Muzi.com News Gallery Library Forum Celebrity Movies Chinastar Regions Channels
Set Home|Subscribe|Premium Home|MyMuzi

Home | Most-viewed Story | Most-viewed Coverage | Region | People | Time | Events | Business | Sports | Showbiz | IT | Politics | Military | Society | Education | Life | Health
  Muzi.com : Muzi (English) : News
  How to help patients make wiser health choices
Last updated: 2009-02-09


How to help patients make wiser health choices
2009-02-09

Category
Surgeries
Nations
U.S.
City
New York City
States
New York
New Hampshire
Category
Regions
County
Manhattan
University
University of Michigan
Category
National Institutes of Health
Hospitals
Massachusetts General Hospital
Category
Prostate Cancer
Breast Cancer
Heart Diseases
Types
Hospitals

WASHINGTON - It's one of medicine's uncomfortable truths: That blood test for prostate cancer is far from perfect. Would as many men take a PSA test if they knew? Or consider treatment for early breast cancer: Is saving the breast worth all the extra doctor visits for radiation or would you prefer the whole breast removed in one trip?

There's no single right answer for everyone yet patients often are ill-equipped to weigh increasingly complex medical options. Now there's a small but growing movement to get unbiased reports of the pros and cons of different tests and treatments into patients' hands before they fall back on, "Doc, just tell me what you'd choose."

"No matter how hard I tried" to be objective, "inevitably my personal biases got involved," recalls breast surgeon Dr. Dale Collins of New Hampshire's Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, which helped pioneer the concept that it calls shared decision-making.

Think of it as "informed consent 2.0," going a step beyond the brief patient education that doctors are required to provide. One state, Washington, has passed a law encouraging the trend. And it may get renewed attention in this era of health care reform because studies suggest that patients who get the full scoop frequently choose more conservative therapy than their doctors initially recommend.

Savvy patients today turn to places like the National Institutes of Health or American Cancer Society for advice. For the less savvy, some medical groups are developing what they call decision aids, plain-English guides that give equal voice to the advantages and disadvantages of options and include real patients explaining why they chose differently. They can be videos or pamphlets, but the goal is for patients to get the guides even before doctor appointments so they come armed with better questions.

Consider that PSA blood test. Most men over 50 have had one even though it's hugely controversial. Why? Most men who undergo a biopsy for an abnormal PSA test don't turn out to have prostate cancer at all. Of those who do, there's no proof yet that the early detection saves lives. But finding an early prostate cancer forces a decision about trying surgery or radiation treatments that can cause incontinence and impotence -- known harm for unknown benefit.

In fact, health guidelines issues last year concluded men over age 75 shouldn't get a PSA test while younger men should make an individual choice after hearing the pros and cons.

But getting upfront objective information is rare, Dr. Michael Barry of Massachusetts General Hospital told a meeting of the nonprofit Foundation for Informed Medical Decision Making last week, where health workers gathered to debate how to spread "informed choice."

In a decision-aid video the foundation sponsored about PSA testing, one doctor says, "Is this a slippery slope that I really want to get on?" He decided not to have his own PSA level checked.

"It's a good way to diagnose a potentially fatal condition," says another physician on the video who did get tested.

At Dartmouth, every woman diagnosed with early-stage breast cancer now sees a similar decision-aid video before meeting a surgeon. They're also quizzed to be sure they understood that survival is equally good regardless of whether they choose removing just the tumor, followed by radiation, or removing the whole breast -- but that there are valid reasons for either choice, such as anxiety about keeping the breast, the time radiation requires, how often more surgery is needed.

Patient choice is only one part of good health care; a separate problem is how often doctors fail to offer proven care, such as medications that improve survival after a heart attack.

But many other scenarios -- back surgery, knee and hip replacement, enlarged prostates, especially end-of-life care -- have no one-size-fits-all guidelines, and Dartmouth research suggests where patients live often is the biggest determinant of what they get. For example, elderly patients with chronic illnesses spend 11 days in the hospital in Bend, Ore., over their last two years of life -- while those in Manhattan spend 35 days in the hospital, although the extra care doesn't lengthen life.

A new University of Michigan study of how 3,000 patients made common medical choices suggests patients frequently have misinformation. Fewer than one in five could name the most common side effect of cholesterol-lowering statin drugs they were considering, for example. Moreover, patients said their doctors discussed treatment advantages more than the disadvantages.

