Category Archives: General Cynicism

Guns make murder too easy, Too many guns means too many murders

The police said the four handguns Mr. Pardo used in the killings, a fifth one that he used to shoot himself and two shotguns found in his home in Montrose, Calif., were legally registered to him. He had also legally gotten the fuel tanks he used to seed the Covina fire.Only in America will incidents like these occur with such frequency. Our gun laws facilitate them!

Dallas Roadway shootings kill two drivers

And in the Holiday spirit

3 die after Gunman in Santa suit Targets party

Addendum: Now six reported dead in Santa shooting. Now up to eight. More on Santa here:

“The police said the four handguns Mr. Pardo used in the killings, a fifth one that he used to shoot himself and two shotguns found in his home in Montrose, Calif., were legally registered to him. He had also legally gotten the fuel tanks he used to seed the Covina fire.”

5 handguns and two shotguns. How pathetic.

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PET Scans, Very Costly but Becoming Routine–does it always improve outcomes?

At a tumor board today we discussed a case of a 80 year old woman, with a 55 year smoking history that continues to today. She presented with moderately severe chronic lung disease and a lung mass that impinged on her bronchi. A biopsy showed this to be a non small cell lung caqncer. There were several small indeterminate satellite lesions that were thought likely to be tumor–too small to biopsy.

The pulmonologists thought her poor breathing capacity eliminated the possibility of surgery to remove the tumor. The surgeons also didn’t think the tumor was resectable. The radiation oncologist thought she should have a PET scan to see if her disease was curable with radiation treatment–highly unlikely in similar cases even in the best of circumstances. His thinking was that he would use different technique if the disease were not local–though the CAT scans already showed several suspicious lesions away from the original tumor site.

It should be noted that PET scans often miss small metastatic lesions and if positive require biopsy confirmation. So a negative PET showing no spread would have a good chance of being incorrect. And a postive PET would require some confirmation to act on it. All this in an 80 year old with non-resectable lung cancer.

That decision to do a PET scan costs about $4000 in our institution. The range of cost around the country is between $3000 and $6000.

In no other endeavor involving individuals are such expenses incurred, with so little consideration of expense and in this case with so little expectation of a successful outcome. It’s one of the reasons our healthcare costs in the last year of life are excessive.

In the woman’s case above it could be reasonably argued that the chance that this tumor was local was virtually nil and that she should be palliated with local irradiation to relieve the tumor related respiratory symptoms and then treated symptomatically.

In my view she has no chance of cure whether she has the PET scan or not.

Can we afford such testing? Where do guidelines end and physician judgment begin? Don’t we pay physicians to excercise judgment and don’t they need to include cost efficacy in their patient care decisions?

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Unitedhealth It’s all about the MONEY

The Wall Street Journal (behind the wall) notes this about recent SEC rulings on Unitedhealth backdating options for executives.

“The company’s former General Counsel, David J. Lubben, agreed to a $575,000 penalty in the case.”

“Mr. Lubben also will repay $1.4 million in gains and $347,211 in prejudgment interest. In addition, he agreed to an order barring him from serving as an officer or director of a public company for five years and from appearing before the SEC as an attorney for three years.”

This is not the first time this company has moved money from patient care to executive compensation:

“A year ago, in one of the largest executive-pay givebacks in history, former UnitedHealth Chief Executive William McGuire agreed to forfeit about $620 million in stock-options gains and retirement pay to settle civil and federal-government claims related to stock-option backdating.”

This type fraud while not on the Madoff level does raise the question of who the company is in business to serve. Patients or executives? Until now it appears to be the latter and Medicynic is not optimistic that this will change.

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Bad News for Vitamin Manufacturers, Naturopaths, Megavitamin advocates– Vitamins don’t work, may hurt you

It’s been apparent for some time that vitamins taken in pill form have little positive benefit and may hurt you, particularly when taken in large doses. This article in the LA Times summarizes where we are, it ain’t pretty.

“two long-term trials with more than 50,000 participants offered fresh evidence that vitamin C, vitamin E and selenium supplements don’t reduce the risk of prostate, colorectal, lung, bladder or pancreatic cancer. Other recent studies have found that over-the-counter vitamins and minerals offer no help in fighting other cancers, stroke or cardiovascular disease.”

Vitamins may harm you:

“These things are ineffective, and in high doses they can cause harm,”

“One trial that followed 29,000 male smokers in Finland for an average of six years found that men who took beta carotene were 18% more likely to be diagnosed with lung cancer and 8% more likely to die during the study than men who didn’t.”

“A second trial involved 18,000 American men and women who were smokers or former smokers or who were exposed to asbestos at work. That study found that after an average of four years, lung cancer rates were 28% higher among those who took beta carotene and vitamin A, and their overall risk of death during the trial jumped by 17%.”

“Those who took vitamin E were just as likely to develop heart disease, stroke and a variety of cancers as the women who took a placebo, according to results published in 2005 in the Journal of the American Medical Assn.”

