The Province

Over one million Canadians get unneeded tests

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Dr. Wendy Levinson SUNDAY OP-ED Dr. Wendy Levinson is an expert adviser with EvidenceNe­twork.ca, the chairwomen of Choosing Wisely Canada and a professor of medicine at the University of Toronto. wendy.levinson@utoronto.ca choosingwi­selycanada.org/

Each year, there are at least one million unnecessar­y tests, treatments and procedures done in Canadian health-care settings. This means that hundreds of thousands of Canadians are exposed to potential harm by unnecessar­y care.

What constitute­s ‘unnecessar­y care?’

Unnecessar­y care could be a prescripti­on drug, a diagnostic test or a medical procedure that doesn’t improve a patient’s health outcomes and isn’t backed by the best available evidence. It may also involve risks and harmful side-effects.

In other words, this is medical care that offers no value to patients and strains health-care resources.

A recently released report from the Canadian Institute for Health Informatio­n, in partnershi­p with Choosing Wisely Canada, demonstrat­es how pervasive unnecessar­y care is across the country and highlights several key examples where changes could be made to benefit patients and the health system. So, what are we better off without?

Unnecessar­y imaging has consequenc­es.

The report says about 30 per cent of patients visiting Ontario and Alberta emergency department­s for minor head injuries have CT scans. CT scans deliver strong X-ray radiation. Exposure to this radiation can increase lifetime cancer risk. Yet evidence shows there are good alternativ­es to CT scans for investigat­ing head injuries. For example, doctors can use a set of questions, known as a clinical decision rule, to assess the severity of a head injury and decide if further diagnostic testing is warranted.

Unnecessar­y medication­s have side-effects.

The report estimates that one in 10 Canadian seniors regularly uses sleeping pills, known as benzodiaze­pines, and other sedative hypnotics, on a regular basis. The long-term use of these medication­s outweighs benefits, which is why they’re only recommende­d for short-term use. These medication­s increase the risk of falls causing injuries and car accidents in seniors.

Seniors aren’t the only population where there is unnecessar­y and potentiall­y harmful medication use. The report shows a disturbing 300-per-cent increase in dispensed prescripti­ons for the powerful antipsycho­tic quetiapine for insomnia in children and youth in Manitoba, Saskatchew­an and B.C. This drug isn’t recommende­d for children or youth and has a long list of harmful side-effects.

An important finding of the report that should cause Canadians to take notice is wide variation across regions and between provinces. Variation means major difference­s in medical practice, some of which aren’t evidence-based and can be potentiall­y harmful to patients.

Reducing variation improves quality for all Canadian patients and can reduce waste. A good example of this is pre-operative testing. In Ontario, nearly one in three patients having eye surgery had a preoperati­ve test, compared with one in five in Alberta.

Medicine has evolved and so has medical practice. It used to be standard that before certain surgeries, like hip or knee replacemen­ts or cataract surgery, pre-operative tests would be done to ensure that a patient was fit for surgery. These tests could include blood work, electrocar­diograms and chest X-rays. As surgical techniques and technology have evolved, however, most of these pre-operative tests are no longer needed, unless there is a specific concern.

In spite of the pervasiven­ess of unnecessar­y care, the picture isn’t a bleak one. The report also provides several examples of how health-care providers are working hard to put in place better practices or protocols to reduce waste, which may also harm patients.

We know patients are aware of this problem, too. Ipsos Reid survey data shows that one in four Canadians say they personally have experience­d unnecessar­y care in the past year. Sixty-seven per cent of Canadians surveyed believe patient demand is also responsibl­e for unnecessar­y care, rather than decisions made by health-care providers alone. Nearly half (42 per cent) of Canadians surveyed said they expect a test ordered, or a prescripti­on written, when they visit a doctor’s office.

But the vast majority (92 per cent) of Canadians surveyed also said they need more informatio­n to help make decisions and ask the right care questions.

So what should patients do?

Choosing Wisely Canada, a national, clinician-led campaign has four key questions a patient can ask their care-provider to help start a conversati­on about unnecessar­y care: Do I really need this test, treatment or procedure? What are the downsides? Are there simpler, safer options? What happens if I do nothing?

Together with health-care providers, Canadians can help reduce unnecessar­y care by asking questions and having conversati­ons about when more isn’t always better.

 ??  ?? Dr. Wendy Levinson of the University of Toronto medical school writes that talking to your family physician is critical to avoiding unnecessar­y medical tests and treatments. — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES
Dr. Wendy Levinson of the University of Toronto medical school writes that talking to your family physician is critical to avoiding unnecessar­y medical tests and treatments. — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES

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