Freakonomics Radio - 270. Bad Medicine, Part 3: Death by Diagnosis
Episode Date: December 15, 2016By some estimates, medical error is the third-leading cause of death in the U.S. How can that be? And what's to be done? Our third and final episode in this series offers some encouraging answers. ...
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This is an American condition. This is an American disease.
This has been one of the great mistakes of modern medicine.
That's David Kessler, who ran the Food and Drug Administration during the 1990s.
Surely you know the condition, the disease he's talking about.
President Obama's been talking about it.
This crisis is taking lives.
It's destroying families.
It's shattering communities all across the country.
But what does Kessler mean when he says this has been one of the great mistakes of modern medicine?
Drug overdoses now take more lives every year than traffic accidents.
A lot of time, they're from legal drugs prescribed by a doctor.
What Kessler is talking about is a combination of good intentions,
greed, and a complicated changing relationship
between doctors and their patients.
The result?
People dying every year from prescription drugs
that are supposed to heal us, not kill us.
It's a sick twist, isn't it?
So how'd this happen?
It's part of the recurring sense of hope and despair
associated with these drugs that are supposed to solve problems,
but they end up being problems in themselves.
The numbers are remarkable.
Prescription opioid use has gone up about 300 to 400 percent since the year 2000.
America is a world leader in the consumption of painkillers.
Here's what a 2007 report found.
We were consuming about 83 percent of the world's oxycodone in the United States.
And it is not because we had 83 percent of the world's pain.
It's because we are a consumer society that believes
in the power of a magic pill. How did medicine get taken over by consumerism?
Doctors used to practice medicine on sick and injured patients, and it was those two
players in the healthcare system. And now the same two people in the room, the doctor and the
patient, behind the room is a gigantic industry of people buying, selling, trading, bartering,
discounting, marking up all of our services. Today on Freakonomics Radio, the third and final part
of our Bad Medicine series. This time, we look at the doctor-patient
relationship. Who's got the real leverage in that relationship? They cope with their job by
giving an angry patient what they want, not what they need. What's the number one problem
in healthcare? I think the number one problem is we don't measure performance. We don't measure
the outcomes of patients in healthcare for 99 99% of the health care that's delivered.
And is it a better idea to just stay away from the doctor?
So I would think that you are a downright danger to your patients.
How is it that you're not?
No comment.
From WNYC Studios, this is Freakonomics Radio, the podcast that explores the hidden side of everything.
Here's your host, Stephen Dubner. In the first two episodes of our Bad Medicine series, we looked at some of medicine's biggest mistakes.
Drilling holes into people's skulls.
It would cause a whole series of malformations and probably a lot of fetal death.
It was literally taking someone to hell and back.
And we looked at how better science is pushing medicine not always forward, but often backwards.
It is quite common to see practices that end up getting reversed.
And the best estimates are that happens about 15% of the time.
We talked about who has been excluded from a lot of clinical trials.
The study of women in general became part of the collateral damage.
And these days, who gets included?
When you look at the evidence, what you often find is that trials are conducted in absolutely
perfect dream patients, people who are, by definition, much more likely to get better
quickly.
Now, that's very useful for a company that are trying to make their treatment look like it's
effective. But actually, for my real-world treatment decisions,
that kind of evidence can be really very uninformative.
Today, in our final episode of Bad Medicine, we focus on those real-world treatment decisions.
We focus on where healthcare really happens when a patient gets together with a doctor or another healthcare professional.
And what's one of the main reasons any of us might go to a doctor?
It's easy. It's because we're in pain.
Pain illuminates what is, I would argue, a general problem in medicine.
Keith Whaloo is a Princeton historian who focuses on health policy.
That is to say, who's to say what degree of pain a person is in and what constitutes truly effective relief other than the patient themselves?
And two different people might actually require different doses of medication to alleviate
the pain.
In the late 1980s and early 90s, there was a push to mandate the recognition and treatment
of pain.
This culminated in the promotion of pain as the fifth vital sign, along with temperature,
blood pressure, pulse, and respiratory rate, which made pain the only
vital sign that is determined not by objective measurement, but by the patient's own assessment.
