Two of the three health care reform bills wending their way through Congress contain provisions for research that compares the effectiveness of different treatments. The bills would also reinforce the infrastructure that's needed to disseminate results to both doctors and patients.
The public's faith in President Barack Obama's plan for health care
reform is fading. Proposals ranging from the public insurance option to
reimbursing physicians for end-of-life counseling are mired in a debate
that's as overheated as August temperatures. Even the seemingly
self-evident idea that the nation has a moral duty to make sure all
citizens have basic access to health care is up for grabs. But there's
one aspect of health care reform that California voters support almost
universally: better medical evidence.
A
poll released Sept. 2 shows extraordinary levels of enthusiasm for
policies that would help doctors and patients know what works in
medicine, what doesn't work and for which patients. In a poll of 800
California voters conducted by Lake Research, 88 percent of respondents
said they believe it is important that doctors have access to
scientific evidence that compares the effectiveness of different
treatments. Nearly half, 46 percent, consider it extremely important.
Of
course they do. Patients go to the doctor looking for effective
treatment, and this being the 21st century, they assume that their
doctors' recommendations will be based on up-to-date science.
Yet all too often that's not the case. According to the prestigious
Institute of Medicine, only about half of the treatments, surgeries,
tests and minor procedures that doctors recommend are backed up with
sound medical evidence. The other half? Doctors have only theory,
tradition or marketing by the pharmaceutical and medical device
industries to guide them.
This
lack of valid science hurts patients and costs the nation billions in
wasted dollars annually. Take lumbar fusion surgery for simple lower
back pain--pain that isn't caused by cancer or a major accident.
Between 1993 and 2003, spending for lumbar fusion rose 500 percent,
despite an almost complete lack of sound evidence that this invasive,
potentially risky procedure is effective. It might relieve pain for
some patients--and worsen it for others. Surgeons and patients simply
don't have the information they need to predict ahead of time who is
likely to benefit and who will be harmed.
Many, if not most,
patients are also in the dark about the very real dangers posed by any
hospitalization. Out of the 34 million patients admitted to the
hospital each year in the United States, as many as 190,000 die not
from their disease but from infections acquired in the hospital or
avoidable medical errors. Poor-quality medical care kills more people
than AIDS, breast cancer and car accidents combined.
On the flip
side, there is inappropriate undertreatment. Even when sound evidence
exists, patients don't always get the care they need. About 25 percent
of heart attack patients don't receive an aspirin and beta blocker
within 24 hours of being admitted to the hospital, despite solid
science showing that these drugs can cut the risk of a subsequent heart
attack by 20 percent.
The same is true for countless other
conditions and tests. In some cases, the root cause is poorly trained
doctors, but most of the time, we just don't have effective ways of
monitoring quality and providing doctors with timely, reliable evidence.
Voters
know that getting care they don't need, and not getting care they do,
is bad for their health. According to the poll, 80 percent of voters
think it is a serious problem when doctors provide unneeded medical
treatments, and 79 percent think it's a serious problem when they don't
get needed care. Ninety percent think doctors should be required to
tell their patients when there is no scientific evidence to support a
treatment recommendation.
Why isn't the issue of medical evidence
front and center in the health care debate? Maybe because doctors have
not always been truthful in telling people what they know and don't
know. Many physicians are either unwilling or unable to take the time
needed to fully explain where uncertainty exists. As a result, 65
percent of California voters are under the mistaken impression that
most or nearly all of the health care they receive is backed up by
scientific studies.
The results of this poll, which was conducted
for the Campaign for Effective Patient Care, a nonprofit founded this
year with initial support from AARP, California Association of
Physician Groups and Blue Shield of California, should embolden
legislators and policymakers to forge ahead with legislation that
supports medical research aimed at providing practical answers to
everyday medical dilemmas. Two of the three health care reform bills
wending their way through Congress contain provisions for research that
compares the effectiveness of different treatments. The bills would
also reinforce the infrastructure that's needed to disseminate results
to both doctors and patients.
There's a lot of misinformation
being circulated by opponents of comparative effectiveness research.
Some are politically motivated and simply want to see Obama and the
Democrats fail. Others have a financial interest in keeping patients
and doctors in the dark. Either way, Americans deserve better quality
health care, and voters know that the only way to get there is through
better medical evidence.
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