Cautionary Tales with Tim Harford - The Spreadsheet of Life and Death
Episode Date: June 26, 2020Clive had a deadly form of cancer, but fortunately there was a new drug to treat it. Imagine his anger when he was told the treatment was too expensive. He’d entered a world where unique human lives... are given a value in a mathematical formula. So how much should we spend to extend or save a life? And are some lives worth more than others?Read more about Tim's work at http://timharford.com/Tim's latest books 'Fifty Inventions That Shaped The Modern Economy' and 'The Next Fifty Things That Made The Modern Economy' are available now. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Pushkin
Freeland is a village in the English countryside.
A few miles north of Oxford where I live, it boasts a 19th century church,
a cricket team, and a pub called the Oxfordshire Yoman. It has about 1500 residents. In 2007,
one of them, Clive Stone, went to see his doctor. Stone was a bank manager, recently retired.
He joined the bank straight from school and worked his way up.
Now he was concerned about a mysterious pain in his chest.
Renal cell carcinoma is cancer of the kidney.
If you have it, you don't normally discover that because you have a pain in your chest.
Nevertheless, that is what happened to Clive Stone, and the prognosis was bad.
The diagnosis was a great shock to me, Stone later wrote.
Both my wife, Jan and I were regular walkers, who kept ourselves fit with visits to the
gym and I was a swimmer, I could find no trace of any hereditary renal cancer in my family.
Stone was only 59 years old.
There was some good news, a new drugs that showed promise, Sunitaniib
or Sutent, had been approved in America the previous year. It wouldn't cure Stone's
cancer, but it might extend his life. And then, some bad news, Stone would not be offered
the drug, it was too expensive. The UK's National Health Service, the NHS, refused to pay for it.
To stone, that seemed wrong.
He set up a campaign called Justice for Kidney Cancer Patients.
That humble sounding cause soon kicked up a storm, one that offers a lesson about how
we make life for death decisions the world over.
I'm Tim Harford and you're listening to another cautionary tale. There are many ways to decide if a sick person can get a medical treatment that might help.
The most common is, can you pay for it or will you're insurer pay for it?
In state funded health systems such as the UK's NHS, it's, will the tax pay a pay for it. In state-funded health systems such as the UK's NHS, it's, will a taxpayer
pay for it. What the NHS will and won't pay for is guided by a body called, Nice, the
National Institute for Health and Care Excellence. A new treatment comes along, like, suitent,
for kidney cancer. It'll benefit some patients, like Mr Stone. But the British taxpayer
has limited money and it's nicest job to make sure it's spent wisely. It is an ironic acronym.
The decisions the Institute must make are far from nice.
Clive Stone and a hundred fellow campaigners turned up at Nises headquarters in Hoban,
Central London. They carried placards with a slogan,
Kidney Cancer Patients deserve the right to life. Among them was an outspoken talk radio host,
the Kidney Cancer survivor himself. He had come along to lend his support.
I want the chairman of NICE to come down and speak to these people, he said.
I want him to look into the eyes of the people whose lives he would cut short.
These faceless bureaucrats are trying to stop people's lives.
In his credit, the chairman of Nice did come down and meet the protesters.
Clive Stone told him, I'm dying.
You're taking any hope away from me.
A few months later, nice changed its guidance.
Pfizer, the drug company which makes suitent, agreed to lower the cost.
Nice said the NHS could now pay for it, although only in certain circumstances it depended
what else might be afflicting the patient.
By now, this was no longer about just one drug.
Clifestone's campaign had caught on.
All over the country, other patients with other kinds of cancer were pleading for the NHS
to pay for their own expensive new drugs.
Stone's work had also caught the attention of his local member of Parliament, a man called
David Cameron. Mr Cameron was swerve, self-assured,
and young, just 39 years old when he became leader of the UK's opposition party, the Conservatives.
A general election was imminent and in the spring of 2010 Cameron faced off against the
incumbent Prime Minister Gordon Brown in the first of the televised debates.
He's what he said.
I have a man in my constituency called Clifestone who had kidney cancer, who came to see me with
seven others, tragically two of them have died because they couldn't get the drug suit
and that they wanted, that was on the market, that people knew was a good drug.
That's a scandal in our country today."
Cameron made a promise.
He said, and I'll set up a special new fund to pay for cancer drugs.
