Friday, February 22, 2013

How To Practice Medicine in a World We Can Never Truly Understand


Central to the problem of how best to live in a world that we cannot understand is how to regard:

“The Extended Disorder Family (or Cluster): (i) uncertainty, (ii) variability, (iii) imperfect, incomplete knowledge, (iv) chance, (v) chaos, (vi) volatility, (vii) disorder, (viii) entropy, (ix) time, (x) the unknown, (xi) randomness, (xii) turmoil, (xiii) stressor, (xiv) error, (xv) dispersion of outcomes, (xvi) unknowledge.  (Nassim Nicholas Taleb, Antifragile, London: Allen Lane, 2012)
To this impressive list, I would add seventeenth and eighteenth items:  failure and death.  All of these characteristics scare and frighten most of us, and so we do our best to avoid them.

Despite the popularity of self-help books emphasizing the pursuit of happiness, a vocal minority has advocated embracing all of the above negative items in order to live fully and successfully.

Eric G. Wilson perhaps provides the best overview of this minority report when he observes that

“To desire only happiness in a world undoubtedly tragic is to become inauthentic, to settle for unrealistic abstractions that ignore concrete situations.”
And
“Our passion for felicity hints at an ominous hatred for all that grows and thrives and then dies.” (Eric G. Wilson, Against Happiness, New York:  Sarah Crichton Books, 2008)

To be alive and to realize that you are going to die means being insecure and vulnerable.  According to Martha Nussbaum one should embrace this uncertainty.

“To be a good human is to have a kind of openness to the world, an ability to trust uncertain things beyond your own control, that can lead you to be shattered in very extreme circumstances for which you were not to blame. That says something very important about the ethical life:  that it is based on a trust in the uncertainty, and on a willingness to be exposed.  It’s based on being more like a plant than a jewel: something rather fragile, but whose very particular beauty is inseparable from that fragility.” (Oliver Burkeman, The Antidote, New York:  Faber and Faber, Inc., 2012).

The Stoics may have been the first to realize that embracing the negative can be a useful tool for human beings attempting to lead a meaningful life.  William Irving in A Guide to the Good Life:  The Ancient Art of Stoic Joy describes their negative visualization as imagining that the worst possible outcome may occur.  And if bad things do happen that is the way it is supposed to be.  Marcus Aurelius advised us to “constantly regard the universe as one living being, having one substance and one soul. (http://classiclit.about.com/od/aureliusmarcus/a/aa_maurelius.htm)  Whatever happens at all happens as it should; you will find this true, if you watch narrowly.” (http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Marcus_Aurelius)

By concentrating on this glass half full philosophy, the Stoics solved two of the more vexing problems that humans encounter when they pursue happiness.  The hedonic treadmill effect where sources of pleasure last only a short period of time is minimized when one meditates on the likely negative outcome of everything in life.  Negative visualization also decreases the anxiety associated with the irrational fears that our minds come up with when worrying about the unknown future. 

Oliver Burkeman in The Antidote describes how Albert Ellis, the second most influential psychotherapist of the twentieth century, advocated a similar negative approach to life.  He differentiated become a terrible outcome and a merely undesirable outcome, and he argued that it could always be worse.  In advising an anxious and ambivalent woman trying to decide if she should move to be with her boyfriend, Ellis shouted:

“So maybe he turns out to be a jerk, and you get divorced! That would be highly disagreeable! You might feel sad! But it doesn’t have to be awful.  It doesn’t have to be completely terrible.”

One of the things that troubles me most about the current American fascination with happiness is how self-absorbed and superficial the entire enterprise can become.  Those that are most concerned with happiness often appear to be ignoring much of reality.  Taleb in Antifragile defines via negativa as focusing on what something is not and he recommends using it as recipe for what to avoid, what not to do.  He also observes that we know what is wrong with more certainty than we know what is right.  Applying these concepts to happiness, he believes the subject is best dealt with as a negative concept:

“Instead, they should be lecturing us about unhappiness (I speculate that just as those who lecture on happiness look unhappy, those who lecture on unhappiness would look happy).”

Which brings us to Alan Watts who in The Wisdom of Insecurity makes two very important points.  The first is that

“There is a contradiction in wanting to be perfectly secure in a universe whose very nature is momentariness and fluidity.”
His second key observation in this important book about our inability to control events in a world that we truly do not understand is his fascination with the law of reversed effort.

