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Saturday, August 14, 2010

How To Get Your Spouse To Eat Healthy?


It can be hard to maintain a lifestyle if you have someone who doesn't agree with it. No one wants to play the healthy food vs junk food game everyday, because it gets old and tiring very quickly. So, how can you get your spouse to eat healthy?

1. Be encouraging. Explain to him or her the importance of eating a healthy diet.

2. Get the whole family involved. It's much easier to do things together, than it is alone.

3. Involve him or her in the planning of meals and the grocery shopping.

4. Try new and different recipes. Eating healthy doesn't have to be boring or taste bad.

5. Try to keep healthy foods and snacks around the house.

6. Pick good books to read regarding making the transition to a healthy lifestyle. Include the whole family. Don't know what kinds of books to consider? Check out my Health Essential Books Store in my side bar for some of my recommendations.

7. Kindly, remind them that we have only one body and we have to take care of it, because if we don't who will? Nothing is worth being miserable over, and especially because one chooses to eat poorly.

8. Don't argue, and this is a big factor. Don't let food be the reason for an argument.

9. Have patience, and be understanding. Remember, the food industries are using ingredients that is causing it to be addictive. It also takes time for a person to break bad habits.

10. Lead by example. If you are looking and feeling good. That's something that few people can resist.

Teaching Your Kids To Eat A Healthy Diet

Sometimes kids have picked up bad eating habits and we say to ourselves, where did they come from? Often they have come from the parents. Children can be taught to eat a healthy diet at a young age. Fruits and vegetables should be a part of children’s diet along with drinking water. In the beginning the child might resist but if you are persistent you will eventually win the battle. You have to be the one to teach them because if you don’t the food companies with their fancy advertisements will and who wants that?

Sugary cereals should not be included in a child’s breakfast. Eating junkie cereals are a beginning of a child’s addiction for junk food. Let’s face it, if you are eating sugary foods for breakfast is not getting them off to a good start health wise.

If you don’t buy it they cannot get it at your house. The reason I say this is because just because you are not buying it doesn’t mean that they are not getting it. Many times grandparents will buy what you won’t. Don’t worry. It won’t ruin your child’s decisions on making the right food choices. I know because I was one of those kids who asked their grandparents to buy the junkie cereals because my parents wouldn’t and I make good food choices.

You still may want to tell your parents about the importance of eating a healthy diet and why you aren’t buying that junk for your children. I believe it is important so the grandparents won’t feel like you are depriving them.

Oatmeal and cream of wheat are excellent for breakfast because it is warm and it stays with them. Pancakes and waffles are good too. It is better to make it from scratch but you can purchase a mix called Arrowhead Mills at your local health food store.

When you reward your children for good behavior or good grades or whatever the occasion may be it doesn’t have to be with sweet candy. Popcorn is a nice healthy snack that can be used as an alternative. Peanuts, sunflower seeds, and sesame seed sticks are also good choices.

When kids see other kids eating healthy they too follow suit. When I was little my cousin had come over to play with my siblings and I, and he stayed and ate dinner with us. When his father came to pick him up he noticed that he was eating salad. When he saw him eating the salad he said, “You don’t eat salad”. My cousin replied, “ I like the salad dressing”. I do believe since he saw all of us kids eating it he thought he might try it himself realizing he did like it with that particular salad dressing which was Viva Italian.

Reading the labels can also be very helpful to make sure your child isn’t getting too much intake of sugar. It’s not like it used to be a long time ago where sugar was mostly in desserts. Now, it is in food that we eat every single day.

I’m not saying that a child shouldn’t eat any junk food. I just don’t think that it should be eaten every single day. Everything a child eats doesn’t have to be sweet. Remember, children imitate their parents. So, let’s teach them to make good food choices that can last them a lifetime and they too can pass it down to their children as well.

Healthy Foods To Keep In Your Kitchen

When we are sick we don't feel like running all around trying to pick up the things we need to help us feel better. It is so much easier if we keep these things on hand. Many of these foods we use on a regular basis, and it could help you from getting sick or if you do get sick you won't be sick for long. You can either refrigerate them or keep them in your kitchen cabinets.

1. Fresh Garlic - It's good for high blood pressure and high cholesterol.

2. Apple Cider Vinegar - Aids in digestion and helps acid reflux or heartburn.

3. Flax seeds or Flax oil - Helps with breast cancer, prostrate cancer, and is good for constipation due to it's high fiber content.

4. Lemons - Good for coughs and colds adds great flavor to tea's.

5. Honey - Also, good for coughs, colds, flu, diarrhea if mixed with hot water.

6. Ginger root - Is good for colds, coughs, flu, digestion, cholesterol and is also a natural blood thinner.

7. Black Seed - It is good for many health ailments as Prophet Muhammad (Pbuh) says it is good for everything except death.

