Versions of this story were co-published with Digital First Media websites and newspapers, with public radio station WNYC in New York and with American Public Media’s Marketplace.
Medicare is wasting hundreds of millions of dollars a year by failing to rein in doctors who routinely give patients pricey name-brand drugs when cheaper generic alternatives are available.ProPublica analyzed the prescribing habits of 1.6 million practitioners nationwide and found that a tiny fraction of them are having an outsized impact on spending in Medicare’s massive drug program. Just 913 internists, family medicine and general practice physicians cost taxpayers an extra $300 million in 2011 alone by disproportionately choosing name-brand drugs. These doctors each wrote at least 5,000 prescriptions that year, including refills, and ranked among the program’s most prolific prescribers. Many of these physicians also have accepted thousands of dollars in promotional or consulting fees from drug companies, records show. While lawmakers bitterly disagree about the Affordable Care Act, Medicare’s drug program has been held up as a success for government health care. It has come in below cost estimates while providing access to needed medicines for 36 million seniors and the disabled. But this seeming fiscal success has hidden billions of dollars lost to unnecessarily expensive prescribing over the program’s eight-year history. The waste is exacerbated by a ... |
Copyright
Wednesday, November 20, 2013
Medicare’s Failure to Track Doctors Wastes Billions on Name-Brand Drugs
A Permanent Slump?
Spend any time around monetary officials and one word you’ll hear a lot is “normalization.” Most though not all such officials accept that now is no time to be tightfisted, that for the time being credit must be easy and interest rates low. Still, the men in dark suits look forward eagerly to the day when they can go back to their usual job, snatching away the punch bowl whenever the party gets going.
But what if the world we’ve been living in for the past five years is the new normal? What if depression-like conditions are on track to persist, not for another year or two, but for decades?
You might imagine that speculations along these lines are the province of a radical fringe. And they are indeed radical; but fringe, not so much. A number of economists have been flirting with such thoughts for a while. And now they’ve moved into the mainstream. In fact, the case for “secular stagnation” — a persistent state in which a depressed economy is the norm, with episodes of full employment few and far between — was made forcefully recently at the most ultrarespectable of venues, the I.M.F.’s big annual research conference. And the person making that case was none other than Larry Summers. Yes, that Larry Summers.
And if Mr. Summers is right, everything respectable people have been saying about economic policy is wrong, and will keep being wrong for a long time.
Mr. Summers began with a point that should be obvious but...
|
Related articles
- John Burton Reports on Workers' Compensation Insurance Industry Underwriting Results (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Study: Calif. workers compensation overhaul too new to parse (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Privatization of workers, compensation continues throughout WV (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Work Comp Lost Focus (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Iowa justices: Illegal immigrant entitled to workers' comp (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Florida Workers' Compensation FIlings Continue to Decrease (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Europeans Fault American Safety Effort in Bangladesh (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
ObamaCare's Union Favor
The Affordable Care Act's greatest hits keep coming, and one that hasn't received enough attention is a looming favor for President Obama's friends in Big Labor. Millions of Americans are losing their plans and paying more for health care, and doctors are being forced out of insurance networks, but a lucky few may soon get relief.