So doctors were put in the position of having to determine whose pain was worthy of a prescription
painkiller and whose wasn't. Very often, doctors have decided, yes, in 2015, more than 650,000 opioid prescriptions were dispensed per day in the U.S.
One result of this prescription onslaught?
It is believed to have contributed to a recent uptick in mortality rates.
Anupam Jena is a physician and a health care economist at Harvard.
Mortality rates in the U.S. have risen for the first time in 10 years.
Which is striking, considering that mortality rates have been falling for at least 100 years.
The U.S. rise has been concentrated among a few groups, particularly white, middle-aged men and women.
Among white men with a high school education or less, the death rate has risen an astonishing 22%.
And the attribution of these issues is in part due to opioids.
And this is a problem that was created by medicine.
And yet you certainly can't blame your profession for that because it's an effective drug when used well, correct?
Correct, yeah. And, you know,
like many drugs and medicine, they're effective in certain situations. So for patients who
fall at home and break their hip and have a hip fracture, opioids for situations like that are
known to be effective pain relievers. Or in patients with cancer, particularly in cancer with bone
pain because of disease that has metastasized to the bone, opioids in that situation have been
shown to be highly effective in terms of reducing pain. But opioids for low back pain or headaches
or knee pain or hip pain or just chronic pain in general, opioids are not thought to be
an effective strategy. And yet we've seen the proliferation of their use in the last decade.
So how do you maximize the use of opioids when appropriate and minimize their overuse?
That's not easy. There are a lot of confounding factors, but it's hard to come up
with good prescribing protocols for pain relievers when you don't even have good measurement for pain.
Because we don't have any objective measures for actually figuring out what works,
we are necessarily in a realm where not just subjective assessment,
but also trial and error medicine is necessary to figure out what works.
And to that end, Weilu says, But also trial and error medicine is necessary to figure out what works.
And to that end, Weilu says,
We need to think about over-medication and under-medication as not two poles of the use of pain medicine.
Because then what we do is we kind of just whiplash like a pendulum.
We go from believing that under-medication is a problem to believing that over-medication is a problem.
What we need to do is to understand
that both of these things can be a problem at the same time.
The American Medical Association,
hoping to address this problem,
recently turned back the clock.
It recommended that pain be removed as a fifth vital sign. But how much
will that help? Anupam Jena again. As an economist, I think about supply and demand. So there's the
demand of patients, increasing demand for patients, by patients for opioids. Once you've put the power
in the hands of the patient, or just to call it what it is, in the hands of the consumer,
it can be hard to reclaim it. So how did we get here?
Yeah, so pain management was really emerging as a recognizable and legitimate area of medical practice and care in the 1960s, early 1970s,
with the development of multidisciplinary pain centers.
Keith Whaloo again.
There was a general recognition that you needed more than just drugs to deal with people in chronic pain. Keith Whaloo again.
But those multidisciplinary pain centers were really expensive. And so, you know, one of the economic trends since the 1980s with the rise of cost containment is to sort of see drugs as the cheapest and the fastest solution to our problem.
This coincided with a big shift in how drugs are marketed to the public. Before the 1980s, the idea that you would see prescription drugs being advertised on television was laughable.
It emerges in the mid-1980s that, you know, we're sort of seeing government regulation as the problem and the market as the solution to our problems.
Zoloft, a prescription medicine, can help.
With Adger?
Prestor.
Cymbalta? And out of this era emerges this idea that people have the right to have the information at their disposal.
Increased risk of prostate cancer, worsening prostate symptoms, decreased sperm count, ankle, feet, or body swelling, enlarged or painful breast.
About prescription drugs and to bring that knowledge into the physician's office.
Ask your doctor.
That's between you and your doctor. In order to, not so much demand, but to shape clinical decision-making.
Ask your doctor.
Ask your doctor.
Ask your doctor.
Call your doctor right away.
In fact, the aggressive marketing of OxyContin as a safe pain medication
led to criminal convictions for top executives at its manufacturer, Purdue Pharma,
for misleading the FDA, clinicians, and patients about its risks.
But just because one painkiller is declared risky doesn't mean that consumers wouldn't demand other painkillers.
Because, as Keith Whaloo told us earlier,
We are a consumer society that believes in the power of a magic pill.
And once consumers gained more leverage in the medical realm,
guess whose opinions began to matter a lot more?
Yep, the consumers.
In the form of those patient satisfaction surveys
you fill out after a doctor's visit.
Yeah, it is a problem.
You know, that's the problem when we just measure things that are easy to measure.
That's Marty McCary, a surgical director and health policy scholar at Johns Hopkins.
By putting all this attention on customer satisfaction,
consumer satisfaction, or patient satisfaction,
we're creating a consumerist culture in health care.
People come in, they want an antibiotic for their kid and
they don't care what your diagnosis or explanation is. They want to walk out with that antibiotic
prescription. Or you're in pain and you want that pain script. If the doctor is under the microscope
for their patient satisfaction scores, you can imagine the perverse incentive here.
Indeed, a 2012 paper in the Journal of the American Medical Association pointed to an unintended consequence of this perverse incentive.
Physicians who do not comply with patient requests, the authors wrote, may be the recipients of poor ratings on patient satisfaction scores, possibly resulting in emotional, financial and professional penalties.
So, imagine this. You are a doctor and your patient asks,
maybe by name, for a prescription painkiller.
You may think the patient doesn't really need it.
You may, in fact, be worried they'll abuse it,
maybe even sell it.
But if that consumer has the ability
to punish you professionally,
well, you might just write the script.
They respond to demands. They cope with their job by, you might just write the script. They respond to demands.
They cope with their job by, you know, giving an angry patient what they want, not what they need, because they have to see five patients in an hour.
I can tell you emphatically, doctors are getting crushed out there. crushed with record rates of burnout due to increasing overhead, higher malpractice premiums,
declining pay, lowering Medicare reimbursement, being forced to see more patients in a single
hour, corporate medicine. On top of all that, McCary says, there is a brutal paradox.
Patient satisfaction is not a helpful metric when it comes to measuring
health outcomes. Well, at least not helpful in the direction you might think it would be.
A 2012 study found that the most satisfied patients had higher rates of hospitalization
and higher mortality rates. Why? The authors suggest that more satisfied patients may request more discretionary treatments,
which may increase the likelihood of adverse effects.
So, you know, it's a big problem.
You know, what's important to a patient when they come to a doctor?
The doctor's patient satisfaction score, well, that's a piece of the doctor's quality. But really, what you're interested in
is the doctor's judgment and the doctor's skill and the doctor's ability to empathize.
Those are the sort of metrics, Marty McCary argues, that will help doctors treat patients
better. So coming up on Freakonomics Radio, now all you've got to do is collect all the data on doctors' judgment, skill, and empathy, right? But again, not so easy, in part because of
the sheer volume of that data. We are doing more than we've ever done before. We are doing more
procedures, giving more medications, hospitalizing more patients, diagnosing more things than we ever have in the history of medicine.
Also, why feedback for doctors is so important,
especially for doctors who've been practicing a while.
What we find is that if you happen to be treated by a doctor
who is 10 years or 15 years out of residency,
your mortality within 30 days of being hospitalized is higher.
And remember to make a year-end donation to WNYC, the public radio station that produces
Freakonomics Radio. Just go to freakonomics.com slash donate or text the word freak to the number
69866. Thanks. Thank you. medical reform. First step, improving the feedback loop. That is, what we know and way too often what
we don't know about what actually works. I think the number one problem is we don't measure
performance. We don't measure the outcomes of patients in health care for 99 percent of the
health care that's delivered. McCary might be exaggerating a bit, but still, how can this be?
When you go in for medical treatment, don't the health professionals who treat you find out if their intervention actually worked?
The short answer is, often no.
But the longer answer is much worse.
The longer answer is that not only do medical interventions often not work, medical interventions will sometimes kill you.