Get the idea? Vitamins taken as dietary supplements are ineffective and a waste of moneythat’s 10 billion dollars a year in health care expenditures wasted.

There is much more in this article, so read it and if you are a vitamin manufacturer, weep!!!

Medicynical disclaimer: The case of Vitamin D’s beneficial effects may be different since a deficiency of vitamin D (compared with normal levels found in people) is thought to be associated with an increase the risk of some medical problems. The question remains whether correcting the deficient level by taking supplements helps. We simply don’t know but are recommending it.

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Monopoly Medicine– Ovation Pharmaceuticals, Is This Some Kind of Joke?

It’s hard to believe that “antitrust” enforcers are accusing a drug company of monopolistic practices for a drug that costs $500 dollars for a complete course of treatment. While I certainly agree that the price increase noted in the article ($36 to about $500) is not supportable by the cost of development and manufacture, there are far worse, and more costly, examples of drug patent monopoly abuses.

Consider, for example, drugs under patent that are used in patients with fatal and or debilitating disease that cost a much as $10,000/month and over $100,000/year–more than the average and median income/year in the U.S. These new drugs have, for the most part, limited efficacy and represent an incremental improvement in treatment and outcomes. Their development costs are often subsidized with tax funds and their pricing inflated by inefficiency, marketing costs and greed.

While I consider the issue of Ovation drugs for patent ductus is significant, the drug cost involved is trifling compared to the other abuses of the pharmaceutical industry.

We need patent reform. Medicynical views have been outlined here and here.

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Why the U.S. Spends More on Health Care

The McKinsey Quarterly has an analysis of health care spending and believes:

“that the United States spends $650 billion more on health care than might be expected given the country’s wealth and the experience of comparable members of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).

The costs for outpatient care are growing fastest because of the movement from inpatient to outpatient surgery and by the increasing expense of outpatient care. Specialist care drives cost and as the number of generalists decrease because of economic factors, this trend can be expected to accelerate.

“Outpatient care is by far the largest and fastest-growing part of it, accounting for $436 billion, or two-thirds of the $650 billion figure. The cost of drugs and the cost of health care administration and insurance (all non medical costs incurred by health care payers) account for an additional $98 billion and $91 billion, respectively, in extra spending.”

“Far more important was a surge in the average cost per visit resulting from factors such as the additional care delivered during visits, a shift toward more expensive procedures (for example, diagnostic ones such as CT and MRI scans), and absolute price increases for equivalent procedures. In all likelihood, costs have also gone up because over the past decade there has been a marked shift in the delivery of care, from general practitioners to specialists.”

Prescription drug costs are driven by our resistance to using cost effectiveness as a guide to use and our reluctance to negotiate prices with manufacturers. Patents are part of the problem here. We claim we want a “free market” but provide pharmaceutical companies with a generation long monopoly. This might work if these companies weren’t so greedy. Their pricing is predatory rather than realistic. They say to patients we’re going to charge whatever we can, without relation to cost of development, taxpayer’s contribution to the drug’s development or efficacy. We need patent reform.

“After outpatient care, the category with the highest above-ESAW expenditures, at $98 billion, is prescription drugs-not because Americans are buying more of them but rather because they cost 50 percent more than equivalent products in other OECD countries . The United States also uses a more expensive mix of drugs; the price of a statistically average pill is 118 percent higher than that of its OECD equivalents.”

The inefficiency of administration is attributable in part to the profit need of insurers and the duplication of efforts over many states: marketing costs, underwriting, claims processing, and overhead.

“The third-largest source of above-ESAW spending is health administration and insurance, at $91 billion. In this category, the United States spent $486 per capita in 2006-twice the outlay of the next-highest spender, France, with $248, and nearly five times the average of $103 across peer OECD countries.

Of the $91 billion in above-expected spending, $63 billion is attributable to private payers. Profits and taxes-a negligible expense in OECD countries with single-payer systems-account for nearly half of this total. The cost of public administration for Medicare, Medicaid, and other government programs accounts for the remaining $28 billion in US above-ESAW spending.”

McKinsey doesn’t offer firm proposals to fix the system but does provide a strategic framework that’s worth reading. What’s clear however is that our current system is broke. It provides mediocre care at a very high cost.

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Sin vs The Wonders of Technology

I have a wonderful grandchild, the product of in-vitro fertilization and am grateful for his life.

However, the medical experts of the Catholic Church, (more here) in their wisdom seem to believe that the in-vitro technique that helped bring him into existence is somehow sinful. In their latest guidelines on bioethics they:

“condemned artificial fertilization, embryonic stem-cell research, human cloning and drugs which block pregnancy from taking hold.”

“A long-awaited document on bioethics by the Vatican’s doctrinal body also said the so-called “morning after pill” and the drug RU-486, which blocks the action of hormones needed to keep a fertilized egg implanted in the uterus, fall “within the sin of abortion” and are gravely immoral.”