“When you try to stay on the surface of the water, you sink; but when you try to sink, you float…Insecurity is the result of trying to be secure…contrariwise, salvation and sanity consist in the most radical recognition that we have no way of saving ourselves.”

This realization that the world we live in is essentially insecure and that denying this reality makes us unhappy is the message of Pema Chodron.  She writes, “Things are not permanent, they don’t last, there is no final security.” 

What does the realization that we will never truly understand the world we live in mean for those of us who are physicians?  Should the discussion above change the way we view medicine?  David Agus in the End of Illness and Taleb in Antifragile provide us with guidance about medicine in a complex emergent system world.

Having graduated from Case Western Reserve School of Medicine in 1980 and having trained at UCSF as an academic anatomic pathologist, I am steeped in the traditional approach to health care where we assume we can understand the world of medicine.  The biomedical model reduces every illness to a biological mechanism of cause and effect, and physicians diagnose diseases and then treat them.  Health is defined as absence of disease.  The patient story and experience is subjective and untrustworthy in comparison to the test results emanating from my pathology laboratory, which are objective and true.  Generalists are replaced by specialists who regard cure as the only important goal.  And pathologists are the most important of the specialists because treatment selection and administration has to await the diagnosis rendered in the pathology laboratory. 

Agus labels the traditional approach “the germ theory of disease, which dominated, and in many ways defined, medicine in the twentieth century.”  “The treatment only cared about the invading organism…it didn’t care to define or understand the host (the human being).”

Agus, an academic oncologist and founder of both a proteomics and a genomics biotech start up company, replaces the medical status quo with a system biology approach. “It is important to approach your health in general from a lack of understanding.  Honor the body and its relationship to disease as a complex emergent system that you many never fully comprehend.”  His conclusion that one does not need to understand cancer to treat it is controversial. 

Taleb’s Antifragile provides an approach to living in a world we do not understand by applying his study of the statistics of random events and his experience as an options trader.  Taleb compares and contrasts a fragile and antifragile approach to everything from science, business, errors, systems, and Greek mythology.  In science for example, the fragilista who thinks he understands everything causes fragility by depriving variability loving systems of variability and error loving systems of errors; he favors directed research and grand theories.  The opposite scientist is a practitioner who tries to understand how things react to volatility and errors, and he favors stochastic tinkering or bricolage to grand overarching theories. 

The French biologist Francois Jacob used the term bricolage to describe the trial and error way that nature exploits optionality.  Jacob gives the example of how half of all embryos undergo spontaneous abortion in the uterus, which is easier than designing the perfect baby by blueprint.  Another example of bricolage would be the way that genes that work in simple animals are retained and utilized for similar functions in higher animals.  This concept of “trying to make do with what you’ve got by recycling pieces that would be otherwise wasted” illustrates how nature substitutes optionality for intelligence. 

Saras Sarasvathy’s study of 45 successful entrepreneurs shows how the bricolage approach can be applied to start-up companies.  In Sarasvathy’s effectuation system causally minded people (fragilistas in Taleb’s book) favor a directed plan to achieve their goal.  Effectually minded people, on the other hand, take a trial and error approach to see what they can make out of the means and materials that are on hand.  Applying the bird in the hand principle and the principle of affordable loss, effectually minded people forge ahead to see what happens.  Sarasvathy found that most successful entrepreneurs were effectually minded. (www.effectuation.org)   A conclusion that would please Taleb.

When Taleb focuses on medicine, he concentrates on the problems of iatrogenics and the agency problem.  Iatrogenics literally means caused by the healer as iatros means healer in Greek. 

“Every time you visit a doctor and get a treatment, you incur risks of such medical harm, which should be analyzed the way we analyze other trade-offs:  probabilistic benefits minus probabilistic costs.”

The agency problem is when the agent has personal interests that are different from those of the principal who uses the agent’s services

“An agency problem, for instance, is present with the stockbroker and the medical doctor, whose ultimate interest is their own checking account, not your financial and medical health, respectively, and who give you advice that is geared to benefit themselves.”

Taleb notes that Montaigne recognized the agency problem when he wrote, “No doctor derives pleasure from the health of his friends, wrote the Greek satirist, no soldier from the peace of his city.”

