Skeptic Ginger
Nasty Woman
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2005
- Messages
- 96,955
What's even more bizarre about this flurry of news is these are not really new guidelines. Neither are the guidelines new about the frequency of Pap smears which also made the news.
I always laugh when people talk about cost/benefit in health care in such cold and calculating ways.
Why? Because do you honestly think that when their mother/wife/daughter is in a stage of cancer that is less than positive for the calculated successful survival rate they will heroically console everybody with their statistics saying that it is best that they should just get on and die because it will save everybody money?![]()
Indeed, this is, I think, a sincere and sober recommendation about a reasonable question, but I still have some doubts about how some of these comparisons are made. How can you (can you at all?) reconcile cost to a life with cost of a life, and how generalize it if the people affected cannot agree on what that balance might be?The thing is this is not a question about money, but the costs to peoples lives. So it is not asking how much you would spend, but how many people you would hurt, for something that might be of no benefit.
What's even more bizarre about this flurry of news is these are not really new guidelines. Neither are the guidelines new about the frequency of Pap smears which also made the news.
skeptigirl, what are the new guidelines about the frequency of pap smears?
i hear nothing about this.
It seems reasonable enough, especially in the case of people who have tested clear for a long time, and are not in a high risk group, but then we read that the problem here is not (as is in part the problem in mammograms) the danger of the test itself, but the danger of overtreatment based on questionable results, in particular the presence of HPV. Isn't the problem one of overtreatment, rather than overtesting?Google is your friend. Again, fewer screenings are recommended because overtreatment is harmful, especially to women who may want to have children in the future. Here the potential harms are more clear cut.
Indeed, this is, I think, a sincere and sober recommendation about a reasonable question, but I still have some doubts about how some of these comparisons are made. How can you (can you at all?) reconcile cost to a life with cost of a life, and how generalize it if the people affected cannot agree on what that balance might be?
Imagine I live in a place where giant scorpions are common. I make it a practice to check my bed for scorpions every night before retiring. It's very rare to find one, but once every couple of years or so I do, and finding it saves me from death by scorpion bites. Unfortunately, because my eyesight is bad and I'm too stubborn to put on my glasses, I occasionally mistake the cat for a scorpion and shoot it instead. I shoot several cats a year. This causes great suffering and marital discord, as well as bloody linen, until an epidemiologist is called in. He makes a recommendation that I inspect the bed only every other night. Sure enough, the number of cat shootings has decreased by a dramatic 50 percent in under a year. So far I have also not been bitten by a scorpion, so the solution is perfect!
Again, pap smears are recommended every three years or five years depending on age group in the UK and starting at 25. It seems there is some sort of general tendency towards more frequent screening/ preventative measures in the US.Since different countries have such different guidelines I would have thought camparisons could be useful in weighing costs versus benefits.
Hmmm, I wonder why that could be? What could be the incentive to perform lots of expensive procedures on healthy people?
Could it be defensive medicine, fear of a lawsuit?![]()
Certainly, if early detection is not an issue, or if the cancers are so slow growing that one need test less frequently, then by all means, do it less frequently. I would have no quarrel with that if that were the reason given. But this is not the argument I'm seeing for the change. The argument I'm seeing for the change is that doctors are over-treating for questionable test results. To reiterate, bolded in case this point is not clear enough, the argument I am seeing is not that there is no benefit to more frequent testing, but that the harm from overtreatment outweighs it. It seems ridiculous to me that this should be the argument against the tests rather than against the way they are treated, even if it makes a sort of epidemiological sense.Really really bad analogy. For one thing failure to detect is not death, it will be detected later. So first it needs to be shown that early detection is vital in this cancer.
Again, pap smears are recommended every three years or five years depending on age group in the UK and starting at 25. It seems there is some sort of general tendency towards more frequent screening/ preventative measures in the US.
Since different countries have such different guidelines I would have thought camparisons could be useful in weighing costs versus benefits.
Could it be defensive medicine, fear of a lawsuit?![]()
Certainly, if early detection is not an issue, or if the cancers are so slow growing that one need test less frequently, then by all means, do it less frequently. I would have no quarrel with that if that were the reason given. But this is not the argument I'm seeing for the change. The argument I'm seeing for the change is that doctors are over-treating for questionable test results. To reiterate, bolded in case this point is not clear enough, the argument I am seeing is not that there is no benefit to more frequent testing, but that the harm from overtreatment outweighs it. It seems ridiculous to me that this should be the argument against the tests rather than against the way they are treated, even if it makes a sort of epidemiological sense.
Just don't tell me that the best way to handle inept reading of tests is to skip the tests.
The thing is that it is always a case of balance. There there might be a benefit to testing every month, but the costs in terms of harm to peoples lives. So the question is how much benefit is there and how much cost.
The argument is that there is limited benefit to these tests and a real harm to them.
Like with self exams it is found that they were not helpful, women notice lumps in their breasts the way people notice lumps in other portions of their anatomies.
A false positive is not necessarily a result of the doctor being inept.
Now, tonight, more disconcerting news – the New York Times reports of new guidelines to scale back cervical cancer screenings. The recommendation from the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists comes on the heels of another recommendation to limit breast cancer screenings with mammograms. There are many questions unanswered for me, but one which immediately comes to mind is whether costs have anything to do with these recommendations. The current health care debate elicits great concern because of its introduction of socialized medicine in America and the inevitable rationed care. We need to carefully watch this debate as it coincides with Capitol Hill’s debate and determine whether we are witnessing the early stages of that rationed care before the Senate bill is rushed through as well.
Another question is why these women-focused cancers are seemingly receiving substandard attention at a time when proactive health and fitness should be the message. Every woman should encourage rigorous debate to ensure that our collective voices are heard. We are paying attention to Washington’s health care proposals, and we want to hear what helps patients the most.