Earlier this month the Administration suggested that it may grant a waiver for some insurance plans from a tax that is supposed to capitalize a reinsurance fund for ObamaCare. The $25 billion cost of the fund, which is designed to pay out to the insurers on the exchanges if their costs are higher than expected, is socialized over every U.S. citizen with a private health plan. For 2014, the fee per head is $63. The unions hate this reinsurance transfer because it takes from their members in the form of higher premiums and gives to people on the exchanges. But then most consumers are hurt in the same way, and the unions have little ground for complaint given that ObamaCare would not have passed in 2010 without the fervent support of the AFL-CIO, the Teamsters and the rest. The unions ought to consider this tax a civic obligation in solidarity with the (uninsured) working folk they claim to support. Instead, they've spent most of the last year demanding that the White House give them subsidies and carve-outs unavailable to anyone else. But don't expect ObamaCare favors unless you helped to re-elect the President. In an aside in a Federal Register... |
Related articles
- Obama Moves to Avert Cancellation of Insurance (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Obama: Insurers Can Extend Canceled Policies Into 2014 (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Labor puts Dems on notice: Don't touch Medicare and Social Security benefits (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- The Shame of American Health Care (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Democrats say minimum-wage battles to help 2014 turnout (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Leaders make last ditch plea for Boeing deal as Machinists remain defiant (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- California Considers Its Options On Canceled Insurance Plans (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
Tuesday, November 19, 2013
John Burton Reports on Workers' Compensation Insurance Industry Underwriting Results
Related articles
- Privatization of workers, compensation continues throughout WV (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Where is the Deep Water? (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- CEO resigns from California state workers' comp insurer (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Workers' compensation claims drop in Louisiana (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- California: Medical Delay and Denial Protested (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Study: Calif. workers compensation overhaul too new to parse (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- What a Government Default Will Do To Workers' Compensation (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Work Comp Lost Focus (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
'Superbugs could erase a century of medical advances,' experts warn
The increase of infectious diseases is a cause of great concern in medical care. Today's post was shared by FairWarning and comes from www.independent.co.uk
Routine operations could become deadly "in the very near future" as bacteria evolve to resist the drugs we use to combat them. This process could erase a century of medical advances, say government doctors in a special editorial in The Lancet health journal. Although the looming threat of antibiotic, or anti-microbial, resistance has been known about for years, the new warning reflects growing concern that the NHS and other national health systems, already under pressure from ageing populations, will struggle to cope with the rising cost of caring for people in the "post-antibiotic era". In a stark reflection of the seriousness of the threat, England's deputy chief medical officer, Professor John Watson, said: "I am concerned that in 20 years, if I go into hospital for a hip replacement, I could get an infection leading to major complications and possible death, simply because antibiotics no longer work as they do now." About 35 million antibiotics are prescribed by GPs in England every year. The more the drugs circulate, the more bacteria are able to evolve to resist them. In the past, drug development kept pace with evolving microbes, with a constant production line of new classes of antibiotics. But the drugs have ceased to be profitable and a new class has not been created since 1987. Writing in The Lancet, experts, including England's chief medical officer, Dame Sally Davies, warn that death rates from bacterial infections "might return to those of the early 20th... |
[Click here to see the rest of this post]
The Shame of American Health Care
Even as Americans struggle with the changes required by health care reform, an international survey released last week by the Commonwealth Fund, a research organization, shows why change is so necessary.
The report found that by virtually all measures of cost, access to care and ease of dealing with insurance problems, Americans fared poorly compared with people in other advanced countries. The survey covered 20,000 adults in the United States and 10 other industrial nations — Australia, Canada, France, Germany, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland and Britain, all of which put in place universal or near-universal health coverage decades ago. The United States spends far more than any of these countries on a per capita basis and as a percent of the national economy.
For that, it gets meager results. Some 37 percent of American adults went without recommended care, did not see a doctor when sick or failed to fill prescriptions in the past year because of costs, compared with 4 percent in Britain and 6 percent in Sweden. Nearly a quarter of American adults could not pay medical bills or had serious problems paying them compared with less than 13 percent in France and 7 percent or less in five other countries. Even Americans who were insured for the entire year were more likely than adults abroad to forgo care because of costs, an indication of how skimpy some insurance policies are.
When Americans got sick, they had to wait longer than people in...
|
Related articles
- ObamaCare's Union Favor (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Europeans Fault American Safety Effort in Bangladesh (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Obama Moves to Avert Cancellation of Insurance (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Lousy Medicaid Arguments (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Why Are Children Working in American Tobacco Fields? (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Study: Calif. workers compensation overhaul too new to parse (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- mHealth: A Potential Player for Workers' Compensation (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
Is Walmart's request of associates to help provide Thanksgiving dinner for co-workers proof of low wages?