Taleb develops simple decision rules for dealing with health and wellness.  Using his concept of via negativa that we encountered above when we discussed happiness, his first rule is “only resort to medical techniques when the health payoff is very large (say, saving a life) and visibly exceeds its potential harm, such as incontrovertibly needed surgery or lifesaving medicine (penicillin). 

Taleb believes “we do not need evidence of harm to claim that a drug or an unnatural via positiva procedure is dangerous.”  To emphasize that harm can be difficult to appreciate, he notes that harm often occurs in the future and that the past does not tell one much about rare random events.  The Turkey Problem makes this point.

“The turkey is fed by the butcher for a thousand days, and every day the turkey pronounces with increased statistical confidence that the butcher ‘will never hurt it’ – until Thanksgiving, which brings a Black Swan revision of belief for the turkey.”

Following Taleb’s advice would have avoided the harm caused by Thalidomide (birth defects) and Diethylstilbestrol (delayed cancer in daughters).

“Iatrogenics, being a cost-benefit situation, usually results from the treacherous conditions in which the benefits are small, and visible – and the costs very large, delayed, and hidden.  And of course, the potential costs are much worse than the cumulative gains.”

Another Taleb rule is “we should not take risks with near-healthy people; but we should take a lot, a lot more risks with those deemed in danger” because iatrogenics has a nonlinearity response. 

“This means that we need to focus on high-symptom conditions and ignore, I mean really ignore, other situations in which the patient is not very ill.”

Taleb also recognizes that the paucity of medical articles reporting negative results has contributed to the problem of overtreatment with sometimes disastrous results.

“What made medicine mislead people for so long is that is successes were prominently displayed, and its mistakes literally buried  -- just like so many other interesting stories in the cemetery of history.”

Ben Goldacre in the New York Times recently discussed this point when he wrote about the recall of a Johnson and Johnson artificial hip that experienced a 40% failure rate:

The best evidence shows that half of all the clinical trials ever conducted and completed on the treatments in use today have never been published in academic journals. Trials with positive or flattering results, unsurprisingly, are about twice as likely to be published — and this is true for both academic research and industry studies.” (http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/02/opinion/health-cares-trick-coin.html)

Perhaps the best way to end this discussion of how to live wisely in a world that we can never truly understand is to give Taleb the final word:

“If there is something in nature you don’t understand, odds are it makes sense in a deeper way that is beyond your understanding.  So there is a logic to natural things that is much superior to our own.  Just as there is a dichotomy in law:  innocent until proven guilty as opposed to guilty until proven innocent, let me express my rule as follows; what Mother Nature does is rigorous until proven otherwise; what humans and science do is flawed until proven otherwise.”



















Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Ohio vs. Pennsylvania: Which State Got Medicaid Expansion Right?


Reading the announcements that Governor Corbett (PA) rejects the ACA Medicaid expansion on the same day that Governors Snyder (MI) and Kasich (OH) decide to expand Medicaid, I thought today was as good a time as any to take another look at this controversial issue.  On July 7, 2012 I wrote a long blog post that predicted many Republican governors would eventually agree to the expansion.  My reading of the tealeaves was that it was just too good a deal to pass up.  (http://kentbottles.blogspot.com/2012/07/scotus-ppaca-medicaid-expansion.html)

When Governor Corbett said in his budget speech that he would not add 500,000 Pennsylvania residents to Medicaid “simultaneous boos and cheers broke out among legislators.” (http://www.philly.com/philly/news/politics/state/20130206_Corbett_rejects_expansion_of_Medicaid.html)   The boos came from those who believed the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation prediction that by 2022 such an expansion would cost the state $2.8 billion while bringing in $37.8 billion in federal dollars. (http://www.kff.org/medicaid/8384.cfm)   The cheers came from Republicans who were afraid that the state would have to raise taxes when federal subsidies declined in the future.  In my opinion, Governor Corbett is making a mistake.  I am not alone in that assessment; I found a comment on a blog dated February 5, 2013 where SteveH wrote:

“I heard Gail Wilensky speak yesterday and she thinks most GOP governors will end up taking the expansion.  It should be a no-brainer but some GOP governors probably meet that criteria and will turn it down.” (http://theincidentaleconomist.com/wordpress/the-medicaid-expansion-is-a-really-great-deal/)

Governor Kasich’s support of Medicaid expansion in Ohio brings to six the number of GOP governors who have signed onto the program.  Because of his background as a guest host for Bill O’Reilly, an investment banker, Chairman of the House Budget Committee, and a well-respected deficit hawk, Kasich’s decision is important.   Opponents of state Medicaid expansion certainly were stunned and attacked him:

