More on overdiagnosis

Kale and Korenstein in BMJ give a good overview of the subject. There is a cognitive bias, not just in medicine but in people in general, I think, in favor of " doing something. " We like to feel as though we ' re in control. We don ' t want to get cancer, or diabetes, or heart disease, so if we think there might be something we can do to improve our odds, we ' re likely to go for it.Often, however, we can do more harm than good by our actions. But other cognitive biases make that hard to notice. Obviously, if we don ' t get cancer, we won ' tknow that we wouldn ' t have gotten it anyway. We ' re likely to believe that the prostatectomy or whatever we went through saved our life because we don ' t like to think that all the suffering and damage we endured was unnecessary and that we made a mistake.Another source of bias that promotes overdiagnosis is that doctors and drug companies and device manufacturers are paid for their services and goods. So naturally they tend to think that intervening is a good idea, and they ' ll advocate for it in general and do it for individual patients when they are parties to the decision.K&K make a few recommendations to reduce overdiagnosis but the first issue they consider is the present topic of controversy, broadening of disease definitions. As I have tried patiently to explain, diseases are not generally entities " out there " in the world like apricots and camels that we just have to name. Rather, people decide that a test result abov...
Source: Stayin' Alive - Category: American Health Source Type: blogs