Busting Myths
About Health Care Quality
By Carolyn M.
Clancy, M.D.
February 19, 2008
If you’ve ever
watched the popular "MythBusters" program on the
Discovery Channel, you know that many supposed
truths are based on old, incomplete, or simply
incorrect information.
The same thing
can be said about beliefs about the quality of
health care in America. How many times have you
heard that more tests and treatments are better
than fewer? Or that more costly care is better?
And how can you avoid thinking that the latest
treatment or medicine is better than one that’s
been used for years?
I wish I could
disprove these myths with the same clear-cut
results you see when "MythBusters" tests gadgets
from James Bond movies.
Myths about
health care quality often hold a grain of truth,
which make them harder to prove false. The
advice they offer might hold true for some
people in certain cases. But carefully gathered
findings from many different studies offer a
better idea of what is likely to hold true for
most people under most circumstances.
Let’s take a
closer look at some of the popular beliefs about
health care quality to see why I think they are
myths.
- More
services and treatments are better than
fewer.
Every year,
millions of Americans receive health care
services that are unnecessary, increase
costs, and may even hurt them. Research has
shown that this occurs among all types of
peoplemen and women, rich and poor.
As an
example, in a study of hysterectomies (a
surgical procedure in which the uterus is
removed), researchers found that one in six
operations was inappropriate. That means
that 16 out of every 100 patients could have
gotten better without undergoing surgery.
- More
expensive care is better than less costly
care.
Like other
myths about quality, this one is hard to
prove false because some more expensive
treatments and medicines can give better
results. But this is often not true, and you
can end up paying more for care without
knowing a cheaper option is just as good or
better.
For example,
a study that looked at the use of
antibiotics for treating ear infections in
children covered by Medicaid in one State
found that costly drugs were used far more
often than they should have been. Costs
could have been cut dramatically in one
yearby nearly $400,000if half of the
antibiotic prescriptions that were written
had been for a cheaper but equally effective
medicine.
- The
latest treatment is always better than the
one now in use.
Medicine is
based on progress in understanding how
diseases work and how the human body
responds to new ways of fighting them.
However, progress takes place in stages.
Researchers often must look for answers to
different questions that come up once a new
drug or treatment is approved.
One recent
example is the use of drug-coated stents, or
mesh devices that open a patient’s clogged
artery. These devices lower the risk of
heart attacks and other life-threatening
cardiac disease. Many doctors thought that
the drug-coated devices were better than the
plain stents that had been used before
because they give off medicine exactly where
it’s needed.
But after
more drug-coated stents were used, some
patients developed dangerous blood clots.
After reviews by the Food and Drug
Administration, doctors are now judging
whether the newer stents are right for
patients on a case-by-case basis.
I hope you can
see why myths about health care quality are hard
to prove false. Information that people think is
a proven fact may just be one person’s
experience or the first stage of an ongoing
medical discovery.
But you can act
as your own "myth buster" by asking your doctor
questionslots of them. He or she should be able
to explain why they believe a certain treatment
or medicine is the right one for you or your
family. You deserve health care that is based on
evidence, not myth.
I’m Dr. Carolyn
Clancy, and that’s my advice on how to navigate
the health care system.
Resources
Agency
for Healthcare Research and Quality
Improving Health Care Quality Fact Sheet
http://www.ahrq.gov/news/qualfact.htm
Agency
for Healthcare Research and Quality
Guide to Health Care Quality: How to Know It
When You See It
http://www.ahrq.gov/consumer/guidetoq/
Agency
for Healthcare Research and Quality
Next Steps After Your Diagnosis: Finding
Information and Support
http://www.ahrq.gov/consumer/diaginfo.htm
Food and
Drug Administration (FDA)
FDA Statement on Coronary Drug-Eluting
Stents
http://www.fda.gov/cdrh/news/091406.html
Current as of February 2008
Internet Citation:
Busting Myths About Health Care Quality.
Navigating the Health Care System: Advice
Columns from Dr. Carolyn Clancy, February 19,
2008. Agency for Healthcare Research and
Quality, Rockville, MD. http://www.ahrq.gov/consumer/cc/cc021908.htm
|