“Whatever justification Kasich may give, the actual explanation for his embrace of the Medicaid expansion is political cowardice. Chastened by his failed attempt at public sector union reform and Obama’s victory in the state, Kasich is up for reelection next year.  And he’s afraid to stand up to the inevitable onslaught of attacks from Democrats who would charge that he was refusing to accept free money to bring health care to poor Ohioans.” (http://washingtonexaminer.com/kasichs-cave-on-obamacare-shows-how-hard-it-is-to-beat-big-government/article/2520529?custom_click=rss)

Many observers believe that Kasich’s defection from the opponents of expansion will make it harder for other GOP governors to maintain this conservative position:

“Anti-ObamaCare groups have lost the argument with a few other red-state governors, but Kasich isn't just any red-state governor. He's been known as the most aggressive spending hawk this side of Scott Walker and Mitch Daniels, and the winner of the ‘Legislative Entrepreneur Award’ from the tea-party-affiliated FreedomWorks.”  (http://www.politico.com/story/2013/02/john-kasich-obamacares-biggest-red-state-catch-87143_Page2.html)  

Democratic analysts certainly think that the Kasich move is a game changer:

“Thus Kasich brings us closer to the day when those opposing the Medicaid expansion in their own states—notably southern governors like Perry and Jindal and Bryant and Bentley and Deal and Haley who are deliberately creating huge arbitrary gaps in health care coverage—are forced to stop hiding behind fiscal myths and just come out and admit they don’t want their citizens to benefit from Obamacare, full stop.” (http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/political-animal-a/2013_02/kasich_gives_away_the_game042802.php)

Kasich came out in favor of expansion only after he assembled a coalition of Obamacare supporters and opponents who all agreed that it represented sound economic policy. An Ohio Health Policy Institute study extending to 2022 concluded that covering 684,000 citizens would require $609 million in state dollars and bring in $5 billion in federal funds.  As I predicted in my July 2012 blog post, hospitals and physicians wanted the Medicaid expansion.  The Ohio Hospital Association estimates that hospitals spend $2.5 billion a year on uncompensated care.  The strategy was to have the coalition concentrate on educating the business community and state legislators that the expansion made sense economically and was too good to pass up. (http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2013/02/06/exclusive-how-ohios-republican-governor-sold-the-state-on-expanding-medicaid/)

The best short article on the pro side is titled “Why Opposition to  Medicaid Expansion is Nuts.” (http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-02-05/why-opposition-to-medicaid-expansion-is-nuts.html)  The best long winded academic argument for expansion can be found here. (http://jhppl.dukejournals.org/content/early/2012/10/09/03616878-1898839.full.pdf)  The best long argument against expansion, which did not convince me, is here (http://jhppl.dukejournals.org/content/early/2012/10/09/03616878-1898848.full.pdf)

Upon rereading my July 2012 blog, I am glad that I got most of it right immediately after the surprise Supreme Court decision that created the controversy in the first place. 


Thursday, January 31, 2013

Should your review of doctors be taken seriously?


Recent articles highlight challenges with holding providers accountable for the care they deliver. One of the major thrusts of efforts to transform the American healthcare delivery system has been to become more patient-centered and to allow patients to provide feedback that matters.
Emblematic of this is the emphasis on patient involvement in the final rules for the Shared Savings Program accountable care organizations (ACO).
Echoing former Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Director Don Berwick's plea on the behalf of patients ("Nothing about us without us"), the ACO final rules emphasize patient engagement in governance, quality improvement and the individual doctor/patient interaction.

Follow the link for the rest of this blog


http://www.hospitalimpact.org/index.php/2013/01/30/is_patient_empowerment_the_next_step_for#disqus_thread

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

The Humanities vs. Science Question Revisited


Two of my favorite quotations are the 19th century neurologist Jean Martin Charcot’s “Theory is good, but it doesn’t prevent things from existing” and Albert Einstein’s “In theory, theory and practice are the same. In practice, they are not.” 


I first started worrying about this controversy when I read Francis Crick’s Astonishing Hypothesis:
“You, your joys and sorrows, your memories and your ambitions, your sense of personal identity and free will, are in fact no more than the behavior of a vast assembly of nerve cells and their associated molecules.” 

