've had real bacterial infections in my throat, there's often been no fever or a very low-grade fever (basically no symptoms other than a sore throat), and the pain lasts for more than a couple weeks.

      But that's just my anecdotal evidence and speculation battling with yours. Maybe some of my sore throats with fever were bacterial infections that I managed to fight off on my own without antibiotics. Or maybe there's some other complete misunderstanding that a good doctor could correct.

      In any case, having been pretty sickly for most of my life and so having a fair amount of experience from my own health, I usually don't really go looking for antibiotics for something like a sore throat until week 3, because they'll usually go away on their own within about 2.5 weeks, especially when accompanied by fever.

    9. Re:Symptoms versus infection by Idiomatick · · Score: 1

      "Could be placebo I guess, but I don't think so."
      Rofl... you sure you know how placebos work? If you thought it was a placebo then you might have something haha. Only way you can prove it is with a proper scientific study.

    10. Re:Symptoms versus infection by jacquelinew · · Score: 1

      Actually, TFA was studying the effectiveness of OTC cough medications on relieving the *symptom* (i.e. coughing), and found that none of them did better than a placebo at making the patients cough less. So might as well stick with the hot water with lemon and honey (and preferably rum) - tastes better and works just as well.

  17. Add high cholesterol / statins to that list by Eukariote · · Score: 1

    The view that high cholesterol is bad, and saturated fats are always a no-no is, on closer examination another example of problems being created out of nothing in order to sell more drugs.

    A very profitable and corrupt situation has evolved where the FDA is in the pocket of the pharmaceutical industry, the editorial boards of medical journals are bought and paid for, and academic research often dependent on industry money.

    1. Re:Add high cholesterol / statins to that list by shrimppesto · · Score: 1

      A closer examination of the article you linked to reveals some critical flaws. I will address the most salient part here regarding cholesterol and progression of coronary artery disease.

      Most of the studies cited in the article point to the poor correlation between serum cholesterol levels and progression of plaques as measured by degree of stenosis (degree of narrowing of the artery). It is now believed that a heart attack is not the result of progressive narrowing of the artery, but rather a cataclysmic "explosion" of clot arising from an area of prior damage to the vessel wall - damage that may not be seen on angiography, as angiography only examines the diameter of the vessel lumen. Evidence shows that the correlation between degree of stenosis and What We Care About (i.e. heart attacks, cardiac death) is poor. Hence, proving a poor correlation between serum cholesterol and progression of stenosis doesn't really mean much in terms of What We Care About.*

      There are, on the other hand, large placebo-controlled studies that have clearly shown that (1) patients with high LDL levels have heart attacks earlier, and die earlier from cardiac causes; and, (2) that patients whose high LDL levels are treated with statins/fibrates/etc. can profoundly delay heart attacks and cardiac death. This is called a study with hard endpoints, and this is the sort of study that directly addresses What We Care About. Many scientists are working on exactly what happens between LDL and a heart attack.

      One must examine ALL of the evidence before concluding that cholesterol is a "problem being created out of nothing in order to sell more drugs."

      ---
      * [Note: We are talking about chronic stenosis here. This is an entirely different issue from the idea of placing stents, as stents are placed (i) to relieve symptoms resulting from reversible ischemia, or (ii) to restore blood flow immediately following a heart attack in order to "save the muscle" before it has a chance to die. As a side note, exactly when to stent and when not to stent is a huge controversy that the evidence has yet to resolve.]

    2. Re:Add high cholesterol / statins to that list by Rob+the+Bold · · Score: 1

      The view that high cholesterol is bad, and saturated fats are always a no-no is, on closer examination [opednews.com] another example of problems being created out of nothing in order to sell more drugs.

      Initially, the cholesterol/sat-fat hypothesis was driven almost entirely by the force of will and personality of Ancel Keys, long before big pharma cooked up anything to lower total cholesterol. I don't mean to imply that drug companies haven't been opportunistic about the situation once they had something to sell, though.

      --
      I am not a crackpot.
    3. Re:Add high cholesterol / statins to that list by Eukariote · · Score: 1

      But do these large placebo-controlled studies you refer to represent reality? Studies that support the efficacy of pharmaceutical treatments more often then not have been performed by researchers with industry ties and funding. A growing number of Cholesterol Skeptics are casting the high-LDL causes heart disease hypothesis into doubt, and are pointing out flaws in the studies supporting that hypothesis.

    4. Re:Add high cholesterol / statins to that list by shrimppesto · · Score: 1

      While I do agree that we need to achieve a better separation between industry and research funding, it is also important to remember that industry-funded research does not automatically mean "it's all a bunch of lies!"

      The volume of evidence pointing to the LDLmortality connection has been staggering. I wholeheartedly agree that there are flaws in these studies, just as there are flaws in any study. These flaws create "holes" in our knowledge that many people are hard at work trying to patch, and we learn more by doing it. However, finding flaw in a study does not prove the null hypothesis (i.e. does not demonstrate that the opposite conclusion must be true).

      Ultimately, while there is much evidence to support the idea that cholesterol is NOT the ONLY cause of atherosclerosis (this is a very hot area of research at the moment), I have found very little evidence to support the notion that cholesterol has NO role in atherosclerosis. As usual, the truth probably lies somewhere in the middle.

    5. Re:Add high cholesterol / statins to that list by Eukariote · · Score: 1

      No doubt there is good industry-funded research. But statins have been turned into a roughly 20 billion dollar a year money spinner. That is an awful lot of incentive to misrepresent research data.

      About 25 million Americans, and 4 million Brits are taking statins. That is nearly one in ten people. It boggles the mind.

    6. Re:Add high cholesterol / statins to that list by moosesocks · · Score: 1

      A very profitable and corrupt situation has evolved where the FDA is in the pocket of the pharmaceutical industry, the editorial boards of medical journals are bought and paid for, and academic research often dependent on industry money.

      Bullshit. I worked for a big pharma company for a while.

      Those guys constantly lived in terror of the FDA. The FDA errs on the side of caution regarding most of their actions (as is the way that it should be!) An FDA decision can make or destroy a pharma corporation with the stroke of the pen.

      In either event, the FDA is far too big of an organization to pay off, and would have quite a lot of trouble keeping such a scandal under wraps, given that they extensively document all of their trials and decisions. They're obsessively thorough (once again, as it should be!)

      If you want to pick government agencies to complain about, the FDA should be near the bottom of your list.

      --
      -- If you try to fail and succeed, which have you done? - Uli's moose
    7. Re:Add high cholesterol / statins to that list by Eukariote · · Score: 1

      But the facts speak of endemic corruption. There is a revolving door between the pharmaceutical industry and the FDA (and other government agencies). A pattern of industry funding of perks for FDA officials has emerged.

      Consider that low-level operatives in the drug industry being afraid of the FDA is not mutually exclusive with the FDA being bought off: for the same reason that mobsters are not sanguine about the police, even when many officers in the department are on the take.

    8. Re:Add high cholesterol / statins to that list by quenda · · Score: 1

      Parent linked to an article on opednews, whos enlightening articles include "9-11 and the Mormon-Mossad-CIA Connection". Need I say more?

    9. Re:Add high cholesterol / statins to that list by Eukariote · · Score: 1

      You do not need to say more as science has already spoken. Go get a clue here: http://www.bentham-open.org/pages/content.php?TOCPJ/2009/00000002/00000001/7TOCPJ.SGM

  18. patients are just customers by misanthrope101 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm sure doctors are performing some treatments that aren't warranted. However, I assure you that patients want treatment. I work in the medical field, and the psychology of medicine is weird. Parents want antibiotics for their children, and they don't really care about research that says the antibiotics aren't necessary or may even cause harm. Everyone wants a pill for what they have, and they want it now. I've seen people demand x-rays for their pinkie toe, even though the doc told them outright that it wouldn't make a bit of difference. If the doc doesn't order the x-ray (or fork over the pills), the patient is unhappy, and unhappy patients are vastly more likely to sue.

    I've had a woman bring her kid to the ER with an cold and tell me in the triage room "I can't get in to see the pediatrician till Wednesday, and by then she'll get well on her own." I'm not making this up---she was rushing to make sure her kid got seen by a doctor, because she knew the kid would get well if she waited too long. She wasn't a drooling idiot, but part of her mental checklist of being a good parent included "If kid is sick, see doctor." If docs don't hand out antibiotics for every earache and sore throat, the patient will just come back tomorrow or the next day and complain "I'm still sick." If the second doc gives them pills, they'll tell everyone they know about the first doc, who is obviously an idiot who didn't have the intelligence to see how direly ill they were. "I needed antibiotics, and he didn't give me anything!"

    So all told, I don't blame the docs too much. They are working against hypochondriac patients who demand a pill for everything. In a weird way, people want to be sick, or at least they want their routine aches and pains dignified with snazzy medical terms. I've actually had patients get mad at me when I told them that a contusion is just a bruise, and cephalgia is just a headache.

    1. Re:patients are just customers by nelsonal · · Score: 3, Interesting

      In a similar vein, there are some recent studies that suggest that most of the benefit of medicine is the temporary status transfer from a high status individual paying more attention to the patient which perversely causes them to get better. That goes along with the idea that it's important to get your chance to get that status boost.

      --
      Degaussing scares the bad magnetism out of the monitor and fills it with good karma.
    2. Re:patients are just customers by noidentity · · Score: 1

      I've had a woman bring her kid to the ER with an cold and tell me in the triage room "I can't get in to see the pediatrician till Wednesday, and by then she'll get well on her own." I'm not making this up---she was rushing to make sure her kid got seen by a doctor, because she knew the kid would get well if she waited too long. She wasn't a drooling idiot, but part of her mental checklist of being a good parent included "If kid is sick, see doctor."

      Maybe the woman thought that while the kid was sick, there was some window to be able to reduce the long-term damage the sickness was going to do. Sort of like a deep wound and wanting to clean it and be sure there aren't things in it before it heals up and seals that stuff in (maybe this isn't the case, but you get the idea).

    3. Re:patients are just customers by hherb · · Score: 1

      I'm sure doctors are performing some treatments that aren't warranted. However, I assure you that patients want treatment. I work in the medical field, and the psychology of medicine is weird. Parents want antibiotics for their children, and they don't really care about research that says the antibiotics aren't necessary or may even cause harm.

      And that is the crux of "private" health systems - where patients don't regard themselves as "patients" but rather as "customers". They believe because they pay the doctor directly they can demand the "solution" they favour - and often end up buying snake oil or even harm for lots of money.

      As a doctor I prefer to work in a public health system - where I can provide professional advice without any conflict of interests. Where I can simply tell the patients that the antibiotics/whatever they "demand" are inappropriate for the condition and hence not prescribed to them.

    4. Re:patients are just customers by DavidTC · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Just because people want medication that's harmful for their health doesn't mean doctors should do it.

      Antibiotics are dangerous. They are dangerous for society as a whole, as they increase resistant strains, but they're also dangerous for each individual use. There is a non-zero risk of causing some sort of harm by using things that, after all, are designed to kill cells in your body. They're supposed to take out bacteria cells, but friendly fire is always happening. Although your body can stand to lose a lot of cells with no problem, there's always some risk, like a guy above who apparently suffered nerve damage, probably because an attack took out a nerve cell or two.

      And hence it is unethical, period, to prescribe antibiotics when doctors know it's a viral infection. It is risking harm for no possible gain.

      Doctors should just start prescribing high qualities of vitamins for viruses, if people really want something. People who have influenza and even the common cold often do not eat correctly, and lacking various vitamins has been demonstrated to vastly increase the time it takes to fight off infections, so there's a medical rationale there, and if the medical profession started promoting how they've discovered how to fight off some disease without using dangerous antibiotics, we'd all win.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    5. Re:patients are just customers by nine-times · · Score: 1

      I've actually had patients get mad at me when I told them that a contusion is just a bruise, and cephalgia is just a headache.

      Well that's part of the power of medicine-- if you can label something, you know what it is. Think about all those "-itis" terms and how happy they make people. People go into the doctor with sore throat, and the doctor tells them it's 'tonsillitis'. They go in with a cough, and they're told they have 'bronchitis'. And then they're happier about because they think they've gained additional knowledge about what the problem is.

      Most people seem to think the 'tonsillitis' is the actual name of some virus or bacteria that only infects your throat, but it's not. The 'itis' suffix just means "inflamed or irritated". So when you go in and tell the doctor your tonsils are sore and he says you have tonsillitis, he's just telling you back what you told him, but in more technical terms.

    6. Re:patients are just customers by MMC+Monster · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I inherited a subspecialty (cardiology) medical practice from an old-timer.

      In the first year, I discharged between 50 and 100 patients from the practice (averaging between 1-2 per week), likely more.