The Walmart on Atlantic Boulevard in Canton is collecting food for employees who can't afford Thanksgiving dinner. The company said this is proof that employees look out for one another. The group of employees who have held national strikes against the world's largest retailer says the food drive is proof Walmart doesn't pay associates enough to survive. The Organization United for Respect at Walmart, or OUR Walmart, is holding strikes against the chain at stores in Dayton and Cincinnati on Monday, Nov. 18. (courtesy of OUR Walmart)
CLEVELAND, Ohio -- The storage containers are attractively displayed at the Walmart on Atlantic Boulevard inCanton. The bins are lined up in alternating colors of purple and orange. Some sit on tables covered with golden yellow tablecloths. Others peer out from under the tables.This isn't a merchandise display. It's a food drive - not for the community, but for needy workers. "Please Donate Food Items Here, so Associates In Need Can Enjoy Thanksgiving Dinner," read signs affixed to the tablecloths. The food drive tables are tucked away in an employees-only area. They are another element in the backdrop of the public debate about salaries for cashiers, stock clerks and other low-wage positions at Walmart, as workers in Cincinnati and Dayton are scheduled to goon strike Monday. Chat wrap: OUR Walmart rep answers your questions about this story Is the food drive proof the retailer pays so little that many employees can't afford Thanksgiving dinner? Norma... |
Related articles
- NLRB Office of the General Counsel Authorizes Complaints against Walmart, Also Finds No Merit to Other Charges (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Voters Will Decide on Minimum Wage Hike - Impacting Workers Compensation Benefits (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Largest Civil Disobedience In Walmart History Leads To More Than 50 Arrests (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- John Burton Reports on Workers' Compensation Insurance Industry Underwriting Results (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Breaking: Wal-Mart workers on strike, defying firings (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
Why Are Children Working in American Tobacco Fields?
Young farm workers are falling ill from “green tobacco sickness” while the industry denies it and government lets it happen.
This article was reported in partnership with the Investigative Fund of the Nation Institute. The air was heavy and humid on the morning the three Cuello sisters joined their mother in the tobacco fields. The girls were dressed in jeans and long-sleeve shirts, carried burritos wrapped in aluminum foil, and had no idea what they were getting themselves into. “It was our first real job,” says Neftali, the youngest. She was 12 at the time. The middle sister, Kimberly, was 13. Yesenia was 14. Their mother wasn’t happy for the company. After growing up in Mexico, she hadn’t crossed the border so that her kids could become farmworkers. But the girls knew their mom was struggling. She had left her husband and was supporting the family on the minimum wage. If her girls worked in the tobacco fields, it would quadruple the family’s summer earnings. “My mom tends to everybody,” Neftali says. This was a chance to repay that debt. The sisters trudged into dense rows of bright green tobacco plants. Their task was to tear off flowers and remove small shoots from the stalks, a process called “topping and suckering.” They walked the rows, reaching deep into the wet leaves, and before long their clothes were soaked in the early morning dew. None of them knew that the dew represented a... |
Related articles
- That time Big Tobacco sold asbestos as the "Greatest Health Protection in Cigarette History" (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Great American Smokeout - November 21, 2013 (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Taxpayers pay high cost for low fast-food wages, lawmakers are told (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- National Labor College Will Close Its Doors (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Beyond Fast Food Strikes | Jacobin (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Democrats say minimum-wage battles to help 2014 turnout (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
Europeans Fault American Safety Effort in Bangladesh
Tensions broke into the open on Monday involving two large groups of retailers — one overwhelmingly American, the other dominated by Europeans — that have formed to improve factory safety in Bangladesh.
An official from the European group voiced concern that the American retailers would piggyback at no cost on the efforts of the Europeans — which includes H&M, Carrefour and more than 100 other retailers — in financing safety upgrades at hundreds of factories.
