Friday, February 22, 2013
Doctor
Don’t Do List Grows to 135
It’s
not what you do but what you don’t do that counts.
Anonymous
Tell
me, Doctor, why didn’t you do what could
have done and should have done to predict my client’s heart attack.
Malpractice
Attorney
Doctor Groups Unite
Against Unnecessary Tests & Procedures
By Richard Knox, NPR News, and Kaiser Health News
Doctors do stuff — tests, procedures, drug regimens and
operations. It’s what they’re trained to do, what they’re paid to do and often
what they fear not doing.
So it’s pretty significant that a broad array
of medical specialty groups is issuing an expanding list of don’ts
for physicians.
Don’t induce labor or perform a cesarean section for a
baby who’s less than full-term unless there’s a valid medical reason, say the
American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology and the American Academy of
Family Physicians. (It can increase the risk of learning disabilities and
respiratory problems.)
Don’t automatically do a CT scan on a child with a minor
head injury, warns the American Academy of Pediatrics. (Currently half of all
such children get them, when simple observation is just as good and spares
radiation risk.)
Don’t try to normalize blood sugar in most diabetic
patients over 65, exhorts the American Geriatrics Society. (It can lead to
higher mortality rates.)
And on and on. The latest list totals
90 tests and procedures that are often unnecessary and potentially
harmful, compiled by 17 specialty groups representing more than 350,000
doctors.
The list is the second chapter in a campaign called
Choosing Wisely sponsored by the Foundation of the American Board of Internal
Medicine. Last year the foundation warned
against 45 tests, procedures and treatments that often do patients
no good. That list was endorsed by nine medical specialty organizations.
The new don’ts bring the total to 135.
The idea is to curb unnecessary, wasteful and often
harmful care, its sponsors say — not to ration care. As one foundation official
pointed out
last year, rationing is denial of care that patients need, while the
Choosing Wisely campaign aims to reduce care that has no value.
The campaign aims to foster the notion, among patients as
well as doctors, “that when it comes to health care, more is not necessarily
better,” Dr. Christine
Cassel of the ABIM Foundation says in a statement abut the latest
list, to be officially unveiled at a Washington media event Thursday.
The sponsors promise even more lists of don’ts later this
year from a dozen more specialty groups, ranging from the American College of
Surgeons to the American Headache Society.
Here are some other notable tests, traditions and
procedures to skip:
Don’t use feeding tubes in patients with advanced
dementia. Simply assisting such patients to take food by mouth is better.
Don’t perform EEGs (electroencephalography) on patients
with recurrent headaches. It doesn’t improve diagnosis or outcomes and simply
increases costs.
Don’t perform routine annual Pap tests in women
between 30 and 65. Every three years is enough.
Don’t hold back on providing hospice care to relieve
pain and distress just because a seriously ill patient is getting treatment
aimed at alleviating disease.
Don’t leave an implantable defibrillator turned on if a patient
with incurable disease, or his family decision-makers, have elected to forego
resuscitation. Currently there are no formal policies on this issue, and
implantable defibrillators often fire in the weeks preceding death, causing
pain and distress to dying patients and their families.
Don’t use cough and cold medicines in children under four suffering from
respiratory illness. They offer little benefit, can have serious side effects
and risk accidental overdose.
Don’t do repeat bone scans for osteoporosis more often than
every two years. Healthy women over 67 with normal bone mass can go up to 10
years without a repeat bone scan.
Don’t prescribe benzodiazepines, such as Valium, or sedatives and
sleep aids to older adults with insomnia, agitation or delirium. They can more
than double the risk of motor vehicle accidents, falls, hip fractures and
death.
Don’t screen patients routinely for vitamin D deficiency. Over the
counter supplements without laboratory testing is sufficient for most otherwise
healthy patients.
Don’t screen
for cancer in healthy individuals using CT or PET scans. The likelihood of finding
cancer is around 1 percent, and the scans are likely to identify
harmless findings leading to more tests, biopsies or needless
surgery.
Tweet: American Board of Internal Medicine is
sponsoring a campaign to encourage doctors not to do certain tests and
procedures with low yields.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment