Category Archives: General Cynicism

Inflation–Good news Bad news–Health Care Remains a Problem

The inflation numbers for last year show an overall inflation of 2.50-3%. Not too bad.

However, health care plan premiums rose 5%. Yes that’s under the 10%/year average over the past decade (131% in 10 years) but it remains about twice the general inflation figure.

We do need health reform now!


The Cost of Care–a Graphic Graph

This from National Geographic:


(Click on figure for larger view)

They also comment:

The United States spends more on medical care per person than any country, yet life expectancy is shorter than in most other developed nations and many developing ones. Lack of health insurance is a factor in life span and contributes to an estimated 45,000 deaths a year. Why the high cost? The U.S. has a fee-for-service system—paying medical providers piecemeal for appointments, surgery, and the like. That can lead to unneeded treatment that doesn’t reliably improve a patient’s health. Says Gerard Anderson, a professor at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health who studies health insurance worldwide, “More care does not necessarily mean better care.”

Medicynical Note: Only an idiot would think we have the best “system” in the world. Unfortunately there appear to be no shortage of such in our culture.


Only in America–I’m tired of using this title

Uwe Reinhardt points out that community rating in health insurance is the norm in virtually all industrialized nations. Community ratings in these countries include age which means the elderly are not charged more than younger people–a policy omitted from our current health reform legislation.

The health systems of Switzerland, the Netherlands and Germany are frequently cited as potential models for a reformed American health system. All three countries offer their citizens a wide choice of health insurers — none of which is a government-run health plan. Yet in all three countries full community rating is de rigueur.

Meanwhile in the “best” health system in the world, insurers have been free to overcharge those with risk including the elderly to discourage their purchase of insurance resulting in part, in the 50 million citizens without insurance.

In the article Reinhardt contrasts the sense of “community” in various countries and the ethic that allows, indeed facilitates, the implementation of universal health care.

Medicynical Note: Americans are outliers in the world in a number of ways. The near religious (read on) notion of “original” intent of the founding fathers, our love affair with guns, our aggressive literal “word of God” religious beliefs, and our non system of health care to name a few.


Rationing: We have it NOW!

Financial rationing of health care has been with us for years and has worsened as our costs have skyrocketed.

This is the latest atrocity:

Miami’s public hospital system stopped paying for kidney dialysis for the indigent this week, officials said, leaving some patients to rely on emergency rooms for their life-sustaining treatments.

Emergency room dialysis!?

At Jackson, officials said patients could come to the emergency room for treatment, and eight have this week. “That’s the best we can do right now,” said Dr. Eneida O. Roldan, Jackson’s chief executive.

Federal law requires that emergency rooms treat patients in serious medical jeopardy, regardless of their ability to pay. For patients with end-stage kidney disease, going without dialysis can prove fatal in as little as two weeks.

To be treated in an emergency room, however, dialysis patients often must show up in severe distress. In an interview, Dr. Roldan said patients could be treated in Jackson’s emergency room as often as three times a week, the national standard for continuing dialysis.

Medicynical note: This is somewhat embarrassing news for the country with the “best” health care in the world.


The Best Health Care System in the World Isn’t

We keep hearing from those opposing health care reform that our health care is the “best.” But it isn’t. This from the NEJM Jan 6, 2010.

Despite the claim by many in the U.S. health policy community that international comparison is not useful because of the uniqueness of the United States, the rankings have figured prominently in many arenas. It is hard to ignore that in 2006, the United States was number 1 in terms of health care spending per capita but ranked 39th for infant mortality, 43rd for adult female mortality, 42nd for adult male mortality, and 36th for life expectancy.

Comparisons also reveal that the United States is falling farther behind each year (see graph). In 1974, mortality among boys and men 15 to 60 years of age was nearly the same in Australia and the United States and was one-third lower in Sweden. Every year since 1974, the rate of death decreased more in Australia than it did in the United States, and in 2006, Australia’s rate dipped lower than Sweden’s and was 40% lower than the U.S. rate.

The article goes on to describe the many opportunities, with the advent of health reform, to improve our non-system. These may be exciting times.


Spin in Medical Results

This ABC piece by John Paulos points out how the public is misled about the magnitude and significance of medical results.

That being said, imagine that a headline announces that screening for cancer X reduces deaths from it by 25 percent. Imagine as well that another headline announces that screening cuts deaths from cancer X by about 1 in 1,000, reducing the rate from 4 in 1,000 to 3 in 1,000.

25% is much more impressive than a drop of 4 in 1,000 to 3 in 1,000

See this in a British newspaper touting the results of the Jupiter study. This article reads like a PR release from AstraZeneca the makers of Crestor.

