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September 25, 2006

BehindTheMedspeak: Why the internet is better than your doctor

Doctor_8

Dr. Jerry Avorn, a professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, wrote a very refreshing Op-Ed page piece that appeared in the September 16, 2006 New York Times.

Long story short: It's not very hard to know more about what's wrong with you than your doctor.

I knew Avorn was the real deal when he wrote, "I drove home and reached for three of the most useful medicines I know: aspirin, acetaminophen (Tylenol) and the Internet."

Here's his essay.

    The Sting of Ignorance

    Late on a summer afternoon not long ago, the water at Lucy Vincent Beach on Martha’s Vineyard was warm, and the toxic jellyfish that had plagued bathers weeks earlier had floated out to sea. Body-surfing in on my last wave, I suddenly felt as if someone had whacked my leg with a lead pipe studded with nails. On the 1-to-10 pain scale we use with patients, I would have called it a 14. When I rubbed the area with my hand, my whole palm stung. Apparently those toxic jellyfish hadn’t all left.

    A crowd of passers-by gathered to offer tips from the tainted well of conventional wisdom. “Use ammonia.” “Rub in some meat tenderizer.” “Apply vinegar.”

    Soon a small army of bronzed youths in official-looking tank tops arrived carrying enormous medical kits. One poured sterile water on the sting area; another rubbed it with an ice pack. A third worked an alcohol-based anesthetic into the wound. Each treatment made the pain worse.

    Eventually our group attracted the attention of a nurse strolling down the beach. A year-round Vineyard resident, she had seen her share of vacation-related medical emergencies. “You’ve removed the tentacle, haven’t you?” she asked matter-of-factly. No one, including the medical-professor patient, had thought of this. She took a piece of gauze and pulled off a slimy, transparent string laced with neurotoxins. It had continued to send those toxins into my leg for the first 20 minutes of my care. They are particularly activated, I would later learn, by distilled water, by mechanical pressure (as from an ice pack), and by alcohol-based topical medicines — all the treatments I had so earnestly been given.

    Now the pain began to abate. I drove home and reached for three of the most useful medicines I know: aspirin, acetaminophen (Tylenol) and the Internet. As the first two began to take effect, the third revealed a study published in February in The Medical Journal of Australia.

    The clever Aussies (whose beaches are also infested by toxic jellyfish) had conducted a clinical trial that randomly assigned sting victims to application of hot water (to deactivate the poison) or icepacks. The trial was stopped halfway through because the hot-water group did so much better that it would have been unethical to continue. I didn’t discover this through any proprietary medical search engines. I used Google and Wikipedia, and it took about two minutes.

    Coincidentally, much of my work is about defining which medications work best for which conditions, and how to close the gap between that knowledge and the care patients typically receive. My research group constantly comes across effective treatments that are underused, and poor-choice drugs that are widely prescribed. Even when good clinical trial data on a regimen or medicine exist, no coherent system ensures that the message gets out to doctors and patients. As a result, many treatment choices are driven by habit, old information or glitzy promotional campaigns.

    My aquatic encounter was a small example of what millions of patients confront daily, in much more serious circumstances. The nation faces two yawning medical information gaps. First, we need more studies comparing treatments to each other, as that simple Australian trial did. Drug companies don’t usually do such tests, preferring to evaluate their new products by comparing them to placebos. (The drugs usually win.)

    The National Institutes of Health, facing its first real-dollar budget cut in generations, isn’t likely to expand its mandate in this direction. But what about the insurers, private and governmental, who pay such a large share of the nation’s $220 billion annual drug bill? They could support such studies with the rounding error of their annual budgets — and then save billions if the findings were put into practice.

    The second problem is that much of the knowledge we do have is not communicated to the people who need it. Drug companies are adept at barraging doctors and patients with slick messages touting their most expensive products — even if they are no better than older, more affordable standbys. Maybe if Merck held the patent on hot water, my well-intentioned beach squad would have known all about the Australian study. But that’s a poor way to ensure that patients receive the right care.