      A number of these patients refused to be discharged and would continue seeing me, even though I told them that their primary medical doctor could take care of their mild hypertension or "mitral prolapse syndrome" (which was usually just over-called bowing of a mitral valve leaflet).

      I still discharge patients to their primaries whenever they are interested, but do put up with patients that want the yearly stress test to make sure that they are okay (even when I tell them that they can have a massive heart attack a week after a normal stress test).

      *shrug*

      --
      Help! I'm a slashdot refugee.
    7. Re:patients are just customers by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      However, I assure you that patients want treatment. I work in the medical field, and the psychology of medicine is weird. Parents want antibiotics for their children, and they don't really care about research that says the antibiotics aren't necessary or may even cause harm.

      Uhuh... and therefore the doctors *must* give them the medication they demand? Yeah, no. The doctors are the fucking experts. If antibiotics aren't indicated, they should *not* be prescribing them, and if the patient bitches and tries going somewhere else, they should find that every other doctor is telling them the same fucking thing.

      Honestly, how long do we have to go with antibiotic resistant staph and god knows what else before doctors finally realize that bending to every little patient's whim is probably not a good idea? One unsatisfied patient is not worth the lives lost to antibiotic resistant infections.

    8. Re:patients are just customers by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Any doctor who prescribes antibiotics for a viral condition is violating their oath to "do no harm". They should lose their license.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    9. Re:patients are just customers by Misanthropy · · Score: 1

      This is right on. So many patients if you don't prescribe antibiotics will get pissed and say the doc "didn't do anything." Nevermind the 15 minutes you spent with them taking history, examining them and explaining that they most likely had a virus that antibiotics will not help and that giving them antibiotics may even cause them problems in the long run. Nope, if they don't get a scrip you are worthless in their minds.
      Regardless, I rarely prescribe antibiotics for sinutitis, bronchitis, etc. Because like the article says these are usually viral, and over prescribing antibiotics is a Bad Thing(TM). Sometimes it ends up being something that needs antibiotics and I'll treat it appropriately, but the vast majority resolve on their own.

      I had a nice discussion with a lady last week that had completed her course of abx for pneumonia and she was feeling better, but she really wanted a antibiotic scrip bad "just in case." She was literally begging me to give her more antibiotics. I tried as best as I could to explain that she didn't need any more, and ultimately refused to give her a scrip. I don't think she was happy about it, but that is just the kind of stuff docs have to put up with regulary and unfortunately too many relent and just do what the patient wants.

  19. You have too much optimism by managerialslime · · Score: 0

    The human body is pretty darn good at healing itself. There is absolutely no replacement for a decent diet, moderate exercise, and a positive attitude.

    Anyone on the planet born prior to the 1964 ban on above-ground nuclear tests has been exposed to enough nuclear matter to provide a degree of damage to their immune systems.

    An amazing number of carcinogenic and other hostile and immune-system challenging chemicals have been used in the manufacture and treatment of everything from toys to clothes for the last 100 years.

    The drop in average male sperm count over the last sixty years has been world-wide. The impact has included remote populations living far away from industrial centers and with lifestyles far from developed societies.

    What all of this may mean is that the combination of proper administration of diet, exercise, sleep, water, financial security, and satisfying relation and career may all be insufficient for any given individual to live a long and healthy life.

    Unless, of course, we actually live in the Matrix and all this bad stuff is fiction.

    --
    Live Long and Prosper - Thanks Leonard. You are missed.
    1. Re:You have too much optimism by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 4, Informative

      You do realize I hope that carcinogenic and toxic chemicals are present in great quantities in the natural environment too? For example the human bloodstream naturally contains small amounts of formaldehyde. It is hard to imagine how it would be possible to eliminate exposure to these materials when they are present in every plant or animal through their natural metabolisms.

      Sperm count studies that claim reductions in sperm count over time are very questionable. There have been a number of publications in the literature that claim sloppy investigative practices are the reason for this perception. And it definitely has not been world-wide. The data vary greatly by region.

      As far as immune system affects of nuclear testing - there is no evidence of such effects even in areas directly downwind of radiation hotspots like Hanford. The only studies showing such affects are in populations exposed to far greater doses, i.e. Nagasaki survivors or children exposed in the Chernobyl accident.

    2. Re:You have too much optimism by adamofgreyskull · · Score: 2, Funny

      Sperm count studies [...] sloppy investigative practices[...]

      Please! No more!

  20. I'll take the antibiotics for my ear infections... by MadShark · · Score: 1

    I used to get at least one ear infection a year, usually more. If I took antibiotics, I would be functional again within about 24 hours. If I didn't, I couldn't sleep, was crabby, dizzy and otherwise non-functional for several days. So even though I could possibly recover just fine without them, I'd much rather not miss work and be in pain for several days. I'll take the antibiotics thank you very much.

    I take much better care of myself these days and I only get one ever couple of years instead of twice or more a year. I don't know how much I can attribute to better diet, and more to following my doctors suggestion of taking decongestants when I feel my ears getting plugged up. Either way, it is nice to be on antibiotics less.

  21. invasive diagnostic tests are just as bad by petes_PoV · · Score: 1
    Frequently the risk involved in testing for a condition, such as taking biopsies from peoples' hearts carry a measurable risk - but produce little or no actionable information.

    In litigious countries (read: USA) they are more often than not carried out as a CYA exercise, rather than for the benefit of the patient. This is an area where "best practice" - meaning perform all possible diagnostics, has run wild.

    --
    politicians are like babies' nappies: they should both be changed regularly and for the same reasons
  22. Load of rubbish by nanoakron · · Score: 1

    Let's just directly quote the conclusion of the linked paper (a randomised placebo-controlled trial on 45,000 patients - pretty good evidence in medical terms):

    "The use of early beta-blocker therapy in acute MI reduces the risks of reinfarction and ventricular fibrillation, but increases the risk of cardiogenic shock, especially during the first day or so after admission. Consequently, it might generally be prudent to consider starting beta-blocker therapy in hospital only when the haemodynamic condition after MI has stabilised."

    In other words, beta-blockers (well, metoprolol) do reduce deaths from some of the problems arising from acute MI, but can raise the risk of death from other problems arising from acute MI.

    This doesn't blow beta-blockers out of the water by any means. As a doctor, these side-effects are entirely predictable. It is the last sentence of the conclusion that is the 'art' of medicine rather than the science - using a physician's experience to determine WHEN to introduce certain treatments to a patient.

    Unfortunately, there is no way of measuring this 'art' in a scientific way.

  23. To paraphrase Heston... by dachshund · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "You'll have to pry my Beta Blockers out of my cold, dead hands."

    Point: when the government "retires" beta blockers --- based on strong evidence that they're ineffective --- you can expect objections having to do with 'patient choice' and how the government is telling doctors what to do. Merits be damned: this will be used as an example of why we can't afford government-subsidized health care.

    It's no coincidence that the people who oppose "socialized medicine" are often the same ones who avoid evidence-based medicine in large-scale situations where it might be effective. It's also no coincidence that our health care costs more on average than many other nations, and yet our health outcomes are worse.

    1. Re:To paraphrase Heston... by shrimppesto · · Score: 1

      The article does not promote the "retirement" of beta-blockers -- in fact, it shows that beta-blockers reduce the risk of reinfarction and ventricular fibrillation, but increase the risk of cardiogenic shock.

      Mind you, ventricular fibrillation is a fancy word for cardiac arrest. This brings us between a rock and a hard place. The good news is, there are many findings that can serve as (albeit imperfect) harbingers of conditions such as cardiogenic shock. If I were a patient who did not have such findings, I sure would want the beta-blockers, and the evidence would support it.

      Contrary to your statement, there is no "strong evidence that [beta-blockers are] ineffective." The evidence simply shows that there are situations where they are indicated, and others where their use should be cautioned against. Calling for the "retirement" of beta-blockers ignores the evidence. This would not be evidence-based medicine.

      Part of evidence-based medicine entails examining whether it is appropriate to apply the evidence to your particular patient (in EBM parlance, external validity). For example, a study done on hospitalized patients (who are sicker) may have very different findings from a study done on patients with the same illness that did not require hospitalization, and the conclusions drawn should be applied to different populations. In a field where we know so little in the way of how the body works, where we know so little about how disease works, and where each patient has a million confounding factors that makes him/her different from the next, achieving good external validity can be very difficult.

  24. Idiotic. by DrYak · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Every 3 months or so I would come down with another sinus infection. Each time I would goto the doctor and get a prescription for antibiotics.

    This is indeed idiotic. You should shot your doctor. There's plenty of evidence that chronic sinusitis aren't caused by bacteria (the only thing killed by antibiotics).

    If the doctor really wanted to try something, he should have made a try with an anti-fungic (some studies tend to show that part of recurring sinusitis might be due to bugs more of the fungi persuasion).

    I got a neti pot and I haven't had a sinus infection since, I just use the neti pot whenever I feel my head getting clogged up. $20 dollar solution.

    Brilliant. Washing the nasal cavity is a method which also works for viruses which you most likely had like most of the adult population (and against which antibiotics are no use).
    It's part of what we prescribe here around (although as I said in another post, I now work in research).

    For extra, you can also buy sprays containing carbocisteine (an agent helping making the mucus more fluid), but you should use sprays containing beta-mimetics more than 1-2 weeks.

    But the basic "clean the cavity with water" $20 solution works too.

    --
    "Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
    1. Re:Idiotic. by nine-times · · Score: 2, Interesting

      If the doctor really wanted to try something, he should have made a try with an anti-fungic (some studies tend to show that part of recurring sinusitis might be due to bugs more of the fungi persuasion).

      But that would be more work and would not help the doctor any more in what he's really trying to do: get the patient out of his office.

      Seriously, I'm amazed at how lazy most doctors are about actually trying to help their patients, considering how much work it takes to get to be a doctor. I would bet money that none of my doctors in my adult life have bothered to look at my file a single time except when I've been in their presence. As in, I come with symptoms, and when I'm in the office they grab my file. They glance at the file while I tell them my symptoms, and then they recommend the first course of treatment that pops into their heads.

      If they don't know what the problem is, they don't delve further into my file. They don't go back and research the situation. They don't try to contact other experts to look for greater insight.

      When I was working helpdesk, if I had been that lazy in trying to diagnose problems, I would have been fired.

    2. Re:Idiotic. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bear in mind the difference between recurring acute paranasal sinusitis and chronic paranasal sinusitis. The latter is indeed likely to be mechanical or fungal in nature. Fungal infections are not expected in the paranasal sinuses of anyone with a normal immune system, and in all cases such infections constitute a medical emergency because of the risk of infiltration and necrosis. Mechanical problems are usually polyps, cysts or deviations (e.g. of the septum).

      Acute sinusitis is often mechanical ("pressure headache"), and sometimes triggered by an allergic response. Both involve inflammation of the tissues surrounding the ostia, impeding the flow of mucus and air and leading to differentials in the ambient and sinus air pressure. This itself triggers further inflammation. FESS is designed to reduce the rate of recurrence.

      The problem of acute sinusitis -- whether caused mechanically or virally -- is that trapped mucus is fertile ground for microbial overgrowth. The paranasal sinuses are far from sterile, and in conditions where air and mucus flow is impeded for a day or two, a bacterial infection (often S. aureus) is quite likely.

      This type of infection not only worsens the inflammatory symptoms, it runs the risk of an opportunistic mucormycosis with the possibility of much more serious necrosis (it can be fatal!).

      Leaving a pyogenic process in the paranasal sinuses untreated for more than a day or two even in an otherwise healthy individual is extremely dangerous.

      Treatment with nasal decongestants (although one should be careful with topical sprays) and NSAIDs may be sufficient treatment, but saline and other lavage is contraindicated in such cases because of risks of propagation (e.g. to the sphenoidal sinuses into middle and lower respiratory tract) and inoculation. Also, saline is often poorly prepared by patients, and strongly hypertonic solutions are not a very good idea in the face of an infection.

  25. Ideology? by Tonyrockyhorror · · Score: 1

    I agree with this guy's main point, but I think he's a little too harsh. He keeps harping on "ideology." If you think that back surgery or cough medicine works, does that mean you're "blinded" by your "faith" in pills and surgery?

    We're not talking about homeopathy or some other treatment that couldn't possibly work. These are plausible treatments that at one time seemed promising, but the evidence didn't back them up. If you think that some of them work, maybe you're just misinformed. It doesn't mean you're an ideological zealot.

    1. Re:Ideology? by MaskedSlacker · · Score: 1

      We're not talking about homeopathy or some other treatment that couldn't possibly work. These are plausible treatments that at one time seemed promising, but the evidence didn't back them up. If you think that some of them work, maybe you're just misinformed. It doesn't mean you're an ideological zealot.