8. Turmeric - It's uses include coloring food. It is also good for cuts, burns and bruises.

9. Molasses - Is a source of calcium, magnesium, potassium, and iron.

10. Oatmeal - Helps lower cholesterol.

11. Cranberry Concentrate - Helps with urinary tract infections.

Share Your Knowledge or Give Support

I know sometimes it can be difficult to find good information about different kinds of ailments or maybe you want to deal with it naturally but you just don't know where to turn to. Health social communities are a good way to meet people or ask questions about health concerns.

You can join groups or participate in discussions about herbal medicine, or alternative medicine. Anything that you want to talk about. Maybe you've had experiences dealing with certain health issues or nutrition and exercising. Share your knowledge or give support. You can fill out your profile by telling a little bit about yourself or write a blog.

Since, my interest is healing naturally. I joined the CommunityCures community. If you would like to add me as a friend I am known there as Mimosatree. I am also a member of Healia Communities. They too, have groups about alternative medicine. If you would like to add me as a friend there too, I am known there as QueenMaa. At healia communities when you receive points when you help someone out. It's a way to encourage everyone to help someone make the the best health decisions. Which I think is a fantastic idea. On my blog you will see a healia search engine. It helps you to find information regarding health concerns, because it narrows your search down to health issues.

Both of these are excellent communities. It's nice to be able to help people achieve wellness.You will want to start participating in these communities today.

Give The Gift Of Health

Are you having problems getting your family and friends to see the benefit of living a healthy life?

Do you want to share the information that you are learning but don't know how?

Are you taking natural products that have helped you with a particular health ailment?

Do you want your family and friends to start using products that don't have harsh chemicals in them and would help them improve their health?

Give them as gifts. What better way to get the word of healthy living out? How about putting together a health gift box? You can put health products such as a colon cleanse, a natural health book, and a liquid supplement,etc (These are just suggestions you can put together whatever you like).

So, the next time you don't know what to give as a gift give them the gift of health!

Here are some places to buy natural products that your friends and family members can benefit from:

Vemma Want to share the gift of nutrition? You can with the this liquid supplement. Purchase the V2 Fridge brick they come in cute premixed 2 oz. bottles. Pass them out! They make fantastic gifts!
Amariah Naturals Looking for skin care products. Amariah Naturals, Carol's Daughter, All Natural Me, Amazing Herbs and Kiss My Face make some fabulous skin care products. They make perfect gifts!
Carol's Daughter
Kiss My Face
All Natural Me
Amazing Herbs
Peelu Want to share the gift of a clean mouth. These products are fabulous!
Dr-Schulze.comWant to share the gift of a clean colon? These products are great!

Taking Small Steps Toward Your Health

When you begin to start taking care of your health it may seem overwhelming at times. You're probably thinking, "How am I going to do all this?"

It doesn't have to be difficult to live a healthy life. Always began any endeavor with the mentality that you can and you will make this happen. It will only be hard if you never get started. Don't take your health for granted. Be grateful that you have it and start taking care of it. Not tomorrow. Not next week. Today!

Let's begin with some small steps to get you going. I know you've heard this a million times but I'm going to tell you again. Drink more water and make sure it is filtered! If you can't drink 8 glasses immediately. Start off with at least 5 glasses and work your way up (Don't feel bad I'm still working my way up too). When you feel thirsty don't get anything to drink but some water. Eliminate pop from your diet ( It can be done because if I can do it I know you can).

Before you eat breakfast eat a piece of fruit because fruit has enzymes in it that helps your digestive system. Try it! It really works!

For dinner there are many things that you can cook ( Notice I said cook). Baking is always better and the food seems to lasts longer (It always does for my family). You can fry but just don't make it an everyday occasion. Incorporate a soup dish at least once a week such as beef stew or lamb stew, zucchini soup, potatoe soup, and beans. Have a meatless day once or twice a week too. You can make dishes such as a vegetable pasta stir-fry or spaghetti without the meat. If you think that you might not like it without meat. Get some vegetarian grillers by Morning Star and put them in there as a substitute for the meat.

I'm not saying that you can't eat any junk food. Just cut it down to a minimum. Instead try eating popcorn ( It would be better if you popped your own). Sunflower seeds, sesame seed sticks, natural chips, peanuts, almonds, yogurt covered raisins. You can get all of these things from your local health food store. You can even eat desserts. A pound cake is really an easy cake to make. Remember simpler is better.

Get you some rest. Try to get 8 hours of sleep every night. Go to bed early and get up early. You will feel so much better.

Lastly, but not least. Get up and move by exercising! Walking is one of the easiest exercises to do. Everyone can walk. Grab a partner and go walking! Remember don't make excuses.

Yoga is also a good exercise. There are books for beginners. It doesn't have to be hard. Who doesn't feel good after a good stretch? Yoga is the ultimate stretch for your body.

Whichever one of theses exercises you choose to do you can't go wrong with. You may decide that you would like to do both of these exercisese in your exercise regime.

Natural Health Quotes

Medicine being a compendium of the successive and contradictory mistakes of medical practitioners, when we summon the wisest of them to our aid, the chances are that we may be relying on a scientific truth the error of which will be recognized in a few years' time. - Marcel Proust.