    We need an unbiased, efficient system to get the word out to practitioners on what works best. My colleagues and I have done pro bono research aimed at developing such an approach. Because the drug industry is so adept at changing beliefs and practices, we’ve taken a few leaves from its book.

    In a program financed by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, called the Independent Drug Information Service, we scan the medical literature for the best evidence on how to treat a given medical problem (like high cholesterol or arthritis), boil it down into user-friendly packets of information, and then send nurses and pharmacists out to doctors’ offices to recommend optimal treatments. The information we provide is unbiased and noncommercial, and we don’t offer free trips to golf resorts. The resulting savings from more cost-effective prescribing could more than cover the costs of programs like this.

    The approach has been adopted in several Canadian provinces, and Australia runs a continent-sized program to update its primary care doctors (though I don’t know if it addresses jellyfish injuries). The government covers expenses, but scientific content is determined by nonprofit professional organizations. Their recommendations are transmitted in person by “outreach educators,” in concise newsletters, and electronically to doctors, health workers and patients.

    If the Vineyard beach first responders had known of the latest research results, they wouldn’t have done everything they could to transfer toxin from the jellyfish tentacle to my leg. All of us need access to current, noncommercial medical information. Besides helping to contain our runaway medication expenditures, programs of this kind could prevent a lot of needless suffering — by patients and doctors alike.

....................

One thing that has confounded me ever since I was in medical school is how easily doctors — people whom you'd think would know better — are bamboozled into prescribing and using, not only for their patients but for themselves and their families, new drugs.

Motrin, Advil, Vioxx, Celebrex, the parade never ends.

They cost many times what the old stand-bys do and don't work as well, yet because of powerful advertising they somehow insinuate themselves into the medicine chest.

I've never taken anything but aspirin and/or Tylenol for the aches and pains of everyday life, nor do I believe anyone else should.

Here's my foolproof remedy for almost anything that hurts, be it a headache, sore muscles, joints, you name it:

Three (3) regular aspirin tablets and two (2) extra-strength (500 mg apiece) Tylenol.

Repeat every 3-4 hours as needed.

It's that cheap and easy.

Don't be fooled into believing newer is better — in this case, it's not even as good.

3of4doctorsiiu_1

Trust me....

September 25, 2006 at 04:01 PM | Permalink


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Comments

I'm with Flautist on the Tylenol...I used the 1000mg tablets back when I had severe inflamation due to a then undiagnosed condition, and the doctor had strict warnings on these.

More than 2000mg in a day is potentially harmful -- and the 3000mg I was taking required a weekly blood test to test for liver enzymes along with severe restrictions on diet and alcohol intake...dammit. 2 500mg every 3 hours could potentially be far more than I was taking.

They state that tylenol abuse is the largest cause for liver failure / transplants in the US. I'm positive my sister is already on the list the way she guzzles this stuff. Beyond this, I've heard (but not researched) the idea that their is a lifetime toxicity level in acetaminophen -- it was an aside in a psychoparmacology lecture I attended (in comparing one crazyass drug with one that was off the shelf and the warnings placed on it, despite actually being safer)...something to think about.

Luckily in my case, simple aspirin seems to work these days...

Posted by: clifyt | Sep 26, 2006 10:29:33 AM

Hey Joe, excellent post! But can you elaborate a bit on the use of aspirin and Acetaminophen? What is it about the combination of these two that makes a more effective treatment than either of them taken solo?

Posted by: Rob O. | Sep 26, 2006 8:04:50 AM

I will pick up some aspirin tomorrow, already have Xtra Strength Tylenol. If this gets rid of shoulder pain I will be the happiest person in Elyria.

Posted by: Jackie Keesee | Sep 25, 2006 8:43:06 PM

So, you can take the aspirin and the Tylenol at the same time? It's okay to do that? A medical-type friend of mine, who ought to know, you'd think, said you shouldn't do that because it eats up on or stresses or does something nasty to your liver or kidneys or some really vital organ in there that gets used a lot and is really necessary for life, so I've never done it. But it sure makes sense to me, because they seem to do different things and you'd want them doing it at the same time.

Okay then, aspirin AND Tylenol. Got it.

Posted by: Flautist | Sep 25, 2006 7:43:27 PM

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