Does this tell us anything about the state of medical care
in America? I suspect it does. Since I am unfamiliar with these issues, I will
let the Mayo Clinic report on its research.
You would think that diagnosing an illness falls within the
purview of medical science. After all, we are not talking about psychological
problems. As it turns out, however, medical science is not quite as scientific as we would
like.
You know that people love to refer to experts and
especially to experts with scientific expertise. They tell us that the science
is settled and that we must do what the scientists tell us to do. Now, it turns
out that when patients with serious illnesses seek a second opinion, the
vast majority receive a new or a refined diagnosis.
The numbers are breathtaking. From Studyfind:
When it
comes to treating a serious illness, two brains are better than one. A new
study finds that nearly 9 in 10 people who go for a second opinion after
seeing a doctor are likely to leave with a refined or new diagnosis from what
they were first told.
Researchers
at the Mayo Clinic examined 286 patient records of individuals who had decided
to consult a second opinion, hoping to determine whether being referred to a
second specialist impacted one’s likelihood of receiving an accurate diagnosis.
The
study, conducted using records of patients referred to the Mayo Clinic’s General Internal Medicine Division over a
two-year period, ultimately found that when consulting a second opinion, the
physician only confirmed the original diagnosis 12 percent of the time.
Less than 20% of the patients received the same diagnosis.
The breakdown of the rest is revealing:
Among
those with updated diagnoses, 66% received a refined or redefined diagnosis,
while 21% were diagnosed with something completely different than what their
first physician concluded.
Wherein lies the fault? The Mayo Clinic suggests that many
primary care physicians are overly confident in their judgment. One suspects
that an overly confident physician inspires more confidence in his patients, thus that the attitude is good for business, if bad for the patient's health:
Combine
this with the fact that primary care physicians are often overly-confident in
their diagnoses, not to mention how a high number of patients feel amiss about
questioning their diagnoses, a massive issue is revealed.
Wherein lies the problem? Without having anything but
anecdotal evidence, I suspect that the quality of American health care has
declined. I do not think that the profession attracts the same caliber of
candidates as it used to. And I also suspect that, as some physicians have told
me, Medicare reimbursement rates, coupled with record-keeping requirements and
malpractice insurance costs, are driving doctors out of business and are
preventing good people from entering the business.
As for a statistic, one that I have not verified, a dozen or
so years ago a cardiac surgeon, a man who could no longer make a living doing
the surgery because Medicare reimbursement did not cover his ancillary costs
and who complained bitterly over the fact that Medicare would no longer pay for
two surgeons to perform heart surgery—it preferred one surgeon and one RN—told me
that when he entered his residency program in the 1970s, there were nationally
over 600 applicants for 120 residencies in cardio-thoracic surgery. Thus, there
was a lot of competition. At the time we were talking, he said, there are 60
applicants for the same 120 places. At the least, we can conclude that the
profession is less competitive and is no longer attracting the best and the
brightest medical students. At some point or another this is going to show up
in substandard medical care.
We read in the papers about the wonders of Medicare, and how much
people like their Medicare. Some people want the entire health care system to
resemble Medicare. The truth is, if you overregulate, overlitigate and underpay
the practice of medicine the quality of health care is going to decline… because
the quality of the people involved will decline.
One omission in this study is a breakdown of revised diagnosis by disease or disease type. I suspect expert disagreement is more frequent for complaints like chronic fatigue syndrome than, say, fractured tibias. The aggregate data are interesting, but not much more than that.
ReplyDeleteMedicine most certainly does not "attract", if that's the appropriate word, the same caliber of students. Medical schools annually report the demographic breakdown of admittees by race and MCAT/GPA. The data are shocking. Affirmative action has dumbed down the med school population.
I agree that we ought to have known about disease types. I suspect that when they talk about "serious" illnesses they are not talking about broken bones or other fairly common problems.
ReplyDelete"One omission in this study is a breakdown of revised diagnosis by disease or disease type. I suspect expert disagreement is more frequent for complaints like chronic fatigue syndrome than, say, fractured tibias. The aggregate data are interesting, but not much more than that."
ReplyDeleteI have to deal with physician diagnosis and medical records on a daily basis.
I'm going to agree with trigger warning here. Broken tibias are obvious because they show up on basis x-rays. Chronic fatigue syndrome is basically a diagnosis of exclusion.
Plus, GP's refer to specialists, who then refine the diagnosis and perform additional tests, which potentially alter the diagnosis.
I also assume, although I could be wrong, that we are also talking about psychological/psychiatric diagnoses here, which, as Stuart would agree, is subject to fads and group-think.