      Bleeding was a plausible treatment that at one time seemed promising based on the theory of the four humors.

      Faith healing is a plausible treatment based on the theory of direct divine action in human affairs.

      Arthroscopic knee surgery is a plausible treatment based on the theory based on the idea that washing the inside of your knee will reduce inflammation.

      You know what we consider "some other treatment that couldn't possibly work"?

      Treatments that have no explained mechanism of action.

      Faith healing has a better explained mechanism of action than the knee surgery discussed in the article.

    2. Re:Ideology? by colinrichardday · · Score: 1

      Are you saying that the claim "Washing the inside of your knee will reduce inflammation." is an ideological statement? What ideology is it from? Have advocates of such procedures attacked their opponents as infidels? Do they base their views on a deeper theory, such as the humourists did?

    3. Re:Ideology? by MaskedSlacker · · Score: 1

      Reread the part I quoted. He was implying that washing out the inside of the knee isn't

      homeopathy or some other treatment that couldn't possibly work.

      , when in reality there is about as much science behind it as homeopathy in general.

      In other words, he was making an ideological slam against subscribers to homeopathy whilst being guilty of the same intellectual bankruptcy by claiming that the washing out of the inside of the knee as cure for osteoarthritis wasn't like homeopathy (i.e. has no science behind it).

    4. Re:Ideology? by colinrichardday · · Score: 1

      Is it the same intellectual bankruptcy? The OP might argue that it would be easier to convince an orthopedic surgeon that arthroscopic lavage is no better than placebo surgery by citing an article such as http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/full/347/2/81 than it would be to convince a homeopath that homeopathy is no better than a placebo.

  26. Knee Surgery by cirby · · Score: 1

    You might note that the "knee surgery is no better than sham knee surgery" study was only about osteoarthritis. The vast majority of knee surgeries are for repairing injuries, not for arthritis treatment.

    That said, a surprising amount of medical treatment is out of date. Most doctors do the same things they learned in med school, or in the early years of their practices. There are still a lot of doctors who don't believe in (or even know about) the role of Helicobacter Pylori in peptic ulcers.

    On the other hand, due to the insane amount of regulation in the medical field, getting the word out on new procedures is often like running through a minefield. If you come out with something new and useful, and make claims about how effective it is, you're setting yourself up for huge lawsuits if some doctor screws up the treatment (or if someone isn't cured when they really think they should be).

    1. Re:Knee Surgery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, the article wasn't even about a real surgery, but ARTHROSCOPY, which in the case of osteoarthritis isn't even a treatment but an examination. The article confirms that an examination offers no more relief than a placebo, which in no way is related to surgery.

  27. A documentary relating to this matter by derGoldstein · · Score: 1

    (please read through before thinking this is flaimbait!)

    This has been covered on the documentary The Enemies of Reason by Richard Dawkins. Don't prejudge this based on its name or the author: look for the documentary online, especially "Episode 2: The Irrational Health Service".

    Here's the especially relevant part: Enemies of Reason Ep.2 (5 of 5)

    --
    Entomologically speaking, the spider is not a bug, it's a feature.
  28. Pressure system by dov_0 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Unfortunately medicine, just like any other industry is driven by profit.

    Eli Lily pushed Prozac and got it approved in many countries even though it causes psychotic episodes in 18% of patents. They even send sample packs to GP's so they can hand them out to patients. Psychiatry in itself is a whole sham, pushing drugs which will never heal the patient, when in many cases counseling or Cognitive Behaviour Therapy will bring about a cure.

    Myself, I used to have terrible problems with allergies and get awful migraines. Once I stopped taking pain-killers and antihistamines the problems largely abated. Haven't taken anti-biotics in 13 years and I reckon I get over any nasties I catch mor quickly than I used to. Very rarely get sick though!

    The amount of useless drugs administered and useless surgery performed won't go down while there's money to be made. The pressure will always be on the medicos. Either from the drug companies or for the payments on the new sports car.

    --
    sudo mount --milk --sugar /cup/tea /mouth /etc/init.d/relax start
  29. Results Based Medicine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A "results based medicine" would be indeed a blessing for all humanity.

    Shame it's going to be the medical establishment, i.e. the drugs companies, who will pay for the tests - and the results.

  30. PayWall by jamesl · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Perhaps if The New England Journal of Medicine was available free on-line, more patients would know about the conclusions of the cited article Spinal-Fusion Surgery -- The Case For Restraint. Access to the single article costs $10.

    1. Re:PayWall by dmr001 · · Score: 1
      The abstracts are available free online - but if you aren't a subscriber you have to pay to read about the methodology and details of the statistical analysis.

      Nevertheless, my expectations are low that most patients would bother to search the primary literature (speaking from experience - IAAMD).

  31. Fast test. by DrYak · · Score: 1

    I understand in the US they take a sample and analyse it. In Holland they don't seem to think that's worth while.

    Switzerland, here. We use a fast antibody test so the doctor knows what to prescribe within minutes.

    --
    "Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
    1. Re:Fast test. by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but that's the government dictating what medication you can and can't take!

      Here, we prefer to leave it to the private sector, which doesn't want to actually spend money on figuring out what would be a good idea.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  32. What no back surgery? by Samschnooks · · Score: 1
    That's another sham surgery - for most. And many orthopedic surgeons are steering folks away from it.

    Get some exercise, stretch, lose the gut, and you'll see your lower back pain disappear! Oh, get up away from the idiot boxes - TVs, computers and the internet - speaking of which; bye!

  33. Doing DXM by tepples · · Score: 1

    If the $8 bottle of robitussin is no more effective than lemon tea, what reasonable consumer would buy the robo?

    Someone who wants to do DXM, for one. Dextromethorphan hydrobromide (US OTC) is easier to get in some countries than ketamine (US CIII) or phencyclidine (US CI).

    1. Re:Doing DXM by Hatta · · Score: 1

      It's also a lot less fun. Ketamine is a much cleaner and more pleasant NMDA inhibitor. DXM is interesting a couple times, but heavy users seem to be fucked in the head. Of course, the causality on that could go either way.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
  34. psychosomatic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Far too many ailments are actually psychosomatic. Unconscious rage needs and outlet, and the ego tries to "protect" the conscious mind from this rage by creating distracting physical pain. This is all very well documented in psychoanalytic studies. Most popular of which are from Dr. Sarno at NYU\:

    See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_E._Sarno

  35. He should know better than to generalise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, prescribing antibiotics for Acute Sinusitis is silly, but not every Sinusitis is acute you know... When resting a week or two and using fluticasone propionate (Flixonase) doesn't help, you can only hope that antibiotics work, the other option is surgery.

    In my case, it was: 2 weeks + 2 weeks of Flixonase. Forwarded to ENT specialist. Got a CT, needed surgery. After that, it still wasn't completely gone - a week of antibiotics fixed it.

    1. Re:He should know better than to generalise by Rob+the+Bold · · Score: 2, Funny

      Amen to that! My rule is "Never Generalize". And it works in every situation.

      --
      I am not a crackpot.
  36. Quack by Culture20 · · Score: 1

    Back surgeries to relieve pain are, in the majority of cases, no better than nonsurgical treatment, and knee surgery is no better than sham knee surgery where surgeons 'pretend' to do surgery while the patient is under light anesthesia.

    He's a quack. Knee surgery is never any good?

    1. Re:Quack by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Yeah. tell that to my brother, who got his kneecap broken in half thanks to a kayaking accident and had surgery to attach it back together with titanium pins, and is now fine. I sure he could have just rolled around in a wheelchair his whole life.

      Seriously, saying 'knee surgery doesn't work' is about as stupid as his previous assertion that 'antibiotics is a bad idea for bronchitis or sore throat or sinusitis'....yeah, tell that to people with Streptococcus pneumoniae infections who didn't take antibiotics.

      Oh, you can't? They developed full-blown pneumonia or meningitis or endocarditis or all the other places Streptococcus pneumoniae can live and kill you...and they died? Well, silly them.

      I especially like the fact that 'infections usually recede within days'...um...yeah, and those people usually don't see a doctor in the first place. People go to the doctor when infections don't recede.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    2. Re:Quack by MeanMF · · Score: 1

      Seeing as how he didn't have Osteoarthritis, your brother's broken kneecap isn't really relevant to the discussion. RTFA.

    3. Re:Quack by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Or, and here's a crazy idea, the summary could not talk about 'knee surgery' if it actually meant a specific kind of knee surgery.

      Just because a specific type of knee surgery is a placebo doesn't mean it is correct to say 'knee surgery' is.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  37. Strep Throat and Rheumatic Fever by jamesl · · Score: 1

    From the NYT article: Can we abide by the evidence when it tells us that antibiotics don't clear ear infections or help strep throats?

    It has been common medical practice for decades to treat "sore throat" with antibiotics only after a positive throat swab for Streptococcus because of the associated risk of rheumatic fever and its complications. According to the article cited this is still true: A serious but rare complication is rheumatic fever, which affects the heart and joints ... This review of trials found that antibiotics shorten the illness by an average of about one day and can reduce the chance of rheumatic fever in communities where this complication is common.

    1. Re:Strep Throat and Rheumatic Fever by anagama · · Score: 1

      When I was a kid, an undiagnosed strep throat turned into scarlet fever. I could hardly stand, eat, or drink for nearly a week. It was really brutal.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
  38. That is because heath insurance by Shivetya · · Score: 1

    is ass backwards.

    Health Insurance should work like other insurance policies, for catastrophic issues. My auto insurance doesn't pay for maintenance but that is exactly what people expect from medical insurance. The same for dental. There are many services that are expensive simply because a "group/company" is paying for it, not a person. If auto/home/etc insurance worked like how medical/dental does we would have huge premiums to cover for people going in to get their oil changed every 3k and tires rotated just because someone else is helping pay for it.

    I do not mind universal catastrophic health care, I do mind the idea of paying for every kook who thinks his tummy ache is an emergency. This recent story explains why it can be so out of control, http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29998460/

    A local hospital in Atlanta (actually more than one) reports many cases of people calling 911 to get a ride downtown where by law they are required to be given a "ticket" to get home. So what happens? Many abuse the system only to waste our money and the valuable time of doctors and nurses just so they can come downtown and see friends or do shopping.

    Any UHC system is going to have to set real boundaries so stuff like this gets stopped. It isn't the treatment of real medical issues that is sinking the system, its the abuse of anyone who cries "I got a boo boo" doesn't even need a "boo boo" to get something and worse not be held accountable when it is nothing.

    --
    * Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
    1. Re:That is because heath insurance by nine-times · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I do not mind universal catastrophic health care, I do mind the idea of paying for every kook who thinks his tummy ache is an emergency.

      Well the two might not be directly connected. It doesn't seem to me like giving universal catastrophic health care would encourage people to use the ER more, and in fact having better access to healthcare on a regular basis might decrease ER costs. Setting aside for a second the people who go to the ER for every tummy ache, what about those who do nothing about potentially serious issues until they actually become serious issues? Early detection can often save money, actually.

      A local hospital in Atlanta (actually more than one) reports many cases of people calling 911 to get a ride downtown where by law they are required to be given a "ticket" to get home.

      Well that's just a problem, and again doesn't really have a direct connection to universal healthcare. You can get in trouble (fines, I believe) for calling 911 unnecessarily. You have to figure there will be some abuse, that sometimes a person will get away with something like that. But if it's really all that rampant (the abuse the the ambulance service that you describe) then I would think they should investigate and arrest or fine people abusing the system.

    2. Re:That is because heath insurance by Nutria · · Score: 1

      Health Insurance should work like other insurance policies, for catastrophic issues.

      Proof of your genius is that you think like me. Bravo!

      So what happens? Many abuse the system only to waste our money and the valuable time of doctors and nurses just so they can come downtown and see friends or do shopping.

      For any civilized society to survive, the populace must adhere to a certain code of conduct that can't be legislated. People must behave "well", and organic social pressure must be brought to bear upon those who refuse to behave adequately. Otherwise, society will fall apart.

      Thank you, 1960s leftists, for promoting the Me Generation and thus ushering the downfall of American society.

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    3. Re:That is because heath insurance by sgage · · Score: 1

      "Thank you, 1960s leftists, for promoting the Me Generation and thus ushering the downfall of American society."

      I think you meant to say:

      Thank you, 1980s rightwing Reaganites, for promoting greed and selfishness as the ultimate values, thus ushering the downfall of American society.

    4. Re:That is because heath insurance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      Are you seriously retarded enough not to realize those were the same people?