Clive Stone's kidney cancer had become political.
How much money is society willing to spend to keep someone alive?
What is a life worth?
It's an uncomfortable question to ask, but what is a life worth is also an uncomfortable
question not to ask.
Decades ago one of the 20th century's most brilliant brains conspicuously did not ask it.
His name was John von Neumann.
von Neumann was interested in game theory, computers, and bombs.
He was perhaps a little too interested in bombs.
von Neumann is said to have partly inspired the most famous mad scientist in movie history
Dr. Strangelove.
But easily, we are coming to the computer.
In 1949, von Neumann was working for the Rand Corporation,
advising the US Air Force on military strategy.
Rand had one of the very first computers, an EdVAC.
You know the kind, it filled a room and cost a fortune.
von Neumann was using the computer to answer a very strange, lovey and question.
What would be the most cost-efficient way
to nuke the Soviet Union?
You've had the computer variables about the number of bombs,
the cost of different types of planes, landbases,
logistics, and so on.
The computer crunched through 400,000 permutations and it showed
von Neumann clearly what the US Air Force should do. Imagine the conversation in the cockpit
on a mission to bomb the Soviet Union if von Neumann's plan had come to pass.
This plane feels so flimsy. Yeah, they were built on the cheap. We don't actually have
a bomb on board, right?
No, bombs are expensive. We're a decoy.
Most of these planes don't have bombs.
Why are there so many planes?
Because even if the Soviets shot most of us down, the chances are some bombs will get through.
So you and I are likely to get shot down?
Well, that's why they don't want to spend too much on the planes." It was a clever plan. Two clever by half said Air Force Chiefs. When they read von Neumann's
proposal, they were offended by the thought of sending their pilots on what was tantamount
to suicide missions. von Neumann's model had delved deep into the price of planes, but
had completely failed to consider the issue
of pilot's lives.
This was awkward.
Rand could hardly insist that the pilots were expendable, indeed it's common to say that
every human life is infinitely precious.
But that can't quite be right either, because any jobs, such as that of an Air Force pilot,
are jobs that bear some risk. If pilot's
lives must be protected at all costs, the Air Force chiefs could never allow them in a plane
at all. So, the value of human life couldn't be infinite, and it couldn't be zero. It
had to be something in the middle. Whenever the Air Force generals had to decide on approving a mission, they must somehow weigh
the risk to pilot's lives alongside the monetary costs and the chances of success, even if
they couldn't articulate exactly how they did it.
Rand felt sure that their awesome new computing power had the potential to improve that kind
of decision, but only if they could figure out a way to plug pilots
lives into von Neumann's equations alongside all those dollars and cents. And nobody at
Rand had a clue how to do it. They were completely stumped.
In the 2010 UK election, David Cameron's healthcare spending pledge paid off. He won.
And the new Prime Minister was as good as his word. Soon the Cancer Drugs Fund was up
and running with £200m a year to spend, at the time that was over £300m.
The next year, Clive Stone was honoured for his campaigning. The Queen awarded him
an MBE, a kind of miniature knighthood, with Prince Charles pinning a medal on his chest.
Unfortunately by now, Stone's wife, Jan, had developed a rare form of breast cancer,
and Stone's own cancer had spread to his brain. Their wretched medical luck was just getting worse.
How much is a pilot's life worth? The mathematical wizards at Rand kept scratching their heads. I know, what about
the cost of the Air Force of training a replacement pilot? Hmm, maybe not, somehow that didn't
seem any less likely to offend the Air Force chiefs. It was 20 years before there was an
intellectual breakthrough on this problem of how to quantify the worth of a life, and it
came from the pen of a
Harvard educated economist with a Nobel Prize in his future.
Thomas Shelling knew that Rand's pilot problem was far from unique.
Economists also needed a clear way to think about situations where decision-makers have to
balance prosperity with risks to life.
In 1968, Thomas Shelling sat down to write an essay on the
worth of a human life. This is a treacherous topic he began. You can say that again.
Shelling considered all the usual ways one might try to value an asset, gently
mocking how inappropriate they would be when applied to someone's life. The loss of
future productivity, for example.
If a Harvard professor dies, his family will miss him, and it will miss his earnings.
We do not know which of the two in the end it will miss most, Shelling wrote, and if he
died recently, this is a disagreeable time to inquire.
