lunes, 2 de julio de 2012

Too Much: Testing? | Medical News and Health Information

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Too Much: Testing? | Medical News and Health Information


Too Much: Testing? -- Research Summary

BACKGROUND: Anywhere from one-fifth to nearly one-third of tests and treatments are estimated to be unnecessary, and they may lead to dangerous side effects. Overtreatment occurs because doctors engage in defensive medicine, or ordering tests and procedures to protect themselves against lawsuits. Also, the fee-for-service system compensates them for ordering more tests. It also has become much easier to order tests because of the internet. Patients also contribute too, as they demand routine tests because they're bolstered by advertisements, medical information online, and doctors, and for many, tests provide reassurance. (Source: CBS News)


POTENTIALLY HARMFUL SIDE AFFECTS: Americans get the most medical radiation in the world, and much of it comes from repeated CT scans (too many scans increase the risk of cancer). Thousands who get stents for blocked heart arteries should have tried medication first. Doctors prescribe antibiotics tens of millions of times for viruses like colds that drugs can't help. Back pain is the No. 1 overtreated condition, from repeated MRI scans that can't pinpoint the trouble to spine surgery on people who could have gotten better without it. About one in five who gets that first back operation will wind up having another in the next decade. There are many reasons that one of three U.S. births now is by cesarean section, but an inaccurate monitor strapped to women in labor may be to blame. (Source: CBS News)


HOW OVERTREATMENT IS BEING ADDRESSED: Beginning next year, Medicare will penalize facilities where patients get a lot of hospital-acquired infections, and where a lot of patients are readmitted shortly after being discharged. The Affordable Care Act by the Obama Administration provided funding for a research center that compares existing treatments against each other, something that's not usually done when new drugs are approved. The American College of Physicians (ACP) is creating guidelines to help doctors better identify when patients should screen for certain diseases and when they can be spared the potentially costly and invasive procedures that follow. The health cooperative HealthPartners in Minnesota saw use of MRIs and radiation-heavy CTs growing between 15 percent and 18 percent a year, so the insurer began a new program: National radiology guidelines pop up on each patient's electronic medical record whenever a doctor orders a scan. It's not required, but a reminder of when certain tests are recommended. After 2 years, HealthPartners estimates it avoided 20,000 unnecessary tests, preventing dangerous radiation exposure and saving $14 million. An American Medical Association journal, Archives of Internal Medicine, just began a "Less is More" series to educate doctors about the risks of overused treatments. The journal Annals of Internal Medicine began publishing American College of Physicians' guidelines for "high-value, cost-conscious care." To increase patients' awareness, around a dozen health centers around the country are testing "shared decision-making," a process using plain-English guides or DVDs to explain the advantages and disadvantages of test and treatment options. (Source: CBS, Reuters, USA Today) MORE

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