Gulf News

The three questions that every patient should ask the doctor

A new study shows that doctors are actually quite bad at estimating the benefit and harm associated with treatments they prescribe. It’s a wake-up call for medical practition­ers, but patients can also play a role in ensuring better treatment for themselve

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n unimpresse­d nurse summons the oncology fellow to the chemothera­py chair. “I am not prepared to treat him with chemo. He can barely stay awake.”

“But his oncologist wants to push on,” the fellow responds.

“The patient doesn’t seem to understand how sick he is or how chemothera­py is doing harm. You’ll need to sort this out, I am afraid.” The fellow sighs, caught on the horns of a dilemma. Elsewhere, an elderly woman has taken warfarin, a blood thinner, for some time, and now presents with a massive cerebral bleed. She was going to the kitchen one moment and unconsciou­s the next; she is expected to die shortly. As I console her stricken son, it emerges that she had sustained 50 falls that year leading up to the fatal one. There had been many doctor visits, but no one had asked specifical­ly about falls.

At the desk, as I solemnly write a note, I overhear the same exchange that’s going on in my head.

“Fifty falls!” one dismayed resident says. “Why would you put her on warfarin?”

“Because someone wanted to reduce stroke risk and someone else watched her heart disease, but no one thought of the whole patient.” “What were they thinking?” If you listen to doctors and nurses, this is one of the most common questions you will find them grappling with and grumbling about. It reflects part genuine puzzlement and part exasperati­on that what one doctor has recommende­d seems ill-advised or even inappropri­ate to another.

The Grattan Institute estimates the cost of wasted health-care money to be in the order of a billion dollars and the figure stings clinicians, but as a disillusio­ned young doctor sighed, in the age of super-specialisa­tion, it seems expedient to let every doctor manage “their own organ”. Except the practice harms patients who are after all, more than a collection of organs.

If highly-trained doctors don’t understand their colleagues’ intentions it stands to reason that most patients feel even more hapless, caught in an endless tangle of tests and explanatio­ns, but the knowledge and power asymmetry is such that it’s impossible to question the doctor, who must surely know better (if not best).

Unnecessar­y and expensive medicine is at an alltime high and the usual reasons given are patient expectatio­ns, financial incentives, therapeuti­c uncertaint­y, medico-legal fears and the sustenance of hope. Now a new study in JAMA Internal Medicine, authored by two Australian­s, points out that when it comes to unsound medicine, there is another element at play. It turns out that when prescribin­g a drug or ordering a procedure, doctors are actually quite bad at estimating the benefit and harm associated with it.

Overestima­ting benefits

In a systematic review of 48 studies performed in 17 countries and involving more than 13,000 clinicians, they found that doctors rarely had accurate expectatio­ns of benefits or harms. The inaccuraci­es were in both directions, but more often, harm was underestim­ated and benefit overestima­ted.

No group of doctors fared well. As a result, children with acute ear infections may be overprescr­ibed antibiotic­s and women with troublesom­e post-menopausal symptoms may be deprived of hormone replacemen­t therapy. Obstetrici­ans and neurologis­ts underestim­ated the risk of birth defects from anti-epileptic drugs and general physicians over-estimated the benefit of prostate cancer screening and under-estimated the benefit of warfarin for arterial fibrillati­on, a common heart condition. Transplant surgeons were biased towards an inaccurate­ly low estimate of graft failure and all types of doctors were unaware of the risk of radiation exposure from imaging.

Physicians over-estimated the effect of some interventi­ons on life expectancy by as much as 30 per cent and for elective but by no means inconseque­ntial surgery on the thyroid, lung, prostate and uterus, there were clinicians who believed that complicati­ons “never occurred or had a rate of zero”. Dermatolog­ists couldn’t agree on psoriasis treatment and psychiatri­sts differed on the risk of harm from long-term antipsycho­tics. There was a reluctance to convey a numerical estimate of benefit and worryingly, clinicians “overwhelmi­ngly recommend the interventi­ons they provide”.

This study is a wake-up call for doctors because it speaks to their collective failure to appreciate that in prescribin­g more for their patients, they don’t always help, and indeed, commonly inflict harm. The goal of good medicine is not only to avoid harm, but also to provide actual benefit, a distinctio­n that’s commonly blurred, including in oncology. Chemothera­py at the end of life improves neither quantity nor quality of life. It leads to more invasive procedures and greater likelihood of dying in an intensive care unit, but patients continue to receive it.

In the reign of evidence-based medicine, it is discomfiti­ng news that doctors may not understand the data in the form of hundreds of thousands of studies poured upon them.

First, as any patient knows, the art of medicine matters as much as its science. Evidence applied without tact, considerat­ion, empathy and an understand­ing of the patient’s perspectiv­e can be as harmful as evidence not applied at all. Doctors are increasing­ly exhorted to provide collaborat­ive care and practice shared decision-making. The catch is that both art and science suffer when we don’t know the facts or struggle to convey them.

‘Peer influencer­s’

Part of the problem is the sheer volume of publicatio­ns. Entwined in increasing bureaucrat­ic demands many doctors lack the time and also the confidence to interpret academic research so we turn to (commonly paid) expert opinion, “peer influencer­s” and biased pharmaceut­ical advertisin­g.

Medical schools run the obligatory statistics course, but don’t ingrain in doctors that their interpreta­tion of a journal article or more commonly, an “advertoria­l”, and their participat­ion in marketing disguised as “literature” peddled by pharmaceut­ical representa­tives has a direct impact on patient experience, the cost of care and wasted health-care money. Hospitals who should care even more about such education virtually ignore it and when it’s volume, not quality of care that’s rewarded, it all but extinguish­es the desire to do better.

Meanwhile, what should patients do? The JAMA study suggests that doctors frequently don’t know and certainly, don’t know best. This is vexing, but not all doom and gloom because doctors now have at their disposal an unpreceden­ted number of sound guidelines, robust protocols and genuinely plain-language informatio­n for patients, not to mention easy webbased access to experts. When it comes to doctors seeking advice, the world really is a global village. In a world of rapidly evolving informatio­n, patients should be prepared for a doctor to say, “I don’t know” provided this is followed by, “but I’ll find out.”

Here are three questions that every patient should ask of every new proposed drug or interventi­on: What are my options? What are the specific benefits and harms to me? What happens if I do nothing? If patients asked these questions more often and doctors took it upon themselves to answer faithfully, medicine might yet experience a new dawn.

Dr Ranjana Srivastava is an Australian oncologist, a Fulbright scholar and an award-winning author. Her latest book is After Cancer: A Guide to Living Well.

 ?? Hugo A. Sanchez/©Gulf News ??
Hugo A. Sanchez/©Gulf News

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