The members of the European-led group, the Accord on Fire and Building Safety in Bangladesh, have made binding commitments to help pay for fire safety measures and building upgrades when shortcomings in safety are found in the more than 1,600 garment factories its members use in Bangladesh. While the American-dominated group, which has 26 members, including Walmart Stores, Target and Gap, has stopped short of making such a binding commitment, it has pledged to provide loans for the improvements.
Scott Nova, executive director of the Worker Rights Consortium, a labor rights group based in Washington that is a member of the Europe-led accord, said members had a “significant concern about a free-rider situation.”
Jeff R. Krilla, the president of the American-dominated group, the Alliance for Bangladesh Worker Safety, said he was surprised by the criticism, noting that his alliance had agreed to make $100 million in low-cost loans available to Bangladesh factory owners to finance...
|
Related articles
- Bangladesh: Is Worker Safety Failing in the Global Supply Chain? (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Dozens Hurt in Bangladesh Garment Factory Protest (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Fashion Safety: The Tragedy Continues (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Deadly factory fire again underlines importance of Bangladesh Accord (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- The Shame of American Health Care (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Port truck drivers from 3 firms on strike (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Why Are Children Working in American Tobacco Fields? (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
Extension of Benefits for Jobless Is Set to End
WASHINGTON — Unless Congress acts, during the last week of December an estimated 1.3 million people will lose access to an emergency program providing them with additional weeks of jobless benefits. A further 850,000 will be denied benefits in the first quarter of 2014.
Congressional Democrats and the White House, pointing to the sluggish recovery and the still-high jobless rate, are pushing once again to extend the period covered by the unemployment insurance program. But with Congress still far from a budget deal and still struggling to find alternatives to the $1 trillion in long-term cuts known as sequestration, lawmakers say the chances of an extension before Congress adjourns in two weeks are slim.
As a result, one of the largest stimulus measures passed during the recession is likely to come to an end, and jobless workers in many states are likely to receive considerably fewer weeks of benefits.
In all, as many as 4.8 million people could be affected by expiring unemployment benefits through 2014, estimated Gene Sperling, President Obama’s top economic adviser.
“Historically, there has not been a time where the unemployment rate has been this high where you have not extended it,” Mr. Sperling said in an interview. “Why would you not extend now, when you’re dealing with the nearly unprecedented levels of long-term unemployment coming off such a historic recession? This would be the wrong time to do it.”
Democrats are pushing...
|
Related articles
- Obama Moves to Avert Cancellation of Insurance (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Democrats say minimum-wage battles to help 2014 turnout (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- ObamaCare's Union Favor (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Government Shutdown: Day 9 - Government shutdown hitting veterans, military families hard (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- White House rejects asbestos bill (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- The Future of Workers' Compensation (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- What a Government Default Will Do To Workers' Compensation (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Obama: Insurers Can Extend Canceled Policies Into 2014 (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
NLRB Office of the General Counsel Authorizes Complaints against Walmart, Also Finds No Merit to Other Charges
The National Labor Relations Board Office of the General Counsel has investigated charges alleging that Walmart violated the rights of its employees as a result of activities surrounding employee protests. The Office of the General Counsel found merit in some of the charges and no merit in others. The Office of the General Counsel has authorized complaints on alleged violations of the National Labor Relations Act. If the parties cannot reach settlements in these cases, complaints will issue.