It was hopeless, Shelling said.
Nobody can sensibly answer the question,
how much would you pay not to die. But what we can do, and implicitly we do all the time,
is to weigh up small risks, like a one in a million chance of death.
Here's an example. Your friend invites you for a weekend visit. She lives 100 miles away,
so that's a 200 mile round trip journey. Statistics tell us that driving 200 miles gives
you a roughly 1 million chance of a fatal accident. Do you refuse to go? Even though
you'd like to see your friend? Of course not. Few of us would let that risk deter us. We take it for granted.
Economists now have a fancy piece of jargon for a 1 in a million chance of death.
It's a micromort.
So driving 200 miles is 1 micromort.
It's 34 micromort if you do it on a motorbike.
Giving birth is 170 micromorts in the US. In a lot
of European countries it's safer. Going under general anesthetic is 10 micromorts.
The fun stuff in life can be risky too. A day of skiing is half a micromort. Scuba diving
is 5 micromorts. Hangliding 8 micro-morts. But these are
risks that we, or at least some of us, are willing to take. In some cases, jobs pose
risk, and we're also willing to take those risks for a price. In other cases, we might
choose to pay for something that will reduce our risk of death, such as a bike helmet.
The details are difficult.
There are many situations like this and we don't always think consistently about them.
But the principle, shelling said, is quite straightforward, and it gives us a sensible way
to talk about the value of life. First, determine as best you can how much people are willing
to pay to avoid a micromort, then multiply that figure by a million, and that must be what we think our own lives are worth.
In America, economists reckon that people value micro-morts at roughly $10. That implies we think our lives are worth about $10 million.
Shellings idea is known as the value of statistical life.
Economists use that idea to advise on everything from pollution to product safety regulations
to speed limits on the roads.
In 2003, the Bush administration floated the idea of putting more weight on saving younger
lives.
That kind of logic might lead us to put polluting factories in a part
of town with more nursing homes, rather than a part with more nursery schools, or more
generally it might persuade us to accept risks to people who are already nearer the end
of their lives. The logic is obvious, but the idea was hugely unpopular, critics dubbed
it the Senior Death Discount, it was quickly dropped. But in healthcare, it standard practiced to value younger lives more.
Imagine you have two patients who need a heart transplant and only one donated heart.
Do you give the transplant to the 19-year-old or the 91-year-old?
Or flippercoyne?
I think most of us would give it to the teenager. Medical
resources are seldom unlimited and doctors have to prioritize somehow.
So economists in the health sector came up with a different method to try to formalise
the kind of intuition we have about the heart transplant. They ask how long a given treatment
might prolong a patient's life, along with the quality of that extended life.
The jargon here is Qualies. That's quality adjusted life years.
The reason Clive Stone initially couldn't get the drug treatment he wanted was in large part
because nice had calculated the cost per quality was too high.
And now Mr. Stone was bumping up against the brutal logic
of the spreadsheet once again.
Stone's brain tumors could be treated
with something called gamma knife surgery,
a kind of highly targeted radiotherapy.
Nice said the NHS could pay for it sometimes,
but not when patients had a poor prognosis
from other cancers.
It wasn't worth it, not enough qualities.
What about the new fund that David Cameron created? It existed precisely to pay for treatments
that nice wouldn't approve. Could it fund Stone's treatment? But no. The fund was for
drugs and Stone didn't need a drug he needed surgery. In a cruel irony,
the fund he had inspired couldn't help him. But surely that was a loophole that should
be closed. Stone went back into campaign mode, reaching out to the Prime Minister David
Cameron, but he couldn't take a chance on waiting for a change in policy. Stone was a
widow now. Cancer had taken his wife
Jan quickly. She didn't get to meet her first grandchild. Stone wanted to stick around.
He decided to pay for the surgery himself. I know I've got a limited time left, but apart
from this ticking time bomb in my head I'm feeling fit and well, I just want to keep going
for as long as I can.
Economists are paid to grapple with trade-offs between money and life, but for many people
it's a taboo subject.
The temptation is to say, we must save lives and shut down the conversation.
And not everything is a trade-off.
When Covid-19 arrived, it
was never an option to let the virus run wild. That would have crashed economies more surely
than any lockdown. But there are trade-offs. We can't pretend they're armed. Every
easing of a lockdown means more risk of infections and deaths.