Marty McCary and co-author Michael Daniel
recently published a study arguing that
the third leading cause of death in the U.S.
after heart disease and cancer was medical error.
I'm going to say that again.
The third leading cause of death in the U.S.,
accounting for 10% of deaths annually,
is medical error.
How can this be?
Are doctors and nurses showing up for work stoned out of their skulls?
Are they sneaking into hospital rooms at night and smothering their most annoying patients?
Are they surreptitiously removing healthy organs to sell them on the black market?
If only.
That would make the problem so much easier to solve.
Why are so many deaths the result of medical error?
Well, I think anybody that practices medicine knows that medical errors are a function
of the amount of things that we do in healthcare.
The amount of things meaning what?
We are doing more than we've ever done before.
We are doing more procedures,
more giving more medications,
hospitalizing more patients,
diagnosing more things than we ever have
in the history of medicine.
Right here today in the United States,
we have the most medicalized,
the most diagnosed population in the history of the
world. In economic terms, you could say there's both an oversupply and an over demand of health
care, since the supply and demand are both fueled by the setup of our health care insurance system.
Patients who buy expensive insurance want to get their money's worth and may overconsume, just as you might overconsume at an all-you-can-eat restaurant.
And doctors who make money primarily when they do stuff may tend to do more stuff.
When we're doing all of this stuff, it makes you wonder, does that mean we're also making mistakes proportional to the amount of stuff that we do?
Well, that sounds scary.
So first of all, I don't want to scare people out there.
Most doctors are doing the right thing and always will.
All right, but how can it be that the people we entrust to heal us,
the people who've worked their entire adult lives to learn how to heal us,
may sometimes be killing us?
To get to that answer, you first have to
understand that for decades, we've been making a sort of clerical error.
Our research found the methodological flaw in our country's national health statistics.
We use a billing code system to tally causes of death from death certificates. And people don't just
die from billing codes. They die from medical mistakes, communication breakdowns, overdoses,
fragmented care, closed insurance networks, preventable complications, unnecessary treatments.
And if you look collectively at this group of problems, let me call it medical care gone wrong, it's got a significant burden in
society. But those complications and oversights and errors, McCary says, seldom wind up on the
death certificate. When you fill out the death certificate, you have to list the reason the
patient died, both the direct reason and the underlying reason the patient died. Well, we all
knew what the real reason was, but you can't put that on somebody's death certificate. Why not?
When somebody experiences a fatal mistake, their heart stops, and then you do CPR, then you pronounce
them dead. What do you put on the death certificate when it says, what was the cause of the patient's immediate death? And that's really what got us thinking. And that's what led to this study,
because you end up putting cardiovascular arrest. And then it turns out what we put on the death
certificates populates our country's national health statistics. So when the government puts out every year,
these are the most common causes of death in the United States. And by the way, that list is a big
deal. That list informs all of our research funding. It informs all of our public health
campaigns in America. That list is a big deal. So, you know, you realize we're misclassifying medical mistakes as other causes
and that medical mistakes don't even show up on the list.
So, McCary and his colleagues got hold of a mountain of data and started digging.
Well, we basically looked at the best available research on the topic from the New England
Journal of Medicine and Health Affairs and a big Medicare analysis
and something called the OIG report. It was a government report that was independent.
And what'd they find? Before I tell you that, let me tell you this. There is a famous report
put out by the Institute of Medicine in 1999 that set a benchmark for death by medical error. That report estimated there were between
44,000 and 98,000 deaths annually in the U.S. due to medical error. Those are obviously large
and frightening numbers, so large and frightening that I've heard many, many medical professionals
insist those numbers had to be way too high. So what number did McCary come up with? At least
250,000 deaths every year in the U.S. due to medical error. A quarter of a million people.
Before we get into the errors themselves, let's think for just a minute about how
the story of those deaths was hidden in the data. As we've noted throughout
these three episodes on bad medicine, a lot of what we take as factual and empirical within
medicine often isn't very empirical. That includes how data from clinical trials are manipulated or
misinterpreted. And as Marty McCary argues, it includes how the cause of death is categorized.