This subject of humanities vs. the sciences was not on my mind last night when I settled in by the fire to read “Escape From Spiderhead,” the fourth short story in George Saunders’ new collection Tenth of December.  By the time I had finished this 37-page short story, I understood that Saunders had captured the essence of what is wrong with Nobelist Crick’s theory.

The main character Jeff is subjected to scientific experiments as part of his punishment for a violent crime; the investigators inject VerbaluceTM, VeriTalk TM, ChatEaseTM and ED556 in Jeff’s MobiPakTM and observe the results.  A few pages into the story, I realized we are in the future and the scientists are testing Crick’s Astonishing Hypothesis.  By manipulating Jeff’s “nerve cells and their associated molecules,” the investigators make Jeff fall passionately and physically in love with two other subjects, Heather and Rachel.  By changing the chemicals in the MobiPakTM they can make all of the subjects feel nothing for their former lover. 

In follow-up experiments, Jeff is devastated when Heather dies after Jeff is told to give her DarkenfloxxTM.  The head scientist tells Jeff:

“In science, we explore the unknown.  It was unknown what five minutes on DarkenfloxxTM would do to Heather. Now we know.  The other thing we know…is that you really, for sure, do not harbor any residual romantic feelings for Heather.  That’s a big deal, Jeff. A beacon of hope at a sad time for all… My guess is, ProtComm’s going to be like:  ‘Wow, Utica’s really leading the pack in terms of providing mind-blowing new data on ED289/290.’”

In a twist at the end, Jeff validating his humanity finds an unexpected way to refuse to participate in such experiments on human beings.

Saunders’ story gives me more reason to reject Crick and embrace Marilynne Robinson’s conclusion in her Dwight Harrington Terry Foundation Lectures on Religion in the Light of Science and Philosophy at Yale.  She believes that there is a mind separate from the brain, there are things unknowable in this world, and that the humanities can still teach me things that science cannot explain:

“As proof of the existence of mind we have only history and civilization, art, science, and philosophy. And at the same time, of course, that extraordinary individuation.”



           



Monday, December 31, 2012

An Information Flaneur's Best Blog Posts of 2012


As a self described Information Flaneur who wanders aimlessly around the Internet and my world searching for what I don’t know that I don’t know, I did not expect to find any rhyme or reason to my 2012 blog posts.  And yet when I read them today on New Year’s Eve to select the Best of 2012, I surprised myself by finding six coherent and recurring overarching themes:

·      American physicians have lost their way and need to undergo intense self-scrutiny
·      American health plans need to reinvent themselves or disappear
·      The digital future of medicine is fascinating and largely unknowable
·      There is an urgent need to bridge the gap between the humanities and the sciences
·      The American preoccupation with Happiness is wrongheaded but extremely important
·      Understanding and explaining the Affordable Act takes a lot of time and energy, but it is worth it

American physicians have lost their way and need to undergo intense self-scrutiny

Some of my closest colleagues found it amusing that I of all people wrote passionately about the need for physicians to embrace humility and win the battle for the soul of American Medicine. “Early in life I had to choose between honest arrogance and hypocritical humility. I chose the former and have seen no reason to change” is a Frank Lloyd Wright quotation that I used ironically at the start of one of my diatribes calling for physicians to undergo intense self-scrutiny, and my closest friend said he thought Wright could be speaking for me.
Nevertheless, there is a battle for the soul of American Medicine; I pontificated about it here http://thehealthcareblog.com/blog/2012/12/20/the-battle-for-the-souls-of-american-doctors/  and in a three part essay inspired by the English Olympics Opening Ceremony, which celebrated the National Health Service http://www.thedoctorweighsin.com/the-olympics-doctors-nhs-transformation-and-heroes-why-the-difference-between-usa-and-uk/, http://www.thedoctorweighsin.com/the-olympics-doctors-the-nhs-transformation-and-heroes-why-the-difference-between-the-usa-and-uk-part-ii/, http://www.thedoctorweighsin.com/the-olympics-doctors-the-nhs-transformation-and-heroes-why-the-difference-between-the-usa-and-uk-part-iii/   These blogs drew the wrath of many practicing physicians, as did my blog post that attributed much of any personal or professional success to luck http://www.thedoctorweighsin.com/does-luck-contribute-to-personal-success-2/.

