Posted on 08/18/2014 6:42:51 PM PDT by Innovative
Screening older patients for cancer provided minimal benefit at considerable cost and increased use of invasive procedures, reported investigators in two separate studies.
"It is particularly important to question screening strategies for older persons," Gross continued. "Patients with a shorter life expectancy have less time to develop clinically significant cancers after a screening test and are more likely to die from noncancer health problems after a cancer diagnosis."
(Excerpt) Read more at medpagetoday.com ...
I guess I have to end my participation in the thread if the use of inferential statistics in medical research (my minor in grad school) is being summarily rejected. I don’t stick around anti-science threads in general.
Actually I think alot of this screening is a good way to guarantee income. Just as I think physicals (”wellness checks” in post-modern PC parlance) are a way to guarantee it. Meaning more expense every year and a way for insurance to get something, too.
I do not see why there is paranoia over this type of conclusion, when the same people usually eschew, rightfully, all the safety-NAZI precepts such as forcing everyone to wear belts and helmets.
“A consensus exists within the medical and scientific communities that routine cancer screening is unlikely to benefit people who have limited life expectancy. ...”
Unlikely to benefit the Utopian Socialist Society.
Surely it benefits the individual to know. And some cancers can be cured or at least lived with happily for a long time as with a chronic disease.
Each family needs to decide, post screening, whether invasive colon surgery is right for Pops when he is already feeble and frail.
But that is a different subject. They want to cut coverage for the elderly. People are living too long for obamaCare.
“if the use of inferential statistics in medical research (my minor in grad school) is being summarily rejected.”
It isn’t “summarily rejected” — but I am sure you know too that depending on the data and how it’s analyzed and what is emphasized, erroneous or at least misleading conclusions can be drawn — as well as from overgeneralizations.
FDA shut down the genetic testing outfit “23 and me” which would have helped people identify or at least get an idea of their potential genetic disposition to certain diseases. If people would get such tests, it would help to have people focus on their more vulnerable potential diseases — THIS would be a scientific approach in my opinion.
But the objective here is NOT to heal people, but to save money at the expense of lives.
Steve86, this thread isn’t “anti-science.”
For so many years, people were berated if they opted not to undergo screening. Now, ever since the ACA, all of a sudden, we’re being told there’s too much screening. The timing can’t be a coincidence. It’s not about science; it’s about politics.
That's surprising.
My dad was in his early 70s when he had is most recent colonoscopy and the doctor was iffy on whether he should get another one in five years. He did say that if dad did get one it would likely be his last if they didn't find anything because they were unlikely to treat for colon cancer when he gets into his eighties.
I want my doctor to discuss rational treatment options with me, not just look at Federal Health Form #298320B and say "I am not allowed to treat you. Sorry."
My mother died of colon cancer, my sister died of ovarian cancer and my maternal grandmother had breast cancer. Given this added risk, my doctor and I have decided on colonoscopies every 5 years. I want an annual PSA test and if it is elevated consult with a urologist and my doctor to determine the risks and whether or not I should have further tests and what if any treatment I should choose. The idea of using stacks of statistics to determine your medical care is BS.
America demands Justice for the Fallen of Benghazi! |
Commie sob. Seniors have as much right to live as any.
Sure, for you personally, great benefit vs. cost. That is an post hoc analysis. I suspect you couldn't have told me that was going to happen in 1997.
Absolutely meaningless for the population at large. If we could know before-the-fact who the "ConorMacNessas" are it would be great. Would avoid having to subject a lot of people to a dubious test that yields way too many false positives.
Well, it is about cost to society to some extent; no argument there. Do you want to pay an additional $2,000/yr for everybody else's three-year colonoscopies? Most people don't.
In the above example, scheduling at 5 or 3 year intervals vs. ten year intervals subjects a whole bunch of people to unnecessary risks while barely even saving an additional life. If you still think 3 year intervals are desirable, then why not make it 3 month intervals and save another 1/16 life. You see, there's got to be a cutoff somewhere.
America demands Justice for the Fallen of Benghazi! |
“I suspect you couldn’t have told me that was going to happen in 1997. “
That’s what the tests are for.
“Well, it is about cost to society to some extent; no argument there. Do you want to pay an additional $2,000/yr for everybody else’s three-year colonoscopies? Most people don’t. “
You are making ridiculous assumptions — the whole point of insurance is exactly that some people will need extensive medical care, others may not, that’s how they establish — or at least used to — the premiums, so they are manageable for everyone.
But now that obamacare is expanding and the government is insuring many for free, the way to “make it work” is by not testing, not diagnosing people when their conditions may still be treatable, but wait until they are at death’s door, and then pronounce that it’s too late, it’s not worth treating them at that time, and let them die, preferably quickly.
No problem - actually Medicare, Medicaid and probably most third party payers have had requirements for decades that all care provided be “medically necessary” - hospitals and other providers have all sorts of policies and personnel dedicated to make sure that their documentation reflects this so that when outside inspectors from such organizations come around they can prove the appropriateness of care, else they don’t get paid, and maybe even get fined - hundreds of millions and probably billions spent yearly on paper work and reviews only vaguely related to actual patient care - my guess is that the money wasted on such empty efforts probably is more than would be spent on useless medical procedures if third parties stopped looking over the docs’ shoulders - so the no pay if not mandated part isn’t new - only the drive to make fewer and fewer procedures mandated......
America demands Justice for the Fallen of Benghazi! |
Next, the government will be asigning each of us our own personal iceberg the day we turn 60.
“Next, the government will be asigning each of us our own personal iceberg the day we turn 60.”
There was that StarTrack episode, where people voluntarily marched into an incinerator when they turned 60 — it may come to pass.
Just because a medical test is recommended doesn’t mean everyone will opt to have one. Often the deductible alone makes these medical tests unaffordable, plus sometimes people don’t trust certain medical procedures.
What I object to is the change in recommendations all of a sudden. The idea that, suddenly, these tests are no longer necessary just doesn’t ring true.
I agree that some elderly don’t need routine screening, especially colonoscopy etc. In the past, we docs could use common sense. Then the lawyers came and sued us if we didn’t do everything, so costs went way up. Now the death panels will tell us what to do. Again no common sense.
Makes me glad I am retired.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.