Whether decision aids or some other approach truly improves informed choice remains to be seen, but a handful of medical centers are trying the guides.

"You're getting so much information thrown at you at one time, it's hard to assimilate," says Alethea Cassidy, 53, of Erie, Pa., who was diagnosed with early-stage breast cancer in March 2007 and received a similar decision-aid video from Allegheny General Hospital. It helped her decide to keep her breast. "It alleviates any doubts."

___

EDITOR'S NOTE -- Lauran Neergaard covers health and medical issues for The Associated Press in Washington.

 Cancers   Surgeries 
  Profile News994GalleryLinks  
  Study: New device boosts heart failure survival (2009-11-17)
  Stigma part of breast cancer's grip on poor (2009-11-02)
  Cancer "didn't beat" Patrick Swayze, wife Lisa says (2009-10-28)
  Glaxo says U.S. panel recommends Cervarix vaccine (2009-10-21)
  Artificial Sweeteners: How Bad Are Saccharin, Aspartame? (2009-10-20)
  Ohio wife, husband both battling breast cancer (2009-10-13)
  Obama says $5B in grants will aid medical research (2009-09-30)
  Precancer? Earliest cancer? Milk-duct cells vexing (2009-09-25)
  Studies: Merck vaccine safe, promotion unbalanced (2009-08-19)
  Study: Weightlifting helps breast cancer survivors (2009-08-13)
  Study: Tanning beds as deadly as arsenic (2009-07-28)
  First stem cell transplant on Chilean leukemia patient (2009-07-24)
  Study: 7 key genes predict brain cancer survival (2009-07-15)
  Study: 1 in 3 breast cancer patients overtreated (2009-07-11)
  WHO approves cervical cancer vaccine Cervarix (2009-07-09)
  Calif. regulators warn of pot's cancer capability (2009-07-05)
  Fawcett's death spotlights a rare cancer (2009-07-02)
  Disease prevention often costs more than it saves (2009-06-28)
  Jobs' liver transplant shows power of the rich (2009-06-28)
  'Charlie's Angel' Farrah Fawcett dies at 62 (2009-06-27)
  Drug combo helps with repeat cancers in women (2009-05-03)
  Super-chemo targets cancer spreading to the liver (2009-03-30)
  Study: Lots of red meat increases mortality risk (2009-03-23)
  Push is on to tailor cancer care to tumor's genes (2009-02-16)
  New prostate cancer test gets go-ahead (2009-02-11)
Related People
  • Peter Jennings
  • Lance Armstrong
  • Dana Reeve
  • Martin Luther King
  • Francis Collins
  • Stevie Wonder
  • Sheryl Crow
  • George W. Bush
  • Christopher Reeve
  • Kylie Minogue
  • Meredith Vieira
  • Joan Rivers
  • Charles Grassley
  • Jesse Jackson
  • Paul Allen
  • Related Events
  • 2005 Hurricane Katrina
  • Bird Flu Crisis
  • Fighting in Iraq
  • Second Gulf War
  • Tour de France

  • Stories Coverages

    NewsGuide EventCityPeopleShowCompany 
     ENTSportsBIZEDULifeMilitaryPoliticsSocietyHealth 


    [2009 US Health Reform]: Divided Senate opens health care debate on Monday (09:24 11/30)


    [111th Congress]: Divided Senate opens health care debate on Monday (09:24 11/30)

    [China-U.S.]: US and China to reduce emissions, but not enough (22:24 11/27)


    [2009 Dubai Debt Crisis]: Stocks slide on concerns about Dubai debt fallout (16:24 11/27)

    [U.S. Markets]: Stocks slide on concerns about Dubai debt fallout (16:24 11/27)


    [Black Friday]: Shoppers pack stores as holiday season revs up (08:58 11/27)


    [European Markets]: Dubai debt fears remain focus in world markets (08:58 11/27)

    [Iran Nuclear Crisis]: Iran condemned by UN nuclear watchdog (22:24 11/27)


    [Holocaust]: Son insists accused Nazi guard will be found innocent (08:58 11/27)

    [Japanese Markets]: Dubai debt fears hit world markets hard (16:52 11/26)



    Muzi.com

    Muzi.com : About | Sitemap | Ads | Contact
    All Rights Reserved 1994-2006 - All rights reserved.