Health Policy Program: All Related Content

And we're back, with Health Wonk Review!

  • By
  • Joe Colucci
March 1, 2012
Alistair Cookie

Apologies for our extended hiatus--we've been hard at work on an extended report, and it hasn't left a lot of time for blogging lately. But we're back, and hopefully we'll be blogging more often in the coming weeks.

Now, without further ado: this week's Health Wonk Review is up! Check it out.

Many thanks to Joe Padua at Managed Care Matters for hosting!

Join us again on March 14th, for the next exciting edition of Health Wonk Review!

Don't discard shared decision-making!

  • By
  • Shannon Brownlee
February 29, 2012
Austin Frakt, health economics blogger extraordinaire at The Incidental Economist, has a post up commenting on Kenny Lin's post about shared decision-making and PSA testing. The following is an edited comment I posted on that article:
I have to disagree with Kenny on this one, despite having written an article in the NYTimes Magazine that strongly supported Kenny’s work at the US Preventive Services Task Force, which found that PSA testing does not offer a mortality benefit.
Shared decision making is not about getting the patient to do what the doctor wants him to do, which judging from Kenny’s blog he thinks it is (and his opinion about the PSA test is, understandably, “Just don’t do it!”).
Frankly, as a patient, I find myself bristling when doctors (even those who are caring and well-informed) insist that they know best about what I want to do with my body. The point of shared decision making is to help patients: a) understand that ELECTIVE decisions mean the patient has a choice; b) understand the tradeoffs involved in each of the choices; and c) come to a decision that is in keeping with their values and preferences. It doesn't remove the doctor from the decision-making process, but it's not just telling patients what to do and using research to cover it up.
What I think Kenny is saying (apologies if I'm misinterpreting!) is that PSA testing shouldn't be considered an elective test—it shouldn't be presented as an option at all. I don’t know what the right answer is there, but there is a reasonable case to be made that some men might still want it, even after understanding as much as Kenny does about how lousy the test is. And it is a lousy test — as one researcher puts it, PSA predicts whether you have prostate cancer about as well as your eye color predicts the same. But while the randomized controlled trials did not find an all-cause mortality benefit from PSA testing, there’s evidence to suggest that it might possibly reduce your chances of dying from prostate cancer, though not by much. So for a man who would rather die of ANYTHING but prostate cancer (and would even prefer to die from the treatment for it) the test might be a good choice. He values avoiding a prostate cancer death, and while early diagnosis is no guarantee that he will, he might.
So while I think getting a PSA test is a really bad idea, and I don’t think I would get one myself if I were a man, and I’m glad my husband decided to forgo the test after viewing a patient decision aid, maybe it should still be considered an elective decision.
More broadly, what do the data say about shared decision making and its effect on patient decisions? A Cochrane Collaboration systematic review of more than 80 prospective RCTs comparing patients who had access to a patient decision aid (for lots of different elective decisions) and those who got usual care (the doctor tells them about their choices) found that patients who have access to an aid are better informed about the risks and benefits involved in their choices; are more realistic about those tradeoffs; and are on average 20% less likely to choose more invasive options. (That last finding is why policy makers get all excited about shared decision making.)
When you look specifically at studies of shared decision making for PSA testing, it’s not so clear that men are less likely to choose the test. There are a couple of possible reasons. I can’t pretend to have looked at all of the studies, but from a few that I’ve seen, it’s not surprising that men opt for the test because the so-called patient decision aid that was used urged them to get tested. The other reason I think its hard to dissuade men from getting tested is we have been beating the screening drum in the US for a long time. It is an article of faith that catching cancer early is universally good. It is going to take a long time to unlearn that myth.
Conclusion: discarding all of shared decision making on the basis of PSA testing is a bad idea.