    5. Re:That is because heath insurance by LateArthurDent · · Score: 1

      Health Insurance should work like other insurance policies

      No, that's stupid. Instead, we should stop calling it "health insurance," stop treating it as if it were insurance, and start calling it "health plan" which is actually what it is (and what everyone needs).

      I do not mind universal catastrophic health care, I do mind the idea of paying for every kook who thinks his tummy ache is an emergency.

      I hear this argument a lot, but it's actually a very poor one. It would be much, much cheaper if everyone went to their doctors anytime they got the first sign of an unusual symptom (by unusual = something they haven't felt before, or worse than what they've felt before), regardless of how benign that is. If it turns out to be nothing, as it will in most cases, you've wasted a small amount of cash (that adds up, I'll grant you that). However, if it turns out to be something dangerous in its first stages then you've very probably saved enough money to compensate for all the other cases when people didn't actually need the doctor. Simply because the treatment for dangerous conditions in later stages are typically much more complex, and much more expensive than dealing with the problem early on.

      This recent story explains why it can be so out of control, http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29998460/ [msn.com]

      No, it really doesn't. The story says 9 patients made 2,700 ER visits for the past 6 years, it says nothing as to whether they actually NEEDED to go to the ER that often. In fact, 8 of the 9 were drug abusers, so chances are that they were all near-death from overdosing that many times, and the ER was justified.

      Yes, the ER is expensive. Do you want less money to be wasted? The first time a junkie shows up in the ER, he needs to get the emergency treatment, followed by a court-mandated detox as well as paid-for shrinks to help him kick the habit. Then he won't have the following emergencies, and by paying more early on, you've again saved money in the long term.

      A local hospital in Atlanta (actually more than one) reports many cases of people calling 911 to get a ride downtown where by law they are required to be given a "ticket" to get home. So what happens? Many abuse the system only to waste our money and the valuable time of doctors and nurses just so they can come downtown and see friends or do shopping.

      That would be real abuse, and that one didn't come with a link (I was disappointed, I thought your msnbc link was going to talk about that story). First, I don't believe it, because I've been to the ER. If you've reported symptoms and told the paramedics to take you to the hospital, you're going to spend HOURS in the hospital while they test you for the symptoms you reported that were apparently severe enough to warrant an ambulance. There's no way that pain is worth the ride and (bus?) ticket.

      I suppose once you got to the hospital you could refuse treatment, but I think the solution to that abuse is simple. If you call 911 and refuse tests, you get charged for all expenditures. If you have a history of calling 911 and tests consistently review that you have nothing, you get either charged with fraud (evidence that you just wanted a ride downtown--wtf?) or you get a court-mandated shrink appointment to manage your hypochondria (which is likely to account for a significant amount of repeat ER visitors).

    6. Re:That is because heath insurance by Idiomatick · · Score: 1

      You get charged for fake 911 calls. And if they are really in that dire need of constant care. Stick them in a mental ward or a drug rehab facility. Oh wait thats not free in the states is it. You could uh... shoot them i guess, i mean its not like they are productive anyways.

    7. Re:That is because heath insurance by B1oodAnge1 · · Score: 1

      This made me laugh because it's true. :-D

      --
      RUGBYRUGBYRUGBY
    8. Re:That is because heath insurance by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Health Insurance should work like other insurance policies, for catastrophic issues. My auto insurance doesn't pay for maintenance but that is exactly what people expect from medical insurance. The same for dental.

      My dental covers cleanings. And getting my oil changed doesn't dramatically alter my likeyhood to get into a car crash. With health insurance, those that receive "regular maintenance" cost much less than those that don't. The reason is that things caught early are cheaper to fix. So you are advocating a change that would *increase* medical costs, not decrease them. That may be something that is reasonable based on some arguments, but when you are basing it off a cost argument, it doesn't make sense.

  39. Same for supplements by schwit1 · · Score: 1

    The supplement industry that sells crap like ginko and glucosamine should also be shut down.

  40. don't ignore that sore throat by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    get the right streptococcus, and you will do permanent damage to your heart valves. they colonize the heart from your throat (same holds true for chronic tooth decay)

    also, cough medicine to me seems to be nothing more than a chance to take psychoactive compounds because you are so miserable. that's not an argument against cough medicine, that's an argument for it. there's the placebo effect, then there is pseudoephedrine. two different things

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:don't ignore that sore throat by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      I can't even imagine what they're claiming when they 'review the data' for cough medicine.

      Does cough medicine actually assert to cause less coughing or something? That's not why I take it, I take it because it makes my coughs hurt less!

      Reducing coughs would be a damn stupid thing for medicine to attempt to do...you're coughing for a reason. Your body does not want what is in your lungs in your lungs, do not force it to stay there. It's like trying to sneeze less when you have a cold. Um, no. If you want to medically treat the problem, what you need to do is take that stuff that loosens mucus and makes coughs more productive, so you can actually start expelling the stuff you're trying to expel.(1)

      And, like me and everyone else, take cough medicine so that your throat hurts less and is less irritated. (And if you were coughing solely because your throat was irritated, you might cough less, but that's not the point.)

      1) I actually wish people would realize that a lot of 'sickness' like fevers and sneezing and coughing are our body doing that on purpose, and that you shouldn't attempt to stop them, you should help them along. (Well, except sometimes our body will drive straight over a cliff and kill us with a fever it itself generated, but normally you should help them along.)

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  41. zxcxzcxz by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    lolol @ Obama "administration". They want to consolidate information regarding the medical INDUSTRY? Question in this case is: Who is making money, and what information are they distorting?

    There are thousands upon thousands of tried and true methods that exist in the realm of "Traditional (Environmental) Knowledge". Because they don't match up to "academic" journals doesn't mean a thing.

    I've seen studies about studies, and alot of information if merely cross-referenced for argument sake. It's like a really bad case of broken telephone after awhile.

  42. Placebo testimony by mhelander · · Score: 3, Insightful

    According to TFA, you don't actually know that.

    1. Re:Placebo testimony by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The knee surgeries referred to in the article is a very different procedure from a knee replacement. In a knee replacement, the surgeon functionally changes a previously damaged knee. The procedures described in the article (arthoscopic lavage/debridment) is the orthopedic equivalent of cleaning out your ear with qtips.

      So yes, the parent probably does in fact know that.

    2. Re:Placebo testimony by mhelander · · Score: 1

      So, my comment would have been insightful, had not parent strayed off topic. ;-)

    3. Re:Placebo testimony by ColdWetDog · · Score: 2, Informative

      No, he actually does. TFA is talking about arthroscopy for osteoarthritis, not knee surgery in general - although that little point isn't very clear. Arthroscopic surgeries for some things seems to be useful, although formal comparative studies haven't been done. Same for knee replacements. The problem is that it's dammned hard to do the experiment. For osteoarthritis ("bone on bone"), the VA docs did a wonderful thing. They managed to get a protocol whereby the "control" patients underwent anesthesia and had a sham surgery, complete with scars. That's pretty gutsy - you have to show that the risk of anesthesia to the control patients is essentially zero, since presumeably they would not be getting any benefit from the surgery. That turned out not to be true, but from the point of the Investigative Review Board, that had to be a serious consideration.

      OK, now you have to do this for the half dozen other reasons you would typically do arthroscopic surgery of the knee for. Then figure out how to do a sham knee replacement.

      Now, do you see why we don't know jack.....

      And a shameless plug, even though I have nothing in particular to do with them: The Cochrane Collaboration - an attempt to answers these questions by studying the extant literature. Read it and weep.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
  43. We are still in the dark ages by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Medicine is one of those fields that is still in its infancy. When it comes to medicine we are still living in the dark ages.

  44. NICE does the job but people don't like it by Kupfernigk · · Score: 4, Insightful
    There is evidence that drug companies have orchestrated campaigns to get the general public to agitate for their treatments when NICE has identified that they do not work, or do not work well. Many cancer treatments are actually pretty ineffective, but of course dying people clutch at straws - as I may do one day - and if they are told that X treatment is very expensive but may prolong their lives, they will probably demand it. They may not be told that, say, the side effects are awful and they will get six months of life instead of three.

    We need NICE because ethical drug companies are no longer ethical, and that in part reflects our demand for magical cures. The really serious problems we face - like TB and avian flu - are of little interest to drug companies because (in the first case) most people affected are poor and cannot afford expensive medicine and (in the second case) vaccines are usually a one or two off and do not represent a continuing revenue stream paid for by insurance. We cannot rely on insurance companies to control public health because their aim is to balance revenue and cost - they are not interested in controlling the diseases of the poor, and they do not want diseases cured to the extent that their revenue goes down. We as taxpayers need agencies like the NIH in the US and the NICE in the UK to advise and regulate in our interests, not those of shareholders only.

    --
    From scarped cliff or quarried stone she cries "A thousand types are gone, I care for nothing, no not one."
    1. Re:NICE does the job but people don't like it by GNT · · Score: 0

      NO and NO!

      Stop it with the tail of the cancer therapy argument and realize that NICE denies care to those that could benefit from it greatly. They shouldn't even exist let alone be making decisions for me and mine.

      Patients should decide when they can AND then with their doctors, what treatments to have. Everyone else needs to stay the f*** out of the decision nexus.

    2. Re:NICE does the job but people don't like it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are the patients paying themselves? You aren't answering the points in the posts preceding yours at all.

    3. Re:NICE does the job but people don't like it by Haeleth · · Score: 3, Insightful

      realize that NICE denies care to those that could benefit from it greatly.

      Welcome to what we call the "real world". In the real world, resources are limited. There isn't enough money to provide treatment to everyone who could benefit from it -- that means you have to deny some people treatment. Full stop.

      NICE exists to make sure that the limited resources are spent on cost-effective treatments, not wasted on expensive and ineffective treatments.

      Patients should decide when they can AND then with their doctors, what treatments to have. Everyone else needs to stay the f*** out of the decision nexus.

      Fine -- go private, then. Private patients can buy whatever treatments they like, and NICE can't do a thing to stop them.

      NICE decisions only have any effect whatsoever on the treatments that are provided by the NHS. Treatments that are funded by the taxpayer. What the hell makes you think you're entitled to demand that we pay for whatever treatment you want? If you want something that's not on the menu, you can damn well pay for it yourself.

    4. Re:NICE does the job but people don't like it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Private patients should not benefit from the huge economies of scale associated with the NHS extracting concessions from commercial manufacturers of drugs and medical equipment, but they do. Whenever NICE approves a treatment that the NHS then adopts, prices plunge for private users because private users often are only "partly" private, and will use NHS for subsidy on bargained-down expensive items.

    5. Re:NICE does the job but people don't like it by KlausBreuer · · Score: 1

      While I fully agree that we (or rather, you - medicare is rather different and quite a bit more efficient here in Germany) need NICE, I do not quite agree with your point on poor cancer treatment.

      See, some people respond to certain cancer treatments better than others - and being promised twice as much life *is* something very valuable.
      And, yes, I do know what I'm talking about. In 2003 a diffuse Astrocytoma was found in my brain. I am still alive today, doing very well (no, really), but have suddenly realized that every single day is a gift. Enjoy it. You have a certain number of days, and then you're gone. Do something with them, don't just let them pass in boredom and a bone-standard-every-day-is-the-same kind of life.

      Thus: I'd agree to pain if it gave me three more months.

      --
      Free PC version of ChipWits at http://www.breueronline.de/klaus/chipwits/
  45. Corrupt Doctors by bloobamator · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The single biggest factor driving health care costs in America is the corruption of doctors. Too many doctors are on the take from Big Pharma.

    I personally know one who makes millions dispensing medicines pushed by the pharmaceutical companies. He owns a big house in the Westchester, a swank apartment on the Upper East Side, 2 BMW's, a Mercedes, pays hefty child support, alimony (which includes a third mortgage on his ex-wife's big house in Westchester), and he parties like a freak.

    He's not even a surgeon. How does he make so much money? By accepting kickbacks from the pharmaceutical companies for the medicines he prescribes and dispenses (his specialty allows him to dispense certain injections to relieve back pain.)

    All this guy does is inject people's backs with something that is clearly ineffective, and then refers them on to his surgeon buddy when the injections don't work. What a scam!

    He bragged to me on several occassions, while drunk, how the Big Pharma companies wined and dined him in super-expensive Manhattan restaurants, and how they paid for ultra-luxurious island vacations. I know there was more he wasn't telling me.

    I met another "doctor" who actually just owned a bunch of clinics in NJ. He was the dumbest son-of-a-bitch I have ever met, and he walked, talked and dressed like a wiseguy. Yet he drove 2 Rolls-Royces and invested heavily in porn sites and strip clubs in FL. He was scary, really scary, yet he was a "leader in quality private health care in the greater NJ region". *shiver*

    It's time we cracked down on medical waste and fraud.

