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- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!swrinde!gatech!pitt!km
- From: km@cs.pitt.edu (Ken Mitchum)
- Newsgroups: sci.med
- Subject: Re: How Often Are Placebo's Prescribed?
- Message-ID: <17340@pitt.UUCP>
- Date: 9 Nov 92 13:10:35 GMT
- References: <1992Oct23.164427.2542@netcom.com| <17239@pitt.UUCP| <1992Nov3.004937.29395@cis.uab.edu|
- Sender: news@cs.pitt.edu
- Reply-To: km@cs.pitt.edu (Ken Mitchum)
- Organization: Univ. of Pittsburgh Computer Science
- Lines: 99
-
- In article <1992Nov3.004937.29395@cis.uab.edu| sloan@cis.uab.edu (Kenneth Sloan) writes:
- |In article <17239@pitt.UUCP| geb@cs.pitt.edu (Gordon Banks) writes:
- ||...
- ||I'm not sure what the statistics are, but there are many, many
- ||prescriptions given that are not strictly placebos, but are given
- ||for that purpose. A real placebo (sugar pill) is rarely given.
- ||What is given are penicillin shots to people with colds, etc.
- ||When people visit the doctor, they don't like to leave without
- ||having gotten a prescription. Many of the the things they come
- ||with have no treatment or need no treatment, but if the doctor
- ||doesn't give them something, they'll find another doctor.
- |
- |I've seen this paragraph numerous times in the last few years. I still
- |don't quite understand it. So...a few questions:
- |
- |*who are these "people"? - this doesn't describe the behavior of anyone
- |that I know
-
- Hmm. This describes the behavior of hundreds of patients that I know.
- To come back from the doctor empty-handed is a sign to these people
- that they didn't need to go in the first place. If these people have
- colds, they demand PRESCRIPTION MEDICINE for them, and oftentimes,
- specific antibiotics ("My previous doctor always gave me [insert name
- of expensive, hard to spell and pronounce oral cephalosporin here] -
- I came in for some today - I'm sure YOU'LL give me some, right doc?").
-
- |*what, specifically, is wrong with letting them "find another doctor"?
-
- Most doctors prefer to see patients than to not see them! Many patients
- see the supply-and-demand side of medicine only in terms of trying to
- get a new appointment with the "best" physician in town (the one "everyone"
- goes to). Would it suprise you that for a new physician, starting out
- in a new practice, it is common to borrow enough money to live on for
- a couple of years, knowing it will be about that time before you make
- any money?
-
- |Are you saying that unnecessary drugs are presribed for the express
- |purpose of maintaining market share?
-
- Absolutely. Everywhere but Birmingham, Alabama.
-
- |*Gordon: are you describing your own practice? rationalizing the
- |practice of your colleagues? condemning the practice of quacks?
- |blaming the patient for the sins of the physician?
-
- Are you a preacher?
-
- |It seems to me that prescribing or administering drugs which have no
- |chance of being helpful is quackery (unless, of course, they have been
- |diluted to homeopathic doses). At the very least, it is the first step
- |onto a slippery slope which leads to "Dr. Feelgood" practices.
-
- Hmm. Giving water is not quackery, but giving drugs for less than
- specific reasons is? This does not make sense to me. All of this is
- very different from the Dr. Feelgood types. These people do neither
- a history nor a physical examination, but operate on one principle
- only: give them money and they will give you a prescrition for a
- narcotic, or other recreational drug. In my view, this is a bit different
- from giving a patient an antibiotic for a cold.
-
- Also, there are rational uses of antibiotics in a prophylactic sense.
- The COPD patient in your office may have all the indications of a viral
- respiratory infection, but the numbers show that he will in fact
- do better if you give him an antibiotic. Some doctors, rightly or
- wrongly, generalize such legitimate usage of antibiotics to other
- groups of patients. After all, your flu shot is unnecessary if you're
- never exposed to the flu.
-
-
- |While Gordon didn't say this here (someone else did, elsewhere) - I'd
- |like to take this chance to express astonishment that a physician would
- |consider the dispensing of sugar pills (for their placebo effect)
- |unethical, but would simultaneously consider the dispensing of drugs
- |(such as penicillin) which are known to be ineffective (for their
- |placebo effect). The only difference that I can see is that one has
- |more likely (admittedly minimal) side-effects than the other. For the
- |record, I consider *both* practices to be highly unethical, absent the
- |context of a controlled study. Perhaps someone can explain why I am
- |confused.
-
- The sugar pill is an attempt to trick the patient, and is clearly
- unethical. In the other situation, the patient is already tricked: he
- is convinced he needs an antibiotic, and is not seeing the physician for
- purposes of diagnosis and treatment, but merely as a means of obtaining
- the antibiotic.
-
- I am not sure why all of this bothers you so much, anyway. Anyone who
- follows this group for long will realize that doctors are not terribly
- ethical people in any situation, let alone this one. When there is a
- question, we refer things to ethics committees, which are capable of
- mucking things up to a degree well beyond the capability of an individual
- physician. Since most people assume we are crooks anyway, there is not
- much sense in pretending to be anything else.
-
- Are you sure you're not a preacher?
-
- -km
-
-
-