And that's why he's pushing for a fundamental reform to require that doctors, when they fill out a death certificate, specifically indicate if a medical error was involved.
Because how do you solve a problem if you don't even acknowledge the problem?
And with medical errors, the problem is both deep and broad.
Medical errors have a complex taxonomy.
That, again, is the Harvard doctor and economist Anupam Jena.
But for someone like me, I would just break them into two categories.
There are errors of diagnosis, and then there's errors of commission when a patient has surgery on the
wrong leg or when a patient is given an antibiotic despite it being well documented in the medical
record that he or she has an allergy to that medication or when a patient receives a dose
of insulin that is five times as much what it should have been because someone
couldn't read a doctor's handwriting in the chart. There are errors that occur in the hospital
because of poor hygiene and infectious disease management where people get hospital-acquired
infections. I've got to think that those errors of commission are extraordinarily rare, though, yes?
Well, you know, you would hope so, but it turns out that they're not.
The Johns Hopkins study is actually more about those second set of errors.
So when I hear that, I, as a potential patient, I say to myself,
self, unless you are bleeding heavily or unconscious,
just stay away from every doctor and certainly every hospital?
Well, hopefully if you're unconscious, you won't be making that decision.
Well, you know, I think you also have to take it a step further and say, okay,
well, when a diagnostic error occurs, what is the implication of that? Does it mean that the
diagnosis is ultimately made later in a safe and effective way, well, that's much less alarming than if an
incorrect diagnosis by a doctor leads to, let's say, a biopsy that then causes longer-term problems.
The only thing that I'd mention there is that this is not just an issue of decisions that are made
by individuals. In fact, most of the thinking on this issue points to system-level problems
that lead to diagnostic errors.
The problem is a system problem.
That's Marty McCary again.
Remember, here's what McCary argued earlier. I think the number one problem is we don't measure performance.
In other words, the medical system often fails to collect useful feedback.
Simple data, simple transparency.
McCary himself is a surgeon.
99% of people that have surgery in the United States go home and no one documents or keeps
track at a systematic level, that is national or regional or hospital level, how the patient
does.
At six months, are you glad that
you had your knee surgery done? At six months after hip surgery, are you walking again? Or
a year after weight loss surgery, what is your weight today? We don't keep track of those things
in healthcare for most of the procedures or treatments that we do.
And the problem is that how can you really come up with a quality metric
if nobody's tracking it?
This doesn't mean doctors never check in with their patients,
but the system simply isn't designed to capture robust follow-up data.
Well, there's a follow-up visit.
You know, we'll scribble some note,
patient's doing well, incision has healed nicely. Who's actually measuring the real patient-centered outcomes six months later or a year later? That is a giant opportunity in
healthcare to fix the system by creating a marketplace centered around value, not just around quantity.
That, of course, would require incentives for doctors that reward preventive care and maintenance
rather than just interventions. McCary points to a few areas of medical care where patient
outcomes are well-tracked. But it's only for a small sliver of medical care.
It's like heart surgery and cystic fibrosis outcomes.
In those cases, he says, money plays a big role.
It's almost this hodgepodge of conditions where there's been leaders and good funding
or foundation support.
But absent good follow-up data and absent good feedback in general,
it's hard to tell what works and what doesn't.
Of course, this is true for anything, not just medicine.
But with medicine, the stakes are high.
And if you're the patient, the stakes are practically infinite.
You are putting your life in someone's care,
and you only have one life as far as we know.
Other choices might seem hard, like which house to buy, how to invest your money, how to pick a career or a college major.
But if you've got a serious health concern, your choice of treatment and doctor is an existential choice.
So given a choice between two doctors, let's say, One fresh out of medical school and the other with
15 years experience. Which one do you go for? I think one question that any patient would have
when they see a doctor is, how much experience does my doctor have? That's Anupam Jena again.
Most patients, he says, like the idea of a gray-haired physician. Because the gray-haired
physician has more experience, he's seen more patients like me, and he's just going to take better care of me.