    --
    "Crude and slow, clansman. Your attack was no better than that of a clumsy child."
    1. Re:Corrupt Doctors by mgblst · · Score: 1

      Post these guys details and we will see what we can do. Keep quiet, and you are almost as bad as they are.

  46. Myocardial Infarction by HoaryCripple · · Score: 1

    The recommendations for beta blockers in ST Elevation myocardial infarction and Non ST Elevation myocardial infarction are set forth by the American College of Cardiology, after careful review of the literature. Link.

    Implying that physicians don't know what they are doing when administering beta blockers to ST/Non-STEMI is ridiculous. We fully acknowledge that data is conflicting or insufficient. It is rightly up to the physician to decide whether or not to administer beta blockers after physicial examination of the patient and all the associated data.

  47. infections typically recede within days regardless by D4C5CE · · Score: 1

    ...of treatment and the same is true for bronchitis, sinusitis, and sore throats

    Arguably no less harm can be done by doctors who fail to prescribe antibiotics even in cases where these conditions are less harmless than they'd "typically" expect them to be. Its not a good choice either to just look at "the protocol" rather than at the patient...;-/

  48. Ear infections TYPICALLY recede in a few days? by Kral_Blbec · · Score: 4, Interesting

    So what about those that dont? When I was a kid, our doctor refused to give me anything based on this reasoning. As a result of chronic untreated ear infections, I developed a speech impediment that i had to have therapy for until i was almost 16 and still lingers today. I attribute a lot of my anti-sociality in my youth (and now) to being embarrassed to talk. Thanks for nothing doc.

    1. Re:Ear infections TYPICALLY recede in a few days? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      So wait a week, and if it's still there, then see about treating it as something serious.

  49. There's a whole store full of it near me by darpo · · Score: 1

    The Whole Foods store near my home has whole aisles filled with nonsense like homeopathy, herbal medicines, etc. Okay, not all herbs are useless (e.g. there's evidence St. John's Wort helps depression). But much of this stuff is, if you ask me, flat out fraudulent product.

    I support a free market so I don't want to get rid of these products. But at the same time... it bugs me that companies basically prey on people's ignorance of science to make money.

  50. Anonymous Coward by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The cough medicines article refers only to over the counter medications not to all medications. The one about knee surgery refers only to osteoarthritis, and, in contrast to what is implied, it is actually widely known in the medical community that surgical procedures are generally ineffective for this condition. Yes infections "typically" recede by themselves, except when they evolve to meningococcemia or other complication. And just for the sake of clarity, betablockers DO save lives (And check the date on this article --> http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2858114). What is being discussed is their use IMMEDIATELY after a myocardial infarction, due to the risk of cardiogenic shock.

  51. Treatments that don't work... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Medicine, as practiced in the US, is really as good as it can be. Sure there are instances where doctors or patients abuse the system, but over all, the best care is available and we have access to far more variety of treatment.

    I suffer from Rheumatoid Arthritis. I'm 29. It's a debilitating disease. I've gone through numerous tests and subsequent methods of treatment. The direction the government is proposing simply will not work.

    Here's why I think this:

    If future care will be based on a government health care system, research and new treatment development will come to a screeching halt. Treatments that are "proven" effective will be made available to the public.

    I have no health insurance. My treatment is expensive. The reason my treatment is expensive? The medications I have to use have no generic or low-price alternatives. This is not because my doctor wants to gouge me. We've systematically tried the statistically most-effective drugs to discover that my condition as it presents in my case, does not respond nearly as well to those drugs as the "less effective" treatments.

    I stand to gain a lot by having health care provided free of cost, because I cannot afford it on my own. I will NEVER agree to it, however, because I know that other people like me will suffer for the same reasons.

  52. Believing In Government That Doesn't Work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Over and over again in our history it's been shown that socialism simply does not work. You can "believe" in it with all your heart and "believe" it will work with every fiber of your being. That doesn't change diddly squat. It does not work. It kills human creativity and ambition. And you? Your blind belief makes you no different than the religious people you disdain and make fun of. We'd make fun of you if your kind wasn't so dangerous.

    You can take your socialized medicine and shove it up your ass. That may be the only suppository available to you in that horrible system. :p

  53. Rapid CRP by Aggrajag · · Score: 3, Interesting

    At least here in Finland it is common practice to take a rapid CRP test from patients when they show symptoms of for example sinusitis. If the result is less than 10 sinusitis is most likely caused by a viral infection so no antibiotics will do the patient any good.

  54. Some medical practicioners don't really know! by Sj0 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I dated a nurse's aide for about a year, and what always shocked me was how little she knew about the treatments she was suggesting. Every time I got a cold, she demanded we rush to the ER to get some penicillin.

    Now, I'm not one of those assholes who thinks he knows everything, but I know that colds are caused by a virus, and penicillin doesn't work on viruses.

    Since then, I've gone on the philosophy that just because someone who works in a hospital says something, doesn't mean it's gospel. I won't take it as *wrong*, but I'll take it with a grain of salt, like I do medical advice on the Internet.

    --
    It's been a long time.
    1. Re:Some medical practicioners don't really know! by Renraku · · Score: 1

      One of the big problems in the US is that people leave doctoring to the doctors.

      You get two types of people. People that come in and just KNOW that they have non-Hodgkin's, and people that come in and are totally clueless. The first kind is actually the most dangerous. They don't like to think that their ten minutes on WebMD was shot down by someone with twenty years of experience. They hate it, in fact. The second kind are not likely to catch that their recurring colds and flus might be connected to their IV drug abuse down by the railroad depot.

      If people spent some time reading about common medical ailments, their treatments, and complications, the world would be a MUCH better place. There should be two kinds of health class in high school. One that teaches you all about your body, how not to knock up / get knocked up, and one that teaches you about common ailments and their cures.

      How many emergency room visits could be prevented because a parent recognized their kid coughing or sneezing as a cold instead of deciding that its Hantavirus that they contracted from the school parakeet?

      --
      Job? I don't have time to get a job! Who will sit around and bitch about being broke and unemployed then?
  55. it is about money. by Organic+Brain+Damage · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The numbers are somewhat astonishing, last I heard it was like 14% of GDP going into healthcare in the USA.

    If we look at unnecessary procedures like the arthroscopy for osteoarthritis (assuming the study results are repeatable) that's one major way to save money.

    Another major way to save money is to make the payment handling a non-profit business. Something like 20% of healthcare spending is going into the insurance business and dealing with payments. That should be more like 2%.

    And a third major savings is to be gained by realizing we're all going to die and not spending huge money on someone in their last six months. It makes no sense, but most of the money spent on most of the people in the USA is spent on people within 6 months of death. And most of the time, their life is no longer than if they didn't spend the money, but it is more painful. Curbing this spending could save us as much as 20% of our current healthcare spending.

    I suggest that if a person is 2 years beyond average lifespan, no government money be spent on hospitalization or surgery. If they have the money to buy private insurance or can pay for it out of pocket, fine, that's their choice, but otherwise, too bad, don't make the rest of us pay for torturing your granny to death.

    1. Re:it is about money. by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      I suggest that if a person is 2 years beyond average lifespan, no government money be spent on hospitalization or surgery.

      My next-door neighbor, in his mid/late eighties, got a pacemaker a couple of years ago. He and his wife just got back from three months in Hawaii. I think he would be unimpressed with your hypothesis that quality life ends at a specific age.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    2. Re:it is about money. by drwho · · Score: 2, Informative

      While lots of the things you say have a ring of truth to them, I think your suggestion is a horrible one. It's too simple. I know people in their nineties who are intellectually fine, want to live, but their bones are fragile. You would say that these people don't get a broken hip mended? no way! But if you were to ask if they wanted a heart transplant, they'd probably turn it down, saying it's their time to go and there's younger people who need a chance to grow old. It's not about the surgery, it's about the cost, and not just the simple cost - about the emotional cost to them and those around them, about the opportunity cost to others. Now people that are brain dead, or dying of everything all at once, at some point there needs to be a decision to give up. But who makes that decision? I wouldn't put it in your hands, after what you've said.

      Medical ethics is hard. That's why you need bastards like Doctor Gregory House.

    3. Re:it is about money. by naasking · · Score: 1

      I suggest that if a person is 2 years beyond average lifespan, no government money be spent on hospitalization or surgery.

      The problem with this, is that average lifespan will likely fall as a result of this policy.

  56. DXM works, and codein is better by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have to call bullshit on the claim that OTC cough medicines do nothing. If you have a light cough they yeah, you probably don't need anything more than a glass of water or tea. If you have enough irritation or damage that is triggering intense uncontrollable coughs, then a neural disassociative drug like DXM helps. Actually I have found codein to work better, but it is quite a bit more habit forming. I get tired of arguments that drugs are bad because they are not natural or that drug companies are just evil. Most of the time, you don't need to take anything. Let your body get over it. But if you are actually sick, you'll be glad that some drugs exist for you to feel better. Unless you have a big family you don't really need the 8 dollar bottle of tussin. Look at the instructions. Doesn't it say take no longer than 2 days.

    Now the guifenasin only stuff is no more effective than a tall glass of water. If you need to cough up mucus, drink water. Or if you need that placebo effect, spend 20 bucks on a box of mucinex. If you take it with a tall glass of water you may get an added effect.

  57. Beta blockers aren't the best choice of examples by DarthBobo · · Score: 1

    Yes, early administration of IV beta blockers caused more heart failure. It also caused people have fewer additional heart attacks and to drop into nasty rhythms requiring painful shocks.

    The take home of the big study wasn't not to give beta blockers - it clearly showed they worked for the reason we had always given them - but to be judicious. Don't push them IV at the first sign of a heart attack. Give them to people who seem to have enough cardiac output to spare. In essence, think - don't just give them because a) the study protocol says the get it, or b) the hospital guidelines says to give them.

    --
    +--------------------- You idiot! I told you we were facing the wrong way!
  58. Idiotic article by MemoryDragon · · Score: 1

    Sorry after reading the first 10 lines of the summary I stopped. The problem is that maybe often the infection goes away without treatment. But also very often it does not and to the worse becomes chronic. I once had such a hard stuck sinusitis, it never went away until I started treatment, what do I have to say, antibiotics and 1 month of treatment via infrared light did wonders...
    I am glad that it did not become chronic however...

  59. The problem is... by solder_fox · · Score: 1

    The problem is we need to be very careful in how widely we apply the results of medical studies. We need to depend on them, Doctors should be aware of the results of the ones in their field, and there should be rigorous peer review, but they shouldn't be enforced as a determinitive factor in care except perhaps where results are extreme, because statistics in a given study aren't necessarily indicative of what is likely to happen in a particular case--for example, a huge Danish study said a few years back that extensive lymphadenectomies (i.e. taking out a good portion of the body's filtering and draining system) didn't result in longer life for patients recovering from gastric cancer resections, and that it was a bad idea because higher mortality rates occured in-hospital.

    But it's harder surgery, and if a surgeon doesn't do it all the time he or she may not be able to do it well. That doesn't mean that it's not the best operation for the patient, and a patient's best chance for surival continued to include a radical lymphadenectomy from an experienced surgeon as part fo the procedure--despite the establishment's research-backed arguments against it.. Further, the study used to support arguments against it was only applicable in cases where splenectomy was done at the same time as gastrectomy, which wasn't the case for many if not most of the cases the argument was applied to.

    And, to top it all off, after years of this debate new results came out from the patients of the Danish study showing their five or ten year survival rates were a lot higher with the radical lymphadenectomy.

    I would hate to be a gastric cancer patient in the interim who understood why the study showed such bad results but who wasn't allowed to have the more radical procedure because "it's a medical treatment that doesn't work" according to the establishment. And worse than my hating it, I could easily die because of it.

    Similarly, that back surgeries to relieve pain are usually no better than nonsurgical treatment doesn't mean back surgery should not be used--it means that either it should be more targeted or surgeons should be better-trained in that kind of surgery.

    There are many calls for doing less medicine because of its skyrocketing costs. But we don't need less medicine, we need smarter medicine.

  60. medicine gets it wrong, too by speedtux · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately, a lot of medical papers use statistical tests improperly. As a result, many of the conclusions about what does and doesn't work in medicine are wrong.

  61. Scientolgy != christian science by xant · · Score: 1

    Scientology is the one that hates psychology. Christian Science is the one that says only God cures you. (I exist on this Earth in part because my grandmother refused my Christian Scientist grandfather and took my dad to the hospital with pneumonia when he was little.)

    Both loathsome in their own way, but get em straight.