The Office of the General Counsel found merit to alleged violations of the National Labor Relations Act against Walmart, such as the following:
|
Related articles
- Is Walmart's request of associates to help provide Thanksgiving dinner for co-workers proof of low wages? (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- AIG Facing Lawsuit for Fraud (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Europeans Fault American Safety Effort in Bangladesh (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Largest Civil Disobedience In Walmart History Leads To More Than 50 Arrests (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Breaking: Wal-Mart workers on strike, defying firings (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Too Much Temptation To Do the Wrong Thing (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Florida Upholds Low Counsel Fees (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
Monday, November 18, 2013
My Next Move for Veterans
|
My Next Move for Veterans is sponsored by the U.S. Department of Labor,
Employment & Training Administration, and developed by the National Center for O*O*NET Development. |
Related articles
- Violence Occupational Hazards in Hospitals (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Steel company fined $115,400 by US Labor Department's OSHA for failing to abate workplace hazards (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Study: Workers with disabilities paid 10% less (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- OSHA releases new resources to better protect workers from hazardous chemicals (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- OSHA Releases New Resources to Help Employers Protect Workers from Hazardous Chemicals (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- The High Price of Gas - Mileage Reimbursement for Injured Workers (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Klickitat County Lumber Company Fined (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
Sunday, November 17, 2013
Addiction Specialists Wary of New Painkiller
Addiction experts protested loudly when the Food and Drug Administration approved a powerful new opioid painkiller last month, saying that it would set off a wave of abuse much as OxyContin did when it first appeared.
An F.D.A. panel had earlier voted, 11 to 2, against approval of the drug, Zohydro, in part because unlike current versions of OxyContin, it is not made in a formulation designed to deter abuse.
Now a new issue is being raised about Zohydro. The drug will be manufactured by the same company, Alkermes, that makes a popular medication called Vivitrol, used to treat patients addicted to painkillers or alcohol.
In addition, the company provides financial support to a leading professional group that represents substance abuse experts, the American Society of Addiction Medicine.
For some critics, the company’s multiple roles in the world of painkillers is troubling.
Dr. Gregory L. Jones, an addiction specialist in Louisville, Ky., said he had long been concerned about financial links between the group and the drug industry, adding that the Zohydro situation amplified those potential conflicts.
Dr. Stuart Gitlow, the current president of the American Society of Addiction Medicine, said he had been unaware until now of Alkermes’s involvement with Zohydro. Dr. Gitlow, who is affiliated with Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City, said that the group would seek more information from Alkermes about the situation and then decide what, if anything, to do next.
...
|
Related articles
- F.D.A. Shift on Painkillers Was Years in the Making (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Leading Coal Industry Law Firm Withheld Evidence of Black Lung Disease (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Naloxone Expansion In California Will Enable Family, Friends To Save Lives At Home (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- California: Medical Delay and Denial Protested (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Why Tylenol Isn't Always as Safe as People Think (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Expediting Drug Development - The FDA's New "Breakthrough Therapy" Designation (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Johnson & Johnson to Pay More Than $2.2 Billion to Resolve Criminal and Civil Investigatio (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
Latest firefighter injury report shows that nearly 70,000 injuries occurred in the line of duty in 2012
NFPA released the latest edition of its U.S. Firefighter Injury Report, highlighting data on injuries sustained by firefighters on duty that was collected from fire departments responding to the 2012 National Fire Experience Survey. Firefighter injuries have declined over the past three decades, hovering around roughly 100,000 from the early 1980’s through early 1990’s. In 2012, 69,400 firefighter injuries occurred in the line of duty.
|
Related articles
- Mesothelioma, Other Cancers Higher Among Firefighters (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- CDC - NIOSH Update - NIOSH Study of Firefighters Finds Increased Rates of Cancer (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- OSHA announces proposed new rule to improve tracking of workplace injuries and illnesses (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- California Tossed Out NFL Players Brain Injury Claim: Time To Change The System? (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- FEHA Ain't Work Comp (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- "Stand By Your Pan": Cook Safely This Thanksgiving to Prevent Kitchen Fires (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- State panel rejected injury claim by NFL's Dorsett (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Schneider Electric Recalls APC Surge Protectors Due to Fire Hazard (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
California sends misinformation to 246,000 new Medicaid enrollees
LOS ANGELES -- California has mistakenly sent letters to 246,000 low-income residents, warning they may need to find new doctors next year under the state's newly expanded Medicaid program.