That makes sense, doesn't it? But the challenge is that there hasn't been a lot of actual
high-quality evidence to assess that issue. So Jenna and some colleagues set out to gather
some evidence. But it wasn't so simple as comparing patient outcomes for experienced
doctors and newer doctors.
One problem that you're going to run into is the notion that more experienced physicians will take care of sicker patients.
And how do you get around that issue?
The way that we've tried to get around it is to focus on a very specific group of doctors that are called hospitalists.
Hospitalists are internal medicine doctors
who focus on hospital-based care. Jenna is himself a hospitalist. Because of his research
and teaching, he only sees patients for a month or two each year, but he's familiar with the
hospitalist setup. And the unique thing about these types of doctors is that they tend to work either shifts or scheduled work.
For example, I might work for two weeks, and then my colleague is on for two weeks, and then her colleague is on for two weeks.
Which is nice because we can isolate the effect of you, correct?
Exactly.
So patients more or less end up getting quasi-randomized to physicians with different characteristics. So for example,
if you happen to get hospitalized in the first week of May, you may be treated by a group of
doctors who on average have five years less experience than if you happen to get hospitalized
in the second week of May. And we can basically see what happens if a patient happens to be treated
by a doctor who is 20 years out of residency versus five years out of residency.
And what we find is that if you happen to be treated by a doctor who is 10 years or 15 years
out of residency, your mortality within 30 days of being hospitalized is higher. Just to be clear,
if you happen to draw a more experienced doctor, you are more likely to die.
And so it does suggest that more experience actually could have a negative effect on outcomes.
And what's your best explanation for why that's the case?
So I think the most likely explanation is two things. One is that the field of medicine is
constantly evolving, and there's always new
knowledge, new evidence emerging, both in terms of how to make better diagnoses and what are the
right treatments for particular patients. And as you get further and further away from residency,
I think what happens is that the knowledge that you had as a resident, which is a time when you
spend 80 to 100 hours per week in the hospital, that knowledge gets somewhat ingrained in you.
New knowledge isn't picked up as rapidly. So I think what happens is that older physicians
are just less up-to-date, if you will. I'll give you one caveat. We don't see this effect among
high-volume doctors, doctors who are seeing a lot of patients.
And so what that suggests is that if you're an older doctor who is seeing a lot of patients,
you are protected from this adverse effect, which makes sense.
Unfortunately, some people come out of medical school or training thinking, all right, I've mastered this body of knowledge or this skill set,
and I'm good to go for the next 50 years of practice.
Marty McCary again.
And the reality is, even as a tenured faculty at Johns Hopkins doing complex surgery in a group
that does, you know, the four of us do the most pancreatic surgery of any group in the country,
I'm still learning every day. And my senior, senior partner who's about to retire, he's still learning, you know, the year before he stops operating every day.
So medicine's a career of learning.
And I think the more feedback we can get at any level.
That said, Anupam Jena's research shows that surgeons are among the subset of physicians who do seem to improve with experience. There's the thought that muscle scale experience in the surgical field over time
improves outcomes, and we find that as well. But outside of surgery, when you're thinking about
the care of patients that requires a lot of cognitive skill and being up to date on current
medications and diagnoses, we actually find that over time, older doctors do worse.
So someone like you, so I don't mean to turn this into attack on you, but someone like, medications and diagnoses, we actually find that over time, older doctors do worse.
So someone like you, so I don't mean to turn this into attack on you, but someone like you,
who A, medical school is getting further in the rearview mirror as it is for every doctor, but additionally, you're only practicing for a couple of months out of the year, not full time.
So I would think that you are a downright danger to your patients. How is it that you're not?
No comment. Well, you know, so usually when I work on service, I'm paired with someone who is a full-time clinician educator, and there's a huge difference in the amount of
knowledge. And it's very humbling to see that.
Jenna's research looks specifically at physician experience as it relates to patient
outcomes. But there's another angle to consider when we talk about experience in the medical realm,
especially if you're interested in reform. We have supposedly entered the era of evidence-based
medicine. This is still relatively new ground. The reality was that what we were practicing was something called eminence-based medicine.