    --
    It's rare that you're presented with a knob whose only two positions are Make History and Flee Your Glorious Destiny.
    1. Re:Scientolgy != christian science by nloop · · Score: 1
      An excerpt of wikipedia regarding Scientology and medicine:

      These claims began with the 1950 publication of founder L. Ron Hubbard's book Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental Health (DMSMH). Chapter 5 of DMSMH, Psychosomatic Illness, asserted "The problem of psychosomatic illness is entirely embraced by Dianetics, and by Dianetic technique such illness has been eradicated entirely in every case. About 70 percent of the physician's current roster of diseases fall in the category of psychosomatic illness." Hubbard added, "That all illnesses are psychosomatic is, of course, absurd, for there exist, after all, life forms called germs which have survival as their goals." [emphasis in the original.] Later in the chapter Hubbard asserted, "Bizarre aches and pains in various portions of the body are generally psychosomatic. Migraine headaches are psychosomatic and, with the others, are uniformly cured by Dianetic therapy. (And the word cured is used in its fullest sense." [emphasis in the original.] Such claims have often brought the Church to the attention of law enforcement and regulatory agencies.

    2. Re:Scientolgy != christian science by quenda · · Score: 1

      And on the plus side, the Christian Scientists have a damned good newspaper. They may be a bit weird, but they are nice weird, unlike the Scientologist litigation-happy arsehole money-grabbing weird.

  62. Self proclaimed rubish by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Making bull crap statement as fact is rubbish. Obviously the written has never had turn cartilidge in their knee. Nor several herniated discs in their back. I have and for this Obama bin Binden loving asshole to spew this ignorance from his crack head is as funny as trusting the government to help.

  63. Colombia is nice... by bobbuck · · Score: 1

    I had lasik done there back when the FDA still thought it was too risky.

  64. That's a false choice by bobbuck · · Score: 1

    Sub-Saharan Africa has problems that money can't fix.

    1. Re:That's a false choice by jcr · · Score: 1

      Sub-Saharan Africa has problems that money can't fix.

      I don't know about that. What's it cost to get a dictator killed these days?

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    2. Re:That's a false choice by bobbuck · · Score: 1

      Offing dictators is kinda like pulling the flower off of a dandelion. An other one grows right back.

      (I like the sig, tho.)

  65. Radiation therapy is not nasty - and is tolerated by spineboy · · Score: 1

    Chemotherapy is not tolerated by the old well, but radiation therapy is, and is often the only option, other than surgery to treat malignancies in older folks - either for palliation or treatment.

    --
    ..........FULL STOP.
  66. Not true by spineboy · · Score: 1

    Elderly easily tolerate radiation therapy, and surgery is only not an option for when it doesn't make sense, or if the person is really quite frail, end of life, etc.

    --
    ..........FULL STOP.
    1. Re:Not true by ThinkTwicePostOnce · · Score: 1

      | And don't they stop treating cancer patients in some European countries if they're too old?

      Here in America you just have to run out of money for treatment to stop, or have your insurance
      company decide to retroactively cancel your policy as of the day you bought it ("Recision" happens
      all the time. Some companies pay bonuses to their employees who are their "top recinders".) [PBS]

      So we stop treating people who have the most life to lose, and nationally insure those with less.
      Isn't it about 80% of hospital dollars are spent in the last 6 months of a person's life? (Often
      till their money for Medicare co-payments runs out.)

      Not logical. Not merciful. Profitable for those in the know.

      Come US national health, there will be a market for covering the things that the national program
      doesn't cover (like cancer therapies past certain ages, etc.) for those who want and can afford them.
      Some national health countries make this illegal, others allow this market to exist. I don't see us
      in America banning this private-sector-for-money option.

      --
      Hide all sigs: Click HELP+Prefs (top), VIEWING (last on right), DISABLE SIGS (3rd on left) and SAVE (hidden at bottom).
  67. Re:I'll take the antibiotics for my ear infections by russotto · · Score: 1

    I used to get at least one ear infection a year, usually more. If I took antibiotics, I would be functional again within about 24 hours. If I didn't, I couldn't sleep, was crabby, dizzy and otherwise non-functional for several days. So even though I could possibly recover just fine without them, I'd much rather not miss work and be in pain for several days. I'll take the antibiotics thank you very much.

    Part of the problem of the euphemistically-named "evidence-based medicine" is that it treats conditions statistically instead of individually. Oh, you have an ear infection; statistically, 95% of cases clear up, so no antibiotics for you. Someone I know had a similar problem -- the infection would occur, it wouldn't go away on its own, antibiotics would be prescribed, and it would go away. Then it would come back a few weeks later. Turns out there were two infections, a strep infection which caused the obvious symptoms, and a staph infection which was largely asymptomatic but was depressing the immune system. The drugs would eliminate the strep but the staph was partially resistant. So the staph would remain and lay the groundwork for re-infection by strep. A longer course of different anti-biotics, and no more infection. But that's a bit on the zebra side, so "evidence-based medicine" wouldn't admit to its existence.

  68. On Placebos and Marketing by fugue · · Score: 1

    First, I want to get this out of the way: if a placebo works, USE IT! The human body is amazing--if you convince it that you're treating it, it behaves well. Where placebos have been shown to be effective, use them! They're good, inexpensive medicine.

    Next, how much is this affected by our fear-mongering instant-gratification capitalist society? If you anticipate difficulty in trying to convince patients that throwing a bunch of money at a problem is completely ineffective, then just wait 'til you try to convince doctors and hospitals that taking patients' money is a bad thing.

    This reminds me of the bicycle helmet fiasco. They've been proven, repeatedly, to do no good at all (for on-road recreational and utility cyclists), and yet people keep selling them and trying to scare consumers into buying them, because "it's obvious that they work!" There were also some early studies done really badly by irresponsible morons. We seem to have a fundamental need to throw money at perceived problems--especially when the alternative is educating ourselves and taking responsibility (in this case, learning how to bike safely, which has been shown to have a huge effect on safety; I suppose that the analogue in the medical example is something more akin to preventative medicine). However, it's partly cultural--different societies take it to different extremes.

    I don't claim that there's a link between preventative medicine and good statistics (not a causal one, anyway ;) but I'm bemused by the ease with which even scientists accept science that confirms their biases, and with which conclusions become grandfathered into a culture. Why is that?

    Remember Zombie Feynman! Good methodology is icing on the cake; the real problem is that people hate being wrong, but they usually are.

    Is the solution education? How does one teach skepticism and willingness to examine new evidence? How does one teach a willingness to be wrong?

    --
    "The biggest problem with communication is the illusion that it has taken place."
  69. its usually the rich who are lazy.. by spiffmastercow · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If my experience of moving from minimum wage to upper-middle class in the span of 3 years has taught me anything, its that the amount you're paid is inversely proportional to how hard you work. I still work, but not nearly as hard as when I was an intern. And when I was an intern, I didn't work nearly as hard as when I was a janitor. Looking up on the pay scale, I see that most of the execs at my company make $300-500k to sit around and talk out thier asses, and come up with ideas that lose the company millions of dollars.

    1. Re:its usually the rich who are lazy.. by jamesswift · · Score: 1

      Why the hell is this insightful?
      It's a meaningless anecdote. In my experience the opposite is true but it's not insightful to point that out.

      Sorry.... but as a Slashdot discussion grows longer, the probability of a complaint about moderation approaches 1.

      --
      i wish i could stop
    2. Re:its usually the rich who are lazy.. by RuthlessMinx · · Score: 1

      This is exactly what I have found to be true as well.

  70. No difference at all by macraig · · Score: 1

    People believe in "medical treatments that don't work" for exactly the same reasons that people believe in gods and other things whose existence cannot be objectively demonstrated: emotional need. Some people so badly need to eliminate uncertainties in their existence that they resort to imagining conditions that allow them a necessary degree of it. With that certainty comes a feeling of safety, and perhaps a reduction in stress.

    Another word for this behavior is self-delusion. Collective reinforced self-delusion is frequently a threat to democracy and freedoms, not to mention personal health as in the instances related here. It's possible that people prone to self-delusional behavior have an extremely low tolerance to hormones induced by stress. If we could treat the stress some other way, we might eliminate their reliance on delusions.

  71. Probability lessons by Twinbee · · Score: 1

    If they don't already, medical schools should teach basic mathematical probability (as part of evidence-based medicine). One time, I had chicken pox late (about 28), and at the surgery, I asked one of the doctors what would be the chance I would develop deadly condition x if I took treatment y (treatment y would otherwise potentially help in other ways). I got something along the lines of:

    "Well if you're the one who gets the (deadly) condition in the end, what matter is it that there was z chance of getting it?".

    I went on to explain I'd rather have a 1 in 1,000,000 chance, than a 1 in 10 chance and I think that brought the message home. Still it was quite painful to hear...

    It would nice to see a study at hand to back up most treatments given out, rather than just the doctor's experience/hunch.

    --
    Why OpalCalc is the best Windows calc
    1. Re:Probability lessons by ponos · · Score: 1

      I asked one of the doctors what would be the chance I would develop deadly condition x if I took treatment y (treatment y would otherwise potentially help in other ways). I got something along the lines of: "Well if you're the one who gets the (deadly) condition in the end, what matter is it that there was z chance of getting it?".

      The point being made is that probability is meaningful for populations and in order to define clinical practice but much less useful for individuals. For example, I often get patients asking how long the will live and even though I can give them a statistical average, I cannot give a valid prediction for the person asking the question!

      As for your other concerns, you should know that with over 18 million articles in PubMed, you can find supporting studies (of varying quality) for anything you imagine. Unfortunately, evidence-based medicine is not a magical solution to all medical problems. And, by the way, elementary statistics are indeed taught in medical schools, even if later forgotten.

      P.

  72. bullshit by lubricated · · Score: 1

    Knee surgeries work, atheletes and the team owners have way too much money invested and knee injuries lead to knee surgeries often with remarkable success.

    DXM has kept me from coughing. It's not expensive, I'll continue to buy it, whenever I get bronchitis. It beets seperating a rib.

    Beta blockers slow your heart rate and lower your blood pressure, they have uses.

    --
    It has been statistically shown that helmets increase the risk of head injury.
  73. Make that OVER-THE-COUNTER cough remedies by dpbsmith · · Score: 1

    I was stunned to read, in the article, that "No cough remedies have ever been proven better than a placebo."

    As I write this, I'm recovering from a stress fracture of a rib caused by a persistent cough.

    Let me describe the sequence of events. I coughed nonstop for two weeks. I experienced rapidly-worsening pain in one rib. My doctor prescribed codeine-based cough medicine. I took it. Cough stopped; I slept through the night without coughing for the first time. My rib is getting better.

    Placebo effect? I don't believe it.

    So I followed the link to TFA... the second FA... the one that TFA cites. The title of that article is Should we advise parents to administer over the counter cough medicines for acute cough? Systematic review of randomised controlled trials.

    It's the over-the-counter cough medicines that haven't been proved to work.

    Which I can quite believe. Because I was taking them before the doctor wrote me the prescription.

    1. Re:Make that OVER-THE-COUNTER cough remedies by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      Yes, opiates work extremely well for a cough, but you can't get them over the counter because they are drugs of abuse. It actually doesn't matter which one you take; they all work.

      I had severe bronchitis with a horrible cough, and my doctor prescribed 20 mg codeine. So I went to the pharmacy, and they told me, "Sorry, we don't have this; all we have is 10 mg tablets."

      I said, "That's fine, I'll take two," but they said, "No, we can only dispense what the prescription is written for, and we don't have it." Another pharmacy told me the same thing. By this time it was Friday night, the doctor's office was closed, and I was desperate for something to relieve my cough and let me sleep.

      Fortunately, I remembered that I had some left over vicodin from an injury in my medicine cabinet. Worked like a charm.

  74. Liberal Fascists should be careful. by Zot · · Score: 1

    Liberal Fascists should be careful, because the more power they grab now, will just mean more power that the Conservatives get to use when it is their turn again. All the Liberal are happy that they get to tell everyone what to do, but they forget that eventually the Conservatives will be in the same position. The last time the Conservatives where in power they basically wasted it by doing nothing. Do you honestly think that they will do that again? The Liberal are showing the Conservatives how do it. Which I think is also a bad thing.

  75. Yes, But by meehawl · · Score: 1

    I'm currently halfway through medical school and this axiom is being beaten into us repeatedly. It's not like academic medicine is in denial. Thanks to the influence of post-modernism and self-reflexivity, modern medical education is perfectly comfortable with telling its students, over and over, that only around 50% of what is taught today will turn out to be "correct" in 20 years or so, and half of it will turn out to be incorrect, and that there is of course no easy way today to tell which is which.

