Posted on 06/16/2019 5:12:11 PM PDT by ConservativeMind
Scientists have identified nearly 400 established medical practices that have been found to be ineffective by clinical studies published across three top medical journals.
Writing in the journal eLife, the team hope their findings will encourage the de-adoption of these practices, also known as medical reversals, ultimately making patient care more efficient and cost effective.
Medical reversals are practices that have been found to be no better than prior or lesser standards of care, through randomised controlled trials (RCTs: studies that aim to reduce certain types of bias when testing new treatments). But it can be difficult to identify these practices. For example, Cochrane Reviews provide high-quality evidence on medical practices, but only one practice is covered in each review and many have not been reviewed in this way. Additionally, the Choosing Wisely initiative in the US aims to maintain a list of low-value medical practices, but it relies on medical organisations to report them.
Cardiovascular disease was the most commonly represented medical category among the reversals (20%), followed by public health/preventive medicine (12%) and critical care (11%). In terms of the type of intervention, medication was the most common (33%), followed by a procedure (20%) and vitamins and/or supplements (13%).
Once an ineffective practice is established, it may be difficult to convince practitioners to abandon its use. By aiming to test novel treatments rigorously before they become widespread, we can reduce the number of reversals in practice and prevent unnecessary harm to patients.
"Taken together, we hope our findings will help push medical professionals to evaluate their own practices critically and demand high-quality research before adopting a new practice in future, especially for those that are more expensive and/or aggressive than the current standard of care," concludes co-lead author Alyson Haslam, Ph.D., also at the OHSU Knight Cancer Institute.
(Excerpt) Read more at medicalxpress.com ...
Refuse the flu swab or use Teledoc or some similar service. You pay $175 for the visit, $150 for the swab, and $100 for the Tamiflu. Imagine simply oaying $40 for Teledoc and $100 for the prescription.
Screw stupid doctors!
Does that mean we’re all gonna die?
Antibiotics for viruses?
Good example: flu shots - less than 50% effective.
Pushed like crazy.
Sadly, not a surprise.
They think they have to do something, but it is not always helpful, sometimes it can even hurt, more than help. That is why people need to pay very careful attention, ask the doctors and pay close attention to how they are during the treatment and go back, if you feel and notice something not quite right.
SSRI for mental issues....
Marijuana for everything else???
Clothing...emperor...none.
There’s a reason the call it ‘practicing’...
Just sayin’
Keeping those side shows going to juice the revenue stream...
I don’t want to answer that.
For some, Teledoc is a free service. Tamaflu co-pay isn’t very high either. win-win!
They can have my colonoscopy when they pry it from my cold, dead....
ur...never mind.
(Hate’em, but they’re absolutely necessary.)
This probably goes double for all those pills the big-bureaucrat/big-pharmaceutical criminal complex peddles “as seen on TV.”
I have no intention of allowing them to turn the remainder of my life into a revenue stream.
People are supposed to get old and die. Throwing pills at ailments of aging will not change that.
My bet is people would live longer without them.
I've contracted (I never signed for it, why is it "contracted"?) the flu as an adult (over 30) twice or three times (not sure which)
Every time it started on Monday ... after Sunday church.
Provided with a diagnosis and get some rest, take plenty of fluids, and Tylenol if you have a fever is not cutting it for the masses.
Ever notice how your doctor prescribes a z-pack during certain times of the year, no matter what the symptoms?
The article doesn’t say anything about Tamiflu or anything to support the example you just made up.
Don’t equate your Google search with a medical degree.
That system is a waste of time and FUBAR. Typical fed.
The nine most terrifying words in the English language are, 'I'm from the government and I'm here to help
Ronald Reagan
Yes. We are all going to die.
“Ever notice how your doctor prescribes a z-pack”
I think it started out as CYA with lawyers, now it’s CYA on YELP.
I disagree. People want to make sure their doctor is paying attention and is helping them and get some medication to help, but not to just get anything.
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