American health plans need to reinvent themselves or disappear
The survival of Obama’s Affordable Care Act has demolished the traditional business model of the American health insurance company, and it has been fascinating to watch them scramble to reinvent themselves.  Some are buying bankrupt delivery systems and others are investing in providers and smartphone applications, but none of these tactics will work unless they can transform their corporate cultures.  Read about the challenges here http://thehealthcareblog.com/blog/2012/07/22/health-insurers-the-affordable-care-act-extinction-or-reinvention/, here http://www.thedoctorweighsin.com/health-plans-continue-to-struggle-to-reinvent-themselves/, and here http://kentbottles.blogspot.com/2012/03/technology-aetna-itriage-and-future-of.html.

The digital future of medicine is fascinating and largely unknowable

Like everyone else I read Eric Topol’s book and tried to keep track on Twitter of how digitizing a human being will revolutionize medicine.  I reviewed two books on digital medicine http://www.thedoctorweighsin.com/the-future-of-medicine-as-envisioned-by-topol-and-agus/, advised hospital executives to get with it http://www.hospitalimpact.org/index.php/2012/03/06/p4009#more4009, and wrote a summary of an iMedicine conference organized by medical students http://kentbottles.blogspot.com/2012/04/imedicine-influence-of-social-media-on.html.

There is an urgent need to bridge the gap between the humanities and science

Two of my favorite quotations are the 19th century neurologist Jean Martin Charcot’s “Theory is good, but it doesn’t prevent things from existing” and Albert Einstein’s “In theory, theory and practice are the same. In practice, they are not.”  These two statements summarize the tension between a medical science that thinks it can explain everything and my own experience that an alternative theory of the mind is needed.  I explore these issues in great detail in a five part essay titled Human Understanding, Randomness, Free Will, and Delusions found here http://www.thedoctorweighsin.com/human-understanding-randomness-free-will-and-delusion-part-i/, http://www.thedoctorweighsin.com/human-understanding-randomness-free-will-and-delusion-part-ii/, http://www.thedoctorweighsin.com/human-understanding-randomness-free-will-and-delusion-part-iii/, http://www.thedoctorweighsin.com/human-understanding-randomness-free-will-and-delusion-part-iv/, http://www.thedoctorweighsin.com/human-understanding-randomness-free-will-and-delusion-part-v/ and in a two part essay titled The Humanities vs. Science linked here http://www.thedoctorweighsin.com/the-humanities-vs-science-part-i/ and http://www.thedoctorweighsin.com/the-humanities-vs-science-part-ii/

Siri Hustvedt’s elegant book review of Oliver Sacks’ new book Hallucinations convinces me I need to read more of Sacks and re-read some of Hustvedt’s novels to make better sense of this complex subject. (http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/30/books/review/hallucinations-by-oliver-sacks.html)

The American preoccupation with Happiness is wrongheaded but extremely important

Even though I have read at last count 19 books on happiness, I am always a little bit skeptical about the whole enterprise.  I do find it fascinating that bronze medal winners are happier than silver medal winners and that winning the lottery often results in misery, but there is something wrongheaded about pursuing happiness as a goal.  Viewing Stefan Sagmeister’s The Happy Show at an art museum at the University of Pennsylvania inspired me to write a four part blog post on happiness: http://www.thedoctorweighsin.com/musings-on-stefan-sagmeisters-the-happy-show/, http://www.thedoctorweighsin.com/musings-on-stefan-sagmeister-the-happy-show-part-ii/, http://www.thedoctorweighsin.com/musings-on-stefan-sagmeister-the-happy-show-part-iii/, http://kentbottles.blogspot.com/2012/05/musings-on-stefan-sagmeister-happy-show_21.html.

My skepticism about the whole subject made me write The Downsides of Trying Too Hard to Be Happy, which can be found here http://www.thedoctorweighsin.com/the-downsides-of-trying-too-hard-to-be-happy-part-i/ and http://www.thedoctorweighsin.com/the-downsides-of-trying-too-hard-to-be-happy-part-ii/. I just finished reading a new book by Oliver Burkeman titled The Antidote:  Happiness for People Who Can’t Stand Positive Thinking, which has reinforced and brought focus to my skepticism.  I recommend it highly.