The error frustrated counties and community health centers, which have repeatedly assured patients they can keep their providers when the Affordable Care Act takes effect in 2014. The patients are part of the state's "bridge to reform" program, which was designed to cover uninsured, poor Californians until they became eligible for Medicaid, known as Medi-Cal here. The program launched in 2011 and more than 600,000 people across the state enrolled in county-based health coverage. Many of them formed relationships with doctors and started seeking regular care. But county and clinic administrators said the incorrect mailing this month has put the counties' efforts in jeopardy. The mix-up occurred as people are scrambling to figure out how the health law impacts them, and as private policy holders have been receiving letters canceling their insurance plans. "The whole key to the success is that people seamlessly transition to Medi-Cal," said Sean South, an associate director at the California Primary Care Association. "It is vitally important that we don't confuse them." But that's what happened when the incorrect letters started going out on Nov. 1, said clinic and county officials. Patients immediately began calling and showing up with questions about the letter, said Eva Serrano, a... |
Related articles
- Professionalism and Caring for Medicaid Patients - The 5% Commitment? (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- More Obamacare Enrollees In California Than In 36 States Combined (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Worried About Costs And Unaware of Help, Californians Head Into New Era of Health Coverage (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Lousy Medicaid Arguments (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- California Considers Its Options On Canceled Insurance Plans (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Nearly 1,500 Hospitals Penalized Under Medicare Program Rating Quality (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Federal Court Deems CMS Interpretation of the MSP Act Impenetrable (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- California state Sen. Ron Calderon accepted $88,000 in bribes, FBI affidavit alleges (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
California Considers Its Options On Canceled Insurance Plans
Today's post was shared by Kaiser Health News and comes from www.kaiserhealthnews.org
President Barack Obama’s announcement Thursday that insurers can extend cancelled policies that don’t comply with the health law has prompted conflicting reactions from California insurance regulators and the companies they oversee. State Insurance Commissioner Dave Jones said he will urge companies to let more than a million consumers keep their plans for an additional year, fulfilling the president’s promise that people didn’t have to switch policies if they didn’t want to. “The federal government told people in California and throughout the United States that they could stay in their plans,” he said at a press conference Thursday. But the lobbying group for health plans said its members shouldn’t extend policies that don’t meet the requirements of the Affordable Care Act. The state should “stay the course and transition people into more comprehensive policies,” said Patrick Johnston, chief executive officer of the California Association of Health Plans. The cancellation notices have caused anger and frustration among consumers and led to growing criticism of Obama and the law. Covered California, the state’s new insurance marketplace, has contracts with health insurers that sell plans through the state-run website, requiring them to cancel policies that they sell on or off the exchange if they don't meet the law's standards. Those policies will be cancelled by the end of 2013 if they don’t cover... |
[Click here to see the rest of this post]
A Framework for Reducing Suffering in Health Care
Today's post was shared by NEJM and comes from blogs.hbr.org
Patients suffer — predictably and so obviously that they bring clichés to life. They wince with pain. They shudder with fear. They lose sleep because of anxiety and confusion. And, as they suffer, they turn to medicine for help. But medicine, increasingly, has not provided them with relief. A century ago, little could be done to alter the course of disease, but clinicians understood suffering and their role in addressing it. They acknowledged it, they gave drugs to relieve pain, and they took the time to bear witness to what their patients were enduring. But in recent decades, spectacular medical progress has made many diseases treatable, and some even curable. Super-specialized physicians learned how to attack disease in various organs systems, and fatalism has gone out of fashion. Much good has resulted from that aggressiveness and the narrowed focus of clinicians — but patients’ suffering has been pushed from center stage into the background. Suffering still goes on, of course, but it is often overlooked. Perhaps it is overlooked because clinicians are so busy focusing on the technical details of care, or perhaps it is due to their uncertainty about how to respond. In fact, the profession so systematically avoids acknowledging suffering that medical journals don’t even use the term to describe a patient’s experience. Compliance rates may be said to “suffer,” but not patients. (See Thomas H. Lee’s essay... |
[Click here to see the rest of this post]