How many deaths are we willing to accept to let schools open and give children the education
they desperately need?
What about swimming pools?
Coffee shops?
Hair salons?
We could view lockdowns as a kind of risk-reducing regulation and think about micro-morts and the
value of a statistical life.
That would imply every
death is worth paying $10 million to prevent. Or perhaps we should view lockdowns as a
kind of public health intervention and factor in how the virus poses different risks for
different ages.
In the UK, nice typically values a single quality, a single year of a quality life prolonged
in the range of $30,000.
COVID-19 poses vastly more risk to the elderly, so if we're thinking through the lens of quality
years of life remaining, our decisions about how to proceed change drastically.
Or maybe we need a new measure altogether.
As the UK pondered how to ease its lockdown,
a group of academics came up with a new proposal,
not a quality, but a well-being life year.
It tries to fold in figures for things like mental health.
Is it the right approach?
I don't know.
But it does at least try to ask the right
questions. I realised the spreadsheet method seems repugnant to most of us, but as John
von Neumann discovered, we can't ignore the trade-offs. In the end, we have to balance the risks
to life against the things that make life worth living.
against the things that make life worth living.
The Cancer Drugs Fund was a popular policy.
UK media coverage was positive, but sure there were some who grumbled that it was diverting money from other parts of the NHS, but the biggest criticism was that it wasn't spending enough.
Over six years, the Cancer Drugs Fund bought drugs for almost 100,000 cancer patients.
In 2017, researchers looked at how effective it had been.
It turned out that four-fifths of the drugs it bought had no clinical benefit at all.
The drugs that did have effects often also had side effects.
They extended people's lives on average by a little more than three months.
Those were precious months, no doubt. The cost was £1.27 billion, not far shy of $2 billion.
For that money, you could easily hire 10,000 nurses.
How can we decide if the money would have been better spent elsewhere?
The researchers used qualities.
They reckon the same amount could have done five times as much good if it had funded
other treatments for other patients with other conditions.
Professor Richard Sullivan, who led the research, said the fund had been a major policy error
and a huge waste of money. What had gone wrong?
Remember the cancer surviving talk show host who said the faceless bureaucrats were trying
to stop people's lives?
It's an emotive quote, but wrong.
Nobody was trying to stop anybody's lives.
The bureaucrats were trying to decide how to spend a limited pool of money where it would
be likely to do most good.
They were doing their jobs.
David Cameron must have known that.
He's a smart guy, so it's hard to avoid the conclusion that making Clive Stone an election
issue was a cynical calculation.
As the researcher Richard Sullivan concluded, populism doesn't work when you're dealing
with complex areas of policy like this. It was politically and intellectually lazy.
But in the end, it claims on us, the voters. We make it very hard for our societies to
have cool and rational conversations about life and death decisions. Studies of media coverage point out that
new cancer drugs tend to get a disproportionate amount of hype, nobody wants to grumble about
the cost, and as the pandemic has taught us, we all want to hope for miracle cures.
By the time the report on the Cancer Drugs Fund came out. David Cameron was no longer Prime Minister. He'd resigned after losing
a bitter referendum campaign over Brexit.
Three weeks before that crucial vote, he took time out from the campaign to talk to his
local newspaper The Oxford Mail. They wanted a quote about a constituent who'd died,
and Cameron was happy to oblige.
Clive Stone was an inspiration to me and I'm sorry to hear of his passing.
He was an amazing man who made such a difference to so many people's lives.
Cameron said.
Clive Stone's story was brave and tragic.
It's hard not to react with emotion, but if we're judging policy and politicians. We should try.
Our sources included an article on the Cold War Origins of the Value of Statistical
Life by Spencer Bansath, and on personal testimony on the Kidney Cancer Support Network
website written by the late Clive Stone.
As always, a full list of our sources is in the show notes on timhalford.com
Corsinary Tales is written and presented by me Tim Halford with help from Andrew Wright.
The show was produced by Ryan Dilly with support from Pete Norton. The music, sound design
and mixing are the work of Pascal Wise. The scripts were edited by Julia Barton, special
thanks to Mia Labelle, Carly Milyore, Heather Fein, Maya Canig,
Jacob Weisberg and Malcolm Gladwell. Corsionary Tales is a pushkin industry's production.
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