I can presume it remains a sin to use conventional birth control as well. Also not mentioned is the sensitive issue of abortion even in cases of rape and incest.

In places where Catholic Institutions dominate health care as in my home town, (one hospital and many physicians directly employed) these limits present major issues of access for those of us who disagree.

Most of us will ignore such medieval top down pontification and I for one will honor the effort of my kids to become parents of a wonderful truly miracle child.

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Drug Prices– Patent Reform is Essential to Health Care reform

Fascinating article on the use of cost efficacy data to determine coverage in the U.K. The scheme in the U.K utilizes an impartial board the National Institute for Health and Clinical evidence (NICE) to look at evidence based results and the costs of medications. They then recommend for coverage based on the efficacy and the availability of resources to pay in the system. A rational approach? Rationing?

Both! With single drugs alone costing more than the median and average incomes in our countries we need to evaluate what their use actually accomplishes. In the U.S. we implicitly ration and have done so for many years by pricing insurance beyond the capability of many citizens (50 million approximately) and adding deductibles and co-pays that put many new drugs beyond the reach of patients.

The Time article points out the industry attitude:

“but industry advocates were not so kind. Robert Goldberg, vice president of the Center for Medicine in the Public Interest, an advocacy group financed by drug makers, likened Dr. Rawlins and his institute to terrorists and said their decisions were morally indefensible.”

Despite this a great number of countries are implementing similar schemes.

“For years, Britain was almost alone in using evidence of cost-effectiveness to decide what to pay for. But skyrocketing prices for drugs and medical devices have led a growing number of countries to ask the hardest of questions: How much is life worth? For many, NICE has the answer.”

“Top health officials in Austria, Brazil, Colombia and Thailand said in interviews that NICE now strongly influences their policies.”

“”All the middle-income countries – in Eastern Europe, Central and South America, the Middle East and all over Asia – are aware of NICE and are thinking about setting up something similar,” said Dr. Andreas Seiter, a senior health specialist at the World Bank.”

In fact the problem of drug pricing is based on drug company greed and inefficiency. The Pharmaceutical industry spends far more on marketing than research; rewards company executives and patent holders extravagantly; and ignores tax funded public supported research’s contribution to new drugs. Medicynic has pointed out the minimal drug company investment necessary for the drug imatinib (Gleevac), priced at over $50,000/year. The Time article points out other abuses.

“Celgene’s first big seller was thalidomide, a decades-old medicine now used as a cancer treatment, which is so cheap to manufacture that a company in Brazil sells it for pennies a pill.”

“Celgene initially spent very little on research and priced each pill in 1998 at $6. As the drug’s popularity against cancer grew, the company raised the price 30-fold to about $180 per pill, or $66,000 per year. The price increases reflected the medicine’s value, company executives said.”

“In 2005, the company introduced Revlimid, a derivative of thalidomide that is supposed to be less toxic, but may be no more effective. Celgene priced it at about $260 per pill, or $94,000 per year.”

It’s truly your money or your life. Is that what the company executive meant by value? Gold at 800/ounce is cheap compared to these agents.

Drug manufacturing is the new alchemy with the irony being that many of the newer agents are only marginally better than previous treatments. They are undoubtedly an improvement but is the cost/unit improvement worth bankrupting the health care system.

We need patent reform and aggressive negotiations with drug manufacturers to curb excessive pricing. (See this for proposals) There is legislation that requires reasonable pricing for government research funded advances that has never been applied. And lastly we should have an organization like NICE that objectively evaluates new advances, costly or not, and provides guidelines for payment and their use.

The question is whether the new administration has really isolated itself from Big Pharma’s influence. We’ll see soon enough.

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More Conflicts of Interest

The NY Times (11/30/2008) has a terrific article on Barry McCaffrey and other military types who work promoting defense industry clients to the Pentagon. What’s so insidious about McCaffrey and some others are their use by the news media as “objective” commentators on foreign policy, military matters and war.

“The president of NBC News, Steve Capus, said in an interview that General McCaffrey was a man of honor and achievement who would never let business obligations color his analysis for NBC. He described General McCaffrey as an “independent voice” who had courageously challenged Mr. Rumsfeld, adding, “There’s no open microphone that begins with the Pentagon and ends with him going out over our airwaves.”

“General McCaffrey is not required to abide by NBC’s formal conflict-of-interest rules, Mr. Capus said, because he is a consultant, not a news employee. Nor is he required to disclose his business interests periodically.”

Medicynic doubts both the “independence” of the reporting and recommendations of these employees of the military industrial complex. They have the same veracity problem as medical people in similar roles on the payroll of the medical industrial complex. Money rules!

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More Guns: Two killed at Toys R Us

Black Friday’s toll at Toys R Us–two dead, innumerable people terrorized.

The NRA would have us believe the solution is more guns!

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