Is ProPublica the Paul Revere of Transparency?

By SAURABH JHA, MD Recently, I was speaking with a “less is more” advocate. He used his superior knowledge of statistics – he had an MPH – to debunk randomized controlled trials. We discussed overdiagnosis, overtreatment, and the shakiness of medical sciences. We spoke about measuring the quality of physicians. I remarked that quality metrics have as much evidence as Garcinia Cambogia – we had just laughed about Dr. Oz. I expected a chuckle. Instead, he became distinctly uncomfortable and, in a solemn tone, lectured me about the Institute of Medicine (IOM) report, “To Err is Human.” The physician, a bulldog of evidence-based medicine (EBM), had a blind spot. He ripped cardiologists for overusing pacemakers. He believed in the usefulness of the physician quality reporting system. He disdained big pharma for pushing statins. He was a fan of maintenance of certification. He was at once a raging skeptic and a true believer. My understanding of statistics is modest compared to his. But I am skeptical by nature. I’m skeptical of many things including (not necessarily in this order): statins in 65-year olds, kumbaya, hellfire, England’s soccer team, quality metrics, screening (much to the chagrin of my radiology colleagues), high priests, middle priests, hard drives spontaneously combusting, and futurists. I’d like to believe this is because I’m a dark knight searching for the truth. The reality is that I’m just a cynical git who was raised in an island w...
Source: The Health Care Blog - Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Tags: THCB Source Type: blogs