The Jupiter study showed heart attacks were cut by 54 per cent, strokes by 48 per cent and the need for angioplasty or bypass was cut by 46 per cent compared with a placebo. Levels of ‘bad’ cholesterol were halved.

Experts say the results would not necessarily be found with other statins because some work differently.

But in another interpretations of the Jupiter study published in the New England Journal:

The relative risk reductions achieved with the use of statin therapy in JUPITER were clearly significant. However, absolute differences in risk are more clinically important than relative reductions in risk in deciding whether to recommend drug therapy, since the absolute benefits of treatment must be large enough to justify the associated risks and costs. The proportion of participants with hard cardiac events in JUPITER was reduced from 1.8% (157 of 8901 subjects) in the placebo group to 0.9% (83 of the 8901 subjects) in the rosuvastatin group; thus, 120 participants were treated for 1.9 years to prevent one event. (Medicynical emphasis)

Not nearly as impressive as the 54% reported in the news article.

This type “interpretation” of results is common. PhARMA companies maximize the “benefit” by using relative rather than absolute values. In addition to overemphasizing the medical benefit their interpretation also doesn’t factor in toxicity and cost. Somewhere, somehow in our “reformed” health care system we need to look at this.


Alternative Medicine–it’s not medicine

Nice review of five of inexplicably popular alternative modalities with references here.

As you’d expect reiki, reflexology, zone therapy, homeopathy, magnetic therapy, and kava don’t work. Also inexplicably some insurers cover such nonsense.


Happiness improves Outcomes–Silly idea that lasted 20 years

In 1989, a study from Stanford posited that support groups helped patients with cancer live longer. The study was flawed by small numbers (86 patients), the fact that the many patients who died early on were weighted less in the results than the few that had long survivals.

Immediately counseling groups developed cancer support programs, costing a fortune. Everyone wanted to feel “better” about their disease and reap the benefit of a longer life. It was amazing that this bad study’s impact was so great.

For the patient caught up in the maelstrom of bad science, in a subtle way, it became their fault that the disease progressed–because they didn’t have a positive enough outlook.

This all was proven to be nonsense as one would expect. In 2007 the same author, David Spiegel, in a small study (125) patients tried to “replicate” the previous flawed study. He found this time, as others have documented, no effect on survival from participation in these support groups.

In the interim Spiegel became a guru for support groups to improve survival of cancer patients and literally made a career speaking and appearing on TV flogging his bogus hypothesis. He’s still talking as noted in this NY Times article which takes an appropriately skeptical view of benefits of happiness.

Medicynical note: Having experienced cancer in a loved one I’m aware of the difference between being delusional and realistic; Between trying everything and trying everything that makes sense. One of the drivers of cost of health care in our culture is the notion that there must be “something” that will work and that we are all entitled to try everything. I’m not sure how we approach this.


Health Reform Not So Bad–Pass now, Amend Later

The republican strategy to oppose and campaign against health reform is the best news the country could have as it will be disastrous for republican election hopes.

Consider the millions who benefit from the bill; the cost savings accruing from health reform; the disappearance of medical expense caused bankruptcy; the fact that we are the last industrialized nation to have some form of national health scheme.

If the bill had passed during the Clinton administration is likely the GM and Chrysler bankruptcies would have been avoided.

This in support of health reform from the December 2, NEJM article by Jonathan Gruber, Ph.D.

One common refrain of opponents of reform is that it represents a government takeover of health care. But reformers made the key decision at the start of this process to eschew a government-driven redesign of our health care system in favor of building on the private insurance system that works for most Americans. The primary role of the government in this reform is as a financier of the tax credits that individuals will use to purchase health insurance from private companies through state-organized exchanges. In Massachusetts, which passed a similar reform in 2006, private health insurance has expanded dramatically. The public insurance alternative that is included in the Senate bill simply adds another competitor — on a level playing field — to the insurance market, and the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projects that it will enroll only a tiny minority of Americans.

And

A second criticism is that the bills are budget busters. This is simply incorrect. Both bills are completely paid for — indeed, both would reduce the deficit by more than $100 billion over the coming decade. And the CBO estimates that both would reduce the deficit even more in the long run, particularly the Senate bill with its strong cost-containment measures.

Regarding Medicare

In any case, there is substantial evidence that reducing these overpayments will not harm the health of Medicare patients — just the pocketbooks of those who profit from them. This reform would simply use market bidding to set the reimbursement rate for Medicare Advantage plans, rather than setting administrative prices, which have traditionally been much too high; and it would reduce payments to hospitals by a small percentage, while tying them to outcome measures.

and so on.

Medicynical Note: Perfect, NO. A good start, yes!


Another alternative medicine that isn’t medicine–Ginkgo

It’s been claimed that Ginkgo improves cognition and may delay or prevent dementia. It doesn’t. It’s in the JAMA here.