That's the physician and researcher Vinay Prasad.
It was where the preponderance of medical practice was driven by really charismatic and thoughtful, probably to some degree, leaders in medicine. And, you know, medical practice was based on bits and scraps
of evidence, anecdotes, bias, preconceived notions, and probably a lot of, you know,
psychological traps. As outdated as that sounds now, keep in mind that a lot of our institutions,
including medical institutions, are still eminence-based, which is to say, in many
institutions, many big decisions are made by
the highest-ranking people who tend to have the most experience. And people with a lot of
experience tend to have fixed views on things. They're attracted to the status quo or some minor
variation of it because that's what they know. It's what they trust and believe in. Also, if you
want to be a bit uncharitable for a moment, we might argue that the status quo is additionally appealing to senior people because, well, because they got theirs already. reformers like to talk about, it's messy. It's time-consuming. It's a pain in the neck.
Like I said, that isn't a charitable view, but I'm afraid it's not wrong either.
Change can be hard. Uncertainty can be scary. True improvement can be elusive.
But one thing that's so inspiring about all the people we've been speaking with for this series
is how they embrace the notion that it's okay to challenge the very institution that you've devoted your
career to. In fact, with medicine, it's a requirement. I think back to something we
heard from Philip Makoviak, the doctor who unraveled the true story of 98.6. As a medical historian, it is patently obvious to me that future generations will look
at what we're doing today and ask themselves, what was grandpa thinking of when he did that
and believed that? Look at us now, how good we are. Why weren't they that good? And they'll have to learn all over again that science is imperfect. And to maintain a healthy skepticism about everything we believe and do in life in general, but in the medical profession in particular. So what happens now?
There's a long list and reasons to be excited.
Marty McCary is particularly enthusiastic about new ideas for collecting better patient feedback.
Well, Washington State has a really neat program in select hospitals.
After you have a certain operation, you get a text question. It
says, how functional are you after your surgery? Here's a scale from one to five. Are you glad
that you had the procedure done? Do you feel that the alternatives were adequately explained to you
before the procedure? And those few questions populate a quality database and they keep track of outcomes,
but that's a rare thing in healthcare. We need to be doing that for every procedure in the United
States. Everyone in the United States that has robotic surgery or a tonsillectomy or gallbladder
removal or heart surgery or colon or whatever it is, should have some data that
follows up and allows us to make conclusions about where we can do better, what's working
and what's not working.
We just sort of discovered or rediscovered, if you will, recently that we don't need to
treat appendicitis with surgery.
You can come in with early appendicitis and we can give you antibiotics and it works more than 60% of the time. That's cool. And we probably could have learned that
if we had the right databases to look at those conclusions to say, hey, of those patients that
refused surgery and we just gave them antibiotics for the last half century, how did they do?
McCary says a lot of this change is being driven by players outside the medical establishment.
It's happening really led by startup companies.
The startup community in America is doing great things in health care, and they're starting to say, hey, can we track how well someone does after surgery?
How is your experience? How is your outcome?
How is the care that you received after whatever procedure you had done?
And over enough time and with enough patients,
they're going to be actually able to make conclusions about quality using firsthand patient data.
But given the complexities of medicine, McCary warns we shouldn't expect quick fixes. First of all, it's different in every area of
medicine. It's different. If you're a cardiologist or an OB or a psychiatrist, you can't simply
implement strategies to improve quality and standardized care in the same way. In my own field of surgery,
we believe there's something that can be done called benchmarking. That is, we can see how we
stand as a surgical group, as individual surgeons, relative to other surgeons in our region and
nationally that take on similarly complex cases.
And that's why we've proposed, and we have a grant to do this nationally,
we want the doctors' associations to come up with a metric of performance.
We want to apply it to all the doctors in that specialty.
And then we want to just share the data with the doctors individually
in a confidential, peer-to-peer, civil fashion.
This is where you stand. This is where the rest of the country stands.
And we're not making a judgment. We just want to share with you your data.
