home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!pitt!geb
- From: geb@dsl.pitt.edu (gordon e. banks)
- Newsgroups: sci.med
- Subject: Re: FDA still at large
- Message-ID: <15914@pitt.UUCP>
- Date: 30 Jul 92 18:30:24 GMT
- References: <h2mm4m_.sss@netcom.com> <15889@pitt.UUCP> <69nmr9j.sss@netcom.com>
- Sender: news@cs.pitt.edu
- Organization: Decision Systems Laboratory, Univ. of Pittsburgh, PA.
- Lines: 71
-
- In article <69nmr9j.sss@netcom.com> sss@netcom.com (Small Systems Solutions) writes:
- >In article <15889@pitt.UUCP> geb@dsl.pitt.edu (gordon e. banks) writes:
- >>In article <h2mm4m_.sss@netcom.com>
- >> sss@netcom.com (Small Systems Solutions) writes:
- >
- >>>>... Too late for them to try the low fat diet.
- >>>>Just let them croak?
- >>>
- >>>Maybe...compare the cost of the bypass, and all comcomitant therapies, with
- >>>granting basic health care to 100 people....
- >>
- >>"OK, Mr. Jones, we've decided that instead of giving you your bypass,
- >>we'll just confiscate your $20,000 and use it to provide basic health care
- >>to 100 homeless people. You won't be needing the money anyway
- >>where you're going." Do you see the problem with this?
- >
- >*His* $20,000 ? Bzzzzt! It's a benefit paid for him out of my pocket
- >and yours. A benefit I would choose not to pay for, if you made me
- >king, unless there were compelling circumstances.
- >
- "Well, doc, my insurance people are being assholes and they won't pay,
- but I'd rather go on living, so I got together with some relatives,
- and we came up with the $20,000 for my operation. Will you do it
- now?
-
- (Probably at least half of the patients who get this procedure would
- be able to do this if they had to.)
-
- >What percentage of total U.S. Health Care Dollars are spent on the last
- >six months of life? 50%, or near that?
- >
- Yes, that is true. Only very sick people die, and it takes a lot
- of money to try to save very sick people. If we just had some
- way of *knowing* when someone was going to die we could just cut
- them off from all treatment and send them to a hospice. The problem
- is, with most of these patients, there is some chance that we can
- save them and they seem to think that they want us to try. A lot
- of research is being done now on better methods of predicting, but
- it still can't be done perfectly.
-
- >If you eliminated the percentage of coronary bypasses due to lifestyle alone,
- >and further eliminated those in patients whose profile shows them to
- >be poor candidates for another 5 years of breathing, what percentage
- >do you estimate to be left?
- >
- I don't think the ones that are thought to be so ill that they won't
- live another 5 years will usually get bypassed, or at least they
- shouldn't (e.g. someone with terminal lung cancer or AIDS). But
- almost all of the coronary occlusions are due to lifestyle. Are
- you saying that we should not make any effort to help these people?
-
- >Prevention, prevention, prevention. The problem with this is that there
- >is nothing the physician can do to make a patient take his/her advice --
- >but every respected cardiologist, and even DeBakey agrees, says that
- >prevention is the *only* approach for the future of controlling heart
- >disease.
- >
- Does he? How silly. It is the best approach, but it isn't the only
- approach, because you can't prevent all heart disease no matter what
- you do. I agree that prevention (on the part of the patient) could
- stop most of the bypasses and that bypasses are too expensive to be
- a good solution, but I also think you can't forbid people to use
- their money to have them done if they will clearly benefit from
- the procedure. By what right could you do that?
-
-
- --
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Gordon Banks N3JXP | "Skepticism is the chastity of the intellect, and
- geb@cadre.dsl.pitt.edu | it is shameful to surrender it too soon."
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-