Understanding and explaining the Affordable Act takes a lot of time and energy, but it is worth

I spent much of 2012 running around the country giving keynotes, retreats, and seminars on the Affordable Care Act.  I also enjoyed teaching another graduate class at the Thomas Jefferson School of Population Health on health policy and the structure of the American delivery system.  My best blogs on this subject were on the demise of fee for service payments http://healthworkscollective.com/kent-bottles/70536/fee-service-really-dead, the Supreme Court decision upholding the individual mandate http://kentbottles.blogspot.com/2012/06/why-did-chief-justice-roberts-do-it.html, and the Medicaid expansion controversy http://www.thedoctorweighsin.com/the-scotus-the-ppaca-the-medicaid-expansion-decision/.

At the end of 2012 I was asked to predict what health care journalists should cover in 2013.  My essay can be read here http://www.reportingonhealth.org/2012/11/15/kent-bottles-new-ideas-covering-health-care-2013.  However, I must warn you that a far better way to understand health care in 2013 is to wander around twitter, read books and newspapers, and go to conferences in fields other than medicine.  Join me in becoming an information flaneur. 






Wednesday, December 19, 2012

The Battle for the Souls of American Doctors


We physicians like to think that we are really different from other workers.  We physicians, perhaps thinking back to that medical school application essay we all wrote, really believe that we went into this career to simply help others.  We physicians truly believe that we always put our patients first. 

Because we sincerely believe all of the above, we are shocked when someone like Uwe Reinhardt points out that collectively we act just like any other worker in the economy.  The classic 1986 letters between the Princeton professor Reinhardt and former New England Journal of Medicine editor Arnold Relman highlight the tension between how we think of ourselves and how we act.

Relman thinks physicians are special and he asks Reinhardt the following question:

“Do you really see no difference between physicians and hospitals on the one hand, and ‘purveyors of other goods and services,’ on the other?”

Reinhardt is ready with a long answer that should be read in its entirety.  The short answer is that doctors act like any other human beings.   A portion of his answer includes the following:

“Surely you will agree that it has been one of American medicine’s more hallowed tenets that piece-rate compensation is the sine qua non of high quality medical care.  Think about this tenet, We have here a profession that openly professes that its members are unlikely to do their best unless they are rewarded in cold cash for every little ministration rendered their patients.  If an economist made that assertion, one might write it off as one more of that profession’s kooky beliefs.  But physicians are saying it.” (http://content.healthaffairs.org/content/5/2/5.full.pdf+html)

I have recently written about the inevitable transition from fee for service payment to global, value-based payment systems, and I was surprised when a primary care physician whom I admire tweeted that he thought the end of fee for service would be the end of primary care.  (http://thehealthcareblog.com/blog/2012/12/12/is-fee-for-service-really-dead-really/)

This tension between the ideal of medicine and the economic reality of how medicine is practiced in the United States is perhaps best summarized by Atul Gawande in his famous New Yorker article about McAllen, Texas:

“Here, along the banks of the Rio Grande, in the Square Dance Capital of the World, a medical community has come to treat patients the way subprime-mortgage lenders treated home buyers: as profit centers." (http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2009/06/01/090601fa_fact_gawande)

This morning I was reminded of this battle for the soul of American medicine when I read two articles in the New York Times.   On the front page an article titled “Quiet Doctor, Lavish Insider:  A Parallel Life” describes how a well-respected neurologist at the University of Michigan capped off his successful academic career by cooperating with federal prosecutors to avoid charges in a Wall Street insider stock trading scandal. 

“The riddle for Dr. Gilman’s longtime friends and colleagues is why a nationally respected neurologist was pulled into the high-rolling life of a consultant to financiers and how he, by his own admission, crossed the line into criminal behavior.”  (http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/16/business/sidney-gilmans-shift-led-to-insider-trading-case.html?ref=health)

The other article in the Times published on the same day was the obituary of Dr. William F. House who invented the cochlear implant. 

“Neither the institute nor Dr. House made any money on the implant. He never sought a patent on any of his inventions, he said, because he did not want to restrict other researchers. A nephew, Dr. John House, the current president of the House institute, said his uncle had made the deal to license it to the 3M Company not for profit but simply to get it built by a reputable manufacturer.

Reflecting on his business decisions in his memoir, Dr. House acknowledged, ‘I might be a little richer today.’” (http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/16/health/dr-william-f-house-inventor-of-cochlear-implant-dies.html?_r=0)

A major challenge for 21st century American medicine is to cultivate the culture epitomized by Dr. House and avoid the mistakes of Dr. Gilman.