    Some people take this to heart and will remain lifelong learners open to new evidence and the retirement of discredited approaches. Others will simply freeze in amber what they learn in their first few years and overly rely on this body of gradually discredited knowledge for the rest of their lifetime. In this regard, doctors as a population are very similar to a lot of other professionals. The proportions of those willing to update their knowledge versus those unwilling may vary between some professions, but humans and human emotions remain the same.

    --

    Da Blog
  76. Be afraid, be very afraid... by ponos · · Score: 1

    Well, speaking as an MD/PhD, I can tell you that even though useless treatments DO exist (for example cough medication), there is a lot of controversy for several other issues. Even guideline groups cannot always agree on a specific attitude.

    For example, beta blockers are clearly indicated for myocardial infarction with evidence grade IA (the highest possible!) in the guidelines of the european society of cardiology (freely available in http://www.escardio.org/guidelines-surveys/esc-guidelines/GuidelinesDocuments/guidelines-AMI-FT.pdf). Anyone with half a brain and ten years of training knows that beta blockers (especially IV) should not be given to someone who is hemodynamically unstable, which is the conclusion of the cited study above (published in Lancet 2005) and the aforementioned guidelines. Saying that beta blockers should not be given is completely wrong.

    Things are much less clear for low back pain surgery, even though recent reports have shown it to be more effective.

    In conclusion, the original article incorrectly criticizes and mixes good treatments that should be avoided in specific subgroups (beta blockers) with useless treatments (cough mediciation) with controversial treatments (low back surgery). Such oversimplification is dangerous, especially if strongly motivated by cost concerns.

    P.

  77. another useless treatment by Velex · · Score: 1

    Oh what the heck, I have karma to burn.

    Using electroconvulsive therapy and "restorative" therapy to attempt to make a gay or transsexual person straight is another example of medicine that doesn't follow the evidence.

    Of course the problem is the religious fundamentalists have tons of money to burn in the pursuit of attempting to change someone's sexual orientation.

    If it ain't broke, don't fix it? Well, not unless there are plenty of people who will pay plenty of money to plenty of doctors to show that it really is broken by using bad science.

    Doctors can accept bribes just as easily as anyone else.

    --
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  78. And what about the opposite by Phat_Tony · · Score: 1

    There are plenty of treatment in "established medicine" that aren't actually established. Along with all the ones they mention, for decades women's doctors put them on hormone replacement therapy following menopause in part to reduce their risk of heart attacks, where there had NEVER been any evidence that they would do so. And after decades and millions of women on hormone replacement, when someone finally bothered to look into it for the first time, it turns out that hormone replacements increase the risk of heart attack.

    But what about the opposite, scientifically proven remedies that have inexplicably shifted into the realm of "home remedies?" A pertinent example is Epsom Salts for curing infections. Soaking wounds and infections in Epsom Salt solutions is a highly effective treatment, and one that used to be prescribed by doctors and used in hospitals. Research has shown it to have great efficacy. But now doctors use antibiotics and even surgery to try to cure things that can be fixed much more safely and painlessly with a $1 box of Epsom salts and a tub of water. Is it just undue influence from pharmaceutical and medical device reps? Another example is just using pressurized air to evacuate and cure oral infections, because most bacteria that colonize mouths are highly susceptible to oxygen poisoning and dehydration. But instead, doctors and dentists rely on courses of powerful antibiotics. There are many more examples. I'm not talking about homeopathic remedies with no scientific trials demonstrating their efficacy, but treatments that are actually shown to be effective. If there's no money in a solution, does it get lost because no one is championing it?

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  79. Private insurance has a weak spot by giorgist · · Score: 1

    Here in Australia private insurance has to compete. All of them offer the exact same thing and many are a different front to the same company.

    So the problem is how do you differentiate to get customers.

    Well you offer ... alternative medicine

    Same goes for a Pharmacy/chemist ... they al sell by law the same stuff. How do they differentiate ... sell crap at a high markup and given you walk into a "respected" establishment the rest of the junk gets credibility.

    So you have over the counter "medicine" in chemists which is just snake oil. You get "stone message" from health insurance companies.

  80. Athletes by KingAlanI · · Score: 1

    A lot of the sorry physical state you see in retired athletes may have as much to do with the playing injuries (especially in contact sports like rugby, American football, boxing, etc.)

    Sure, you have a point with the moderation comment, but I doubt that's the whole picture

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  81. Both Doctors and Patients Are Problems by anorlunda · · Score: 1
    I read that even CAT scans and MRI scans lack clinical evidence that patients live longer if they have them instead of regular X-rays. But scans are a huge industry bringing in billions. Also, tens of millions of patients truly believe that they are getting better care if they have an MRI rather than a X-ray.

    I also read that Medicare costs four times as much per patient in Miami than in LA. In Miami, doctors are scheduling Medicare patients for monthly MRI scans just on general preventative principles.

    My point is that huge battles await government when it tries to truly reign in wasteful health care spending. Both the doctors and the patients will fight like hell, not to mention drug companies, and clinics. Congressmen on the other hand are cowards when it comes to bucking public passion.

    I, for one, have little faith in our government's ability to manage such challenges. I think it will fail.

  82. Strange coincidence by brevp · · Score: 1

    This interesting article, which just happens to mention Obama+Healthcare, reminds me of watching The Daily Show the other night. Peter Orszag, the fellow who was in charge of the new federal budget was on. Even though Jon Stewart never brought up Healthcare, Mr. Orszag did. Over and over, without any prompting. I don't suppose this is part of a tightly scheduled media blitz, is it? Nah.

  83. Forgot to mention... (was Re:And next up) by Nutria · · Score: 1

    The government making choices about people's lives is horrible.

    I'm old enough to remember the 1970s and that "I'm from the government and I'm here to help." really was terrifying, because government fucked up so many things so badly.

    --
    "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
  84. anonymous coward by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have been reading all the comments and I am baffled by the sheer ignorance of just about everything.

    In America there is an incredible amount of disinformation. I have not seen any broadcast, save for some cable/satellite documentaries which warrant interest.Any in depth analysis of any topic pertaining Medicine is generally lacking and is almost always surrounded by some form of sensationalism. News are for sale.

    For sale;most people forget that in America almost everything is for sale and medicine is not an exception. So therefore there is Pharma X advertising this or that, Dr. Y demonstrating why "he" is so good at treating those ugly wrinkles, Hospital and University Z proclaiming their number one cancer centers or their leadership in such and such fields.

    Then there is the legal system, all for profit, doubtful for real justice(OJ anyone?). Malpractice premiums for OB&Gyn and Neurosurgeons etc. in the hundreds of thousands of dollars, enough to sustain any middle class American Family. How to pay for that?.

    Then Dr's. offices have to have the latest gadgetry(many of them gimmicks), luxurious furniture,plasma/LCD TV'S etc. because anything less makes patients suspicious of "not enough evidence of success". In synthesis. all PR stunts everywhere!!.

    If you tell a patient with a "common cold" to go home and have some bed rest, plenty of fluids, chicken soup (great by the way) and take some Ibuprofen or Aspirin and ride it out, you will get the suspicious look and the : "Dr. you are not even going to prescribe an antibiotic?" mantra.

    We are been victims of the dictums of our own society. The inefficiencies of our own media, the shortcomings of our values and the lack of ethics of our economic and legal systems.

    It takes many many years of study, sacrifice, competition and money to "create" a competent physician in America. It is disheartening how superficial people's observations are in general. There are bad apples in every angle of society and the field of medicine is not immune.

    I would like to see anybody who develops an acute ear pain in the middle of the night as a consequence of a common cold to accept that it will go away on its home and to go home and take an aspirin because this "journal" published some preliminary result that showed certain percentage will undergo spontaneous resolution. For that particular person it is 100%!!. And he/she is in pain!!.By the way, an ER visit for this would cost thousands because all kinds of testing will be done because possible economics but most likely because of liability issues. In these hard times nothing better than a medical misadventure to bring in some fresh cash.

    How can there be an Insurance A Gold plan, Insurance B platinum Plus etc. etc. etc. There is one type of medical care, and that is "the best you can offer" under any particular circumstance to a particular patient in his/her particular condition. That is what anybody would demand for any member of his/her own family. Percentages here, certainly mean nothing.

    Remember, people never complain when they pay for pleasure. Paying for pain... is another matter. Worse yet, if your IC does not cover it for some obscure clause in fine print the pain is even grater.

    I don't have the solution for this ugly big complex problem. As a physician, yes , you guessed it, after all this is Slashdot, I can only think that we are obliged to do the best we can and to the best of our abilities and that after 30 years plus in the practice of medicine and still going strong, the only thing that I have found consistently present is this: When someone is in a heck of a lot trouble pertaining their health the first thing you hear is "Get me a Doctor" and guess what, you can almost be certain he/she'll find one. Whether you land in the hands of someone incompetent and not human is not certain but chances are you will not.

    Finally as an information capsule. Arthroscopy is not always successful, no surgery always is, but if you broke your meniscus and a that

  85. Beta blockers not ineffective by tgibbs · · Score: 1

    Point: when the government "retires" beta blockers --- based on strong evidence that they're ineffective --- you can expect objections having to do with 'patient choice' and how the government is telling doctors what to do.

    There is not "strong evidence that beta blockers are ineffective." The article refers only to the use of beta blockers for acute MI. There is strong evidence that beta blockers are effective in reducing the death rate post-MI, and also in patients with heart failure.

  86. Re:bullshit (not) by tgibbs · · Score: 1

    Knee surgeries work, atheletes and the team owners have way too much money invested and knee injuries lead to knee surgeries often with remarkable success.

    These are knee surgeries for acute injuries. TFA is talking about arthroscopic knee surgery for osteoarthritis.

  87. A$$ to mouth is never healthy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've had bouts with my wife's second set of teeth in her vagina. I've never come across someone as yourself that was stupid enough to break a tooth on chewin his own ass. Maybe after my wife has her corrective surgery, you could have some of her unneeded teeth she didn't need down under?

  88. Just remember: DOCTORS BURRY THEIR MISTAKES. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can't emphasize that enough. Doctors kill millions per year, and are payed for it. Don't interrupt them with details to any treatment because it may only piss them off. Hey, he's got to support his living and tea-off at 3pm. Leave the poor guy alone, because he deserves the slack for going to a Pharmaceutical company-endorsed school on non-herbal and unnatural treatments that bypass actual therapies.

    There is a reason why the symbol of medicine is a Serpent on a Staff. What else do you think is wrong about Christian Science objecting to the talking-snake theory in the Garden of Eden?

  89. Auto insurance episodic; health is chronic by Estanislao+Mart�nez · · Score: 1

    Health Insurance should work like other insurance policies, for catastrophic issues. My auto insurance doesn't pay for maintenance but that is exactly what people expect from medical insurance.

    Auto insurance protects the policyholder from a different kind of risk. Criticizing health insurance for not being like auto insurance is a big mistake. Auto insurance protects against episodic risks; you get into a car accident, so you require a fair chunk of money right away, but after the claim is paid, you don't need any more money.

    Health insurance, on the other hand, needs to insure you both against episodic issues and chronic ones. A chronic risk is a risk where, one day, you need a significant amount of money for health care over many years, maybe even the rest of your life. In the general population, people will have acute episodes at some statistical rate, and some proportion of the population will be chronic sufferers. You want to insure yourself both against the episodes, and against the risk that you'll turn out to be one of the chronic sufferers.

    Now, the reason health insurance pays for "maintenance," in theory, is because routine care reduces the risk that people will be chronic sufferers. In practice, the private insurers in the USA do not want to insure chronic sufferers, nor pay for routine care, so they structure their products accordingly, by charging chronic sufferers much higher premiums than healthy people, and pushing for higher deductibles and HMOs in order to reduce their routine care costs. These pricing schemes and practices ultimately make it impossible in practice to insure oneself against acquiring chronic health issues.

    The reason we need universal health insurance is to force everybody to insure themselves against the chronic risks, because the private sector is just systematically unwilling and incapable of doing so, because they can make more money by not providing that kind of coverage. So it makes sense to have the government provide the compulsory chronic health risk insurance. and private insurers to provide supplemental coverage for episodic risks.

  90. People make the same mistake all over by sarkeizen · · Score: 1

    ugh....why do people make the same mistake all over. "Evidence Based Medicine" isn't meant to imply that all other medicine did not use evidence or even good evidence. It's an *idiom* from crying out loud representing a number of things that Sackett and others considered wrong with medical practice. One of which is there was not a standard for interpreting and ranking evidence in medicine.

    1. Re:People make the same mistake all over by WgT2 · · Score: 1

      Then, unless they are going to keep 'shop talk' in the shop, they need to use clearer idiomatic expressions for those who don't run in their circle(s).