The point, McCary says, is improvement, not punishment.
As a matter of fact, firing people for making mistakes in hospitals is the absolute wrong approach.
We need to learn from our mistakes, not send a message that if you have a concern or speak up or you do a mistake, we're going to kick you out.
Doctors are already in a tough place, under attack for nearly every quarter, including for these past few episodes for Economics Radio. And the fear of making a mistake or what may be construed as a mistake
is already so high that doctors practice way too much defensive medicine, that is,
tests and procedures primarily meant to avoid a malpractice suit. A 2010 study found that U.S. hospitals and doctors spent about $45 billion a year on defensive medicine.
But if the present looks occasionally bleak, the good news is there's plenty of optimism about the future of medicine,
as we learned from the variety of clever and motivated people we've spoken to for this series.
Where science and medicine is going in the future is
to more and more precision medicine so that we can get closer to an autonomous and individualized
diagnosis. That's Teresa Woodruff, a professor at Northwestern and director of the Women's Health
Research Institute. When someone comes in with a cancer, there's a set of protocols, there's the
way we treat in general populations,
but we can't tell the specific outcome for that individual. How will they tolerate that drug?
Will it clear the circulation faster for one individual versus another, which means it might be more efficacious or less efficacious on an individual basis? Those are some of that
precision medicine that eventually we have to get to. So I promise not to hold you to the prediction I'm about to ask you to make.
But in terms of precision medicine, like you're talking about, whether it's diagnostic, prescriptive, whatever it is, I just want to know what kind of time frame you see for that being a real practical everyday thing.
Is it more like two to 20 years,
or is it more like 50 to 100 years from now, or somewhere in between, or somewhere beyond?
I think science is becoming even more catalytic, so it's going faster and faster and faster.
Breakthroughs are coming about every day, and I suspect within the next 10 to 15 years,
we'll really understand enough to get away from radiation
and chemotherapy. And that eventuality is the promise of basic science and medicine.
And what that means is that every day as we discover more and more fundamental biology about
cells or about animals or about the way systems work, that translates into better and better medicines
that ultimately will change the patient who is seen tomorrow versus the way the patient
that's seen today.
There's a lot of promise right now that in the post-genomic world that some personalized
medicine or precision medicine will allow us to do that much better.
Jeremy Green, again, a physician and historian
of medicine at Johns Hopkins. Although at present, that's still highly promissory,
except for in a few very well-circumstrized cases. Some people will or won't respond to
a certain drug for hypertension. And you fish around, you try one, you try another, and then
you find a cocktail that works for them. Other people will develop allergies to specific medicines,
and then you're constrained in ways that you hadn't originally anticipated.
I think the game is going to be the same game,
which is a game where, if we're really honest,
perhaps a lot of the low-hanging fruit in medicine has been plucked,
some of the great interventions.
And that, again, is Vinay Prasad.
Now it's a matter of sorting out interventions with medium to small benefits.
But that's okay.
But with a medium and a small benefit, you really have to be sure that you can minimize bias.
You can minimize the role of your own sort of preconceived notions.
And that's why we need careful randomized studies.
But the biggest reason for optimism, Prasad argues, doesn't have to do with better evidence or better protocols or better
medicine per se. It has to do with better thinking. And that, he says, is happening.
I see it every day in medicine. I see it in movements like the British Medical Journal's
really commitment to evidence, to transparency, to data sharing. I see it in JAMA Internal
Medicine's commitment to knowing when more is harmful, when too
much medicine is harmful.
And that took many years for us to realize.
I think we are increasingly allowing people with diverse points of view in medicine, contrarians,
perhaps even like myself, to write articles in really important journals so that they
can be read and thought of by other people.
So I think we're at a moment where we're much more open to different ideas on how to move medicine forward.
So here's to moving forward. And here's to your health and even happiness during the upcoming
holidays. Thanks so much for listening to this three-parter on bad medicine. One more reminder,
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Thanks again and take care. Freakonomics Radio is produced by WNYC Studios and Dubner Productions. Thank you. Thanks for listening.