Price Transparency: Progress, Not Panacea

  • By
  • Joe Colucci
February 27, 2012
Publication Image

Shannon Brownlee's most recent TIME Ideas op-ed is up, and it tackles one of the most-repeated ideas in health care: If we give patients a financial stake in choosing less expensive care, and provide good information about which providers are cheaper than others, we'll end up with higher-value care. (After all, it works in lots of other markets--we don't have a crisis of spiraling iPad costs and lower-than-expected outcomes.) Brownlee's piece gets to the heart of why price transparency doesn't go far enough, though:

"So why do I still have no idea which lens to choose? Because I still need more information. All I know about this lens is what the slick brochure from the manufacturer is telling me. But how safe is the more expensive lens? What are the long-term effects? Can I get a new lens put in if it goes bad? That kind of information just doesn’t exist — as it doesn’t for many medical procedures."

You can read the rest of the article here: http://ideas.time.com/2012/02/27/can-you-comparison-shop-for-surgery/#ixzz1ncfvpkNU

Can You Comparison-Shop for Surgery?

  • By
  • Shannon Brownlee,
  • New America Foundation
February 27, 2012 |

I have an early-onset type of cataract, and my vision has gotten so bad I’m ready for surgery. As a patient, I’m not too happy about being in this situation, but as a health-care-policy wonk, this seems like the perfect opportunity to test one of the central tenets of conservative health-care-reform plans: comparison shopping. Conservatives think one of the reasons health care costs so much is that patients are for the most part completely unaware of the price of medical services. Their solution? Give patients more “skin in the game.”

U.S. Seeks Ways To Reduce Excessive Medical Testing | Insurance Journal

February 17, 2012

Patients share some of the blame for often demanding that doctors do something, anything, to make them feel better, said Shannon Brownlee, senior research fellow at the New America Foundation and author of the book “Overtreated: Why Too Much Medicine ...

Is That X-Ray Necessary Or 'Medical Gluttony'? | MSNBC.com

February 16, 2012

Patients share some of the blame for often demanding that doctors do something, anything, to make them feel better, said Shannon Brownlee, senior research fellow at the New America Foundation and author of the book "Overtreated: Why Too Much Medicine ...

Stemming Overtreatment In U.S. Healthcare May Cut Costs Of Care | Reuters

February 16, 2012

Patients share some of the blame for often demanding that doctors do something, anything, to make them feel better, said Shannon Brownlee, senior research fellow at the New America Foundation and author of the book "Overtreated: Why Too Much Medicine ...

Loss Leaders, Ahoy!

  • By
  • Joe Colucci
February 13, 2012
Publication Image

In her latest installment at TIME Ideas, Shannon Brownlee takes on hospitals that use marketing tactics like offering free screening tests to patients to generate revenue and find new recurring patients, and then claim the cost of those tests as charitable activity to become eligible for billions of dollars in tax breaks. As Brownlee points out, those tactics (minus the tax exemption part) are common across retail--and nobody accuses Amazon of being a charity:

"Hewlett Packard and other manufacturers sell computer printers at rock bottom prices. Once you run out of ink, you find out the cartridge costs almost as much as the printer did. The biggest product launch of last Christmas — Amazon’s Kindle Fire tablet — sold for less than the price of its components, even without accounting for Amazon’s advertising costs. Amazon makes it up on the e-books, TV shows, and Amazon Prime subscriptions purchased by Fire users."

You can read the full piece here: http://ideas.time.com/2012/02/13/direct-marketing-and-deep-discounts-come-to-health-care/#ixzz1mHdv3qXb

How Doctors Do Harm | Food Consumer

February 13, 2012

In her book, "Overtreated: Why Too Much Medicine Is Making Us Sicker and Poorer," Shannon Brownlee also talks about the number of people who die in hospitals due to incorrect care, drug dosage or hospital-acquired infections.

Parting thoughts: Berwick Shares Views on Media Coverage of Health Care and Reform | Association of Health Care Journalists

February 9, 2012

Shannon Brownlee [at New America Foundation] has done a very good job. I don’t think the media has gotten into the "more-is-better" myth enough.

Original article

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