    2. Re:People make the same mistake all over by sarkeizen · · Score: 1

      Your interpretation seems to be completely literal which makes your argument appear to be "they shouldn't use idioms".

      In any case nobody forced any non-doctor to use the term. Nobody forced the writer to skip their fact checking in this respect and lastly nobody forced you to used the term as if you understood it.

      Next time try blaming yourself rather than others.

    3. Re:People make the same mistake all over by WgT2 · · Score: 1

      I think one needs to recognize their audience when one writes to them.

      The use of idioms is fine. The context they are used in makes a difference.

    4. Re:People make the same mistake all over by sarkeizen · · Score: 1

      The context they are used in makes a difference.

      Like say when the proper meaning is linked to?

      Then, unless they are going to keep 'shop talk' in the shop, they need to use clearer idiomatic expressions

      Your commentary is misplaced I don't see anywhere in the linked article where EBM is even mentioned. It's only in the slashdot posting which does not appear to be written by a doctor. Ergo this isn't about someone's shop talk. As mentioned earlier the correct definition was linked to.

      Not to mention that the definition of an idiom is something that can't be derived from the conjoined meanings of it's elements. How could you make that clearer? Other than...say...linking to a definition?

      Again try, try to accept that you are the idiot here. It's healthy.

    5. Re:People make the same mistake all over by WgT2 · · Score: 1

      From the linked definition:

      "Evidence-based medicine is the conscientious, explicit and judicious use of current best evidence in making decisions about the care of individual patients."

      ... I still find the implication that current medical treatment does not apply these standards as heartbreaking.

      As mentioned earlier the correct definition was linked to.

      Exactly. The post, which I erroneously referred to as the article, makes it seem like the use of evidence is not used.

      But, I think you're right. If I'd wasted the time to read the extensive article, which you call a 'definition', I'd not been so mistaken about what was intended. (Is that article really about an idiom? I don't have time to read all of it.)

    6. Re:People make the same mistake all over by sarkeizen · · Score: 1

      ... I still find the implication that current medical treatment does not apply these standards as heartbreaking.

      Also from the link:

      Evidence-based medicine (EBM) aims to apply evidence gained from the scientific method to certain parts of medical practice. It seeks to assess the quality of evidence relevant to the risks and benefits of treatments (including lack of treatment).

      ...and some stuff about the ranking of evidence, recommendations and statistics.

      So it was your apprehension that medicine over the past decade or so generally applies the significant majority of these concepts?

      makes it seem like the use of evidence is not used.

      To you, but remember this is the subgroup of people who are unable/unwilling to consider their knowledge of a term significantly incomplete enough click a link and at least pry open their minds wide enough to determine (even simply by the size of the article) that the idea isn't the same as "having some usage of evidence".

      I'd expect those principles generally applied earn you a lot of misapprehension though.

      Won't even get into people who complain that someone isn't being clear and then uses 'implies' when 'I would infer' is clearer.

      But, I think you're right. If I'd wasted the time to read the extensive article,

      or even looked at it in order to determine this was more than just "having some usage of evidence".

      Is that article really about an idiom?

      It should convince you that it's more than the literal reading and some of which should convince you that it would be highly improbable to deduce from it. QED.

      I don't have time to read all of it.

      Perhaps you can re-allocate some of your "ignorant spouting off" time?

    7. Re:People make the same mistake all over by WgT2 · · Score: 1

      Finished?

      I admit my mistake and you ream me for it?

  91. Still have to Operate within the system. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Unless the broken-arm is an actual *life-threatening -emergency*...

    Why didn't you work within the system of your health insurance. I'm sure you could have negated to perform the operation immediately; determine an in-network dr / emergency room; Call your insurance and tell them you're going to the emergency room and then go.

    In a real life-threatening emergency get the best care available at whatever's closest.

    But you still have to work the system. I'd much rather fight w/ my health insurance than fight with the federal government over "reasonable and customary" treatments.

    1. Re:Still have to Operate within the system. by dodongo · · Score: 1

      Yes, because that's exactly what any rational person would do when they have a screaming child with a broken arm. Jesus Christ... I hope GP fought the hell out of the charges. I did for my treatment and managed to receive just treatment. After a year of haggling, yelling, stressing, and tracking down points of contact. Good times.

    2. Re:Still have to Operate within the system. by cptdondo · · Score: 1

      By way of comparison, my dad had complications with hip replacement that led to partial loss of use of his leg. The doctors here (in the US) basically gave him 4 days of therapy and a cane, and sent him home. Told him he would limp for the rest of his life. His bill for 3 days in the hospital plus the therapy was $70K.

      That summer, in the Czech Republic, the doctor sent him to a therapeutic spa for 6 weeks of therapy. And, since he and my mom are retired, offered to send my mother there as well, with the state picking up half the charges for her so he would not feel lonely. Total bill for 6 weeks, meals included? About $3,000US.

      After 6 weeks of intensive therapy, no limp.

      Which health care system is better?

    3. Re:Still have to Operate within the system. by dodongo · · Score: 1

      Emergency admit, 4 days, 7 hour surgery, $106k here. :-P Believe me, I have a thing or two to say about the insurance / medical billing industry in the states.

    4. Re:Still have to Operate within the system. by cptdondo · · Score: 1

      Dude, if you haven't caught on, there are *NO* emergency room doctors on a preferred provider list of *any* network. None, zip, nada, zilch. I'd have to go to Mexico or Canada to find one.

  92. Hype and Headlines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As a physician, I was rather curious when I saw some of the claims purported, especially regarding the early use of beta blockers after a heart attack and antibiotics in ear infection. I took the trouble to read the linked studies, and I could not for the life of me determine HOW these conclusions were reached from the articles in question.

    Just to stick to these two, since I don't wish to re-hash EVERY one of these points...

    The first study in question determined that giving an UNSTABLE patient beta blockers increases mortality (e.g., death). I have two words for this: NO SHIT. If I had EVER as a resident thought to give someone with low blood pressure (after an MI, probably due to cardiogenic shock) a medication that would reduce the ability of their heart to pump...well, one of my attendings would have cuffed my ear! The study suggests that beta blockers ARE useful when given during the hospital stay, after stabilization (2-3 days or so after admission) - which I had thought was standard practice. Beta blockers are given as early as safely possible, not blindly to anyone after a heart attack! Blind adherence to this idea would potentially be gross malpractice; you don't throw water on a drowning man, do you?

    As for the second, NOWHERE in the study does it seem to be suggested that antibiotics are not useful for inner ear infections. Sometimes it falls to a judgment call, whether or not to prescribe them - usually based on the severity of symptoms and whether or not pus can actually be seen. The article, however, dealt with tympanostomy - placing a surgical hole in the eardrum that is kept open with a small gasket. It is to allow the inner ear to drain more directly, and they either fall out on their own or are removed when the child is older (the middle ear drains more easily in adulthood, and inner ear infections are far more rare). The article basically states that surgery as an option should only be examined in cases of recurrent ear infection (as is currently taught!) and should not be routinely used for acute (sudden) cases regardless of severity (pain, effusion/fluid, etc.). Most cases do get better on their own, and if infrequent should not require surgery. But if I saw pus behind a kid's eardrum, and especially if they also had a fever, I'd be pretty damn remiss if I didn't give antibiotics.

    And as some have stated, that medicine, to quote syntaxglitch is a "mixture of actual science and cargo-cult pseudoscience," if frankly unfair. There is only so much that can be known. Trends can be studied in large patient populations, but while these may show better odds for a given treatment, NONE IS 100% EFFECTIVE. Trends and probabilities do not matter to the individual, and doctors have to rely on the science AND their own judgment in dealing with each and every patient. Granted, some are better than others: THEY'RE PEOPLE.

    For every disease that is 99% fatal, 1% survive; should we say that, according to the numbers, those that survive are likely to be dead? Or, worse, should we not bother to treat them because the numbers are so dismal? Doctors need to be more aware, perhaps, of practicing more efficient medicine - keeping costs down by not ordering a lot of extra and possibly unnecessary tests - but in the current litigious atmosphere that course is rather dangerous. But once we start trying to run medicine by the numbers...what's the point?

    "I'm sorry, Mrs. Johnson, but the beta blocker that's been keeping your blood pressure at 135/90, rather than your usual 300/180 with blood shooting out your eyes needs to be replaced. A double-blind study full of patients who aren't you found that this medication we already determined can't control your blood pressure works better."

    Yeah.

  93. sham or not? by stanjam · · Score: 1

    Well, it really depends on the condition, doesn't it? I am pretty familiar with back pain, having one herniated and one blown disk in my back. This is extremely painful. I know that some procedures, for certain types of back pain, is just as likely to not help as it is to help and can sometimes make it worse. However this is not always the case. Some procedures for certain conditions are showing to be VERY effective for those patients that can not get relief otherwise. That said, back surgery should be a last resort after trying the other remedies. Many back problems go away on their own, or with proper exercise, or medical treatment. However, sometimes it does not. There are quite a few different types of surgery you can get, and some surgeons clearly seem to have a much better success rate than others. Minimally invasive surgeries also seem to, at the very least, decrease the risks of making things worse. I have two friends who had long term back pain, and who eventually had surgery. One had titanium rods put in, and he is much better. The other had a minimally invasive procedure, where they heated up the disk, cut off the bad portion, reformed it, and cooled it down again. He was able to walk off the table and has done well since. With any procedure, always check your options, and if you can, take the time to go through all your available options before turning to surgery. I still have options available to me, which I will explore, but if they do not work, I will not hesitate to go the minimally invasive route in order to get rid of this pain. The pain is what drives people to accept surgery as an alternative, even if they are outright given a 50/50 chance of getting better. Why? Because the pain is awful, as is collapsing in public from searing pain. If you haven't had severe back pain, I hope you never do. I would do just about anything to rid myself of it.

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  94. ear infections? really? by drwho · · Score: 1

    I used to get ear infections regularly. My ear canal would swell up and close, and i'd be in pain and hard of hearing. I haven't had them in a while until now. I found that antibiotics did LOTS of good. But so did anti-inflammatory drugs like Naproxen Sodium. I am going to the doc tomorrow to get some antibiotics.

  95. WTF? by jcr · · Score: 1

    No cough remedies better than placebo? I know from first-hand experience that expectorants can stop a cough. Also, honey is highly effective in clearing out my throat.

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  96. many of these criticisms assume by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that there is no inherent value in, or validity of, placebo effects. the following is only somewhat tongue-in-cheek, but gets my point across: if i want my knee to feel better, give me the sham surgery, as it is less invasive (essentially just a scar) and let me feel better, but please don't tell me that you didn't do surgery.

  97. Well then let's start with low-fat diets by spectro · · Score: 1

    In the early 70s, the government spent millions in scientific studies to support the "food pyramid" with inconclusive results. They went on with the recommendation anyways and somehow population started getting fat.

    Our whole food industry is based on a unproven government recommendation to the point is hard to find high-fat foods in the supermarket anymore, everything is low-fat with a bunch of sugar on it.

    It kinda makes sense: don't want to get fat?, then don't eat fat. Don't want cholesterol?, avoid foods with cholesterol. But studies on human metabolism are showing the opposite is true: a high-fat, low-carb diet (Atkins kind) helps reduce weight and cholesterol levels... weird, uh?

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  98. My Friend Bill's Knee Problems by mscir · · Score: 1

    I hope Dr. Newman never suffers from the bone on bone knee condition my friend Bill is currently suffering from. Bill tells me the pain can be severe. If I can get my hands on them I'll be very happy to FAX Bill's X-Rays to Dr. Newman (as well as posting a link to them on slashdot) so the readers can judge for themselves.

  99. NY TIMES IS DEAD, SO IS THIS ARTICLE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This guy quoted bad evidence. On a lot of the points in the OP. NYT FTW!!!!1 Failed Organization Sensationalizing.

  100. FAIL by Hurricane78 · · Score: 1

    I fell into the classical trap for germans:
    "bekommen" = getting
    "werden" = become

    "bekommen" != become

    I am embarassed. ;)

    --
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  101. Those pills ... by PPH · · Score: 1

    ... I bought on line don't work! My pecker _is_ getting bigger. But women still hate me.

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    Have gnu, will travel.
  102. Century of the Self by Nick+Ives · · Score: 1

    Adam Curtis did a fantastic documentary series called Century of the Self that explored this topic.

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    Nick
  103. Astragalus by astragale · · Score: 1

    I have a hell of a lot of stories about people being given unnecessary/ wrong treatment. I am a strong believer that we, the patient must educate ourselves about the way the body and mind work and make ourselves knowledgeable about the different therapies out there. Doctors generally will not let you know about what options are available to you unless you ask or question.

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