So many come to the sickroom thinking of themselves as men of science fighting disease and not as healers with a little knowledge helping nature to get a sick man well. - Sir Auckland Geddes

The art of medicine consists of amusing the patient while nature cures the disease. - Voltaire

Life is not living, but living in health. - Martial, Roman poet

At the end of this time the candidate was required to pass an examination, and then to take an oath promising to uphold the teachings of the school, to administer no noxious drug, to teach nothing false, and not to keep an apothecary shop. - Katherine B. Shippen, writing about the requirements of the medical school of Salerno in the 13th century, in Men of Medicine

Most men die of their remedies, not of their illnesses. - Moliere

In all the controversies over what the causes of diversities might be, no one seem to have paid much attention to the factor in the environment that has the most obvious effect on any organism: food. - Michael Crawford & David Marsh, The Driving Force: Food in Evolution and the Future

We chat together; he gives me prescriptions; I never follow them so I get well. - Molière

Eat well, drink in moderation, and sleep sound, in these three good health abound. - Latin Proverb

An early morning walk is a blessing for the whole day. - Henry David Thoreau

The preservation of health is a duty. Few seem conscious that there is such a thing as physical morality. - Herbert Spencer

Most over-the-counter and almost all prescribed drug treatments merely mask symptoms or control health problems or in some way alter the way organs or systems such as the circulatory system work. Drugs almost never deal with the reasons why these problems exist, while they frequently create new health problems as side effects of their activities. - John R. Lee, M.D.

The doctor of the future will give no medication, but will interest his patients in the care of the human frame, diet and in the cause and prevention of disease.- Thomas A Edison

Heredity is nothing but stored environment. - Luther Burbank
Physicians of the Utmost Fame Were called at once, but when they came They answered, as they took their fees, 'There is no cure for this disease.' Hilare Belloc

What is dangerous about tranquilizers is that whatever peace of mind they bring is packaged peace of mind. Where you buy a pill and buy peace with it, you get conditioned to cheap solutions instead of deep ones. - Max Lerner

Medicine is a collection of uncertain prescriptions, the results of which taken collectively, are more fatal than useful to mankind. Water, air and cleanliness are the chief articles in my pharmacopeia. - Napoleon Bonaparte

Since the human body tends to move in the direction of its expectations--plus or minus---it is important to know that attitudes of confidence and determination are no less a part of the treatment program than medical and science technology. - Norman Cousin

The very first requirement of a hospital is that it should do the sick no harm. - Florence Nightengale.

Doctors give drugs of which they know little, into bodies, of which they know less, for diseases of which they know nothing at all. - Voltaire

...the estimated total number of iatrogenic deaths—that is, deaths induced inadvertently by a physician or surgeon or by medical treatment or diagnostic procedures— in the US annually is 783,936.......while 553,251 died of cancer. - Gary Null, et al., Death by Medicine

Wanting A Quick Fix To Our Health Problems

Everyone wants a quick fix to everything these days; especially for our health problems. We live in a pop a pill society. We want things right now and we don't want to wait.

It might seem that when we have been diagnosed with an ailment we came down with it overnight. Nothing can be further from the truth. That ailment has been building in your body for years. In fact, your body was probably giving you signs it was not well.

Just like it takes time for you to develop an ailment. It takes time for you to heal yourself from it. It is not an overnight process. Some people say they don't like to take natural remedies or natural health products because they don't work. Natural remedies do work but many people don't give them time to. They try them for a couple of days and if they don't see any results than it doesn't work.

It took years for you to get sick. Why do you think you will be cured overnight?

Prescription drugs don't really cure any disease contrary to what most people believe. They may stop the pain for a minute or as long as you take them but as soon as you stop taking them than the symptoms reappear. In order for you to keep feeling good you have to keep taking them. So, you will be taking them for the rest of your life. They also cause severe side effects. Who wants to end up with something worse than what they already have?

Natural remedies may not cure you overnight but they do help you. They just take time to. Just like it takes time for you to get sick. Give natural remedies a try and give them the time to help you feel better.

Tips To Stay Cold And Flu Free

With the cold weather finally here the cold and flu season is in full force. Many people are coming down with the flu, colds, and coughs. I wanted to share with you some tips to stay cold and flu free.

When you come home from shopping and in public places go straight to the bathroom or sink and wash your hands all they way up to your wrists. This will help you from bringing in germs that you have come in contact with while being out. You will be amazed at how dirty your hands are. You are stopping the germs right at the door. Make this a habit when you go out and come home. There are still many people who aren't washing their hands after they go to the bathroom. I think that is a shame since we are in the 21st century and have excess to plenty of water. That's just being nasty in my opinion. You can read about it here.


You might also want to wash your door knobs down at least a couple of times a year because they hold lots of germs.


Another tip is take a hot shower everyday. The water should be as hot as you can take it. You will know if the water is hot enough when the mirror is fogged up when you get out. This will be like you are in a sauna and you are steaming your whole body opening up your pores and helping you break down the mucus in your chest and head. This can be done before you get sick or while you are sick. It is a very good way to help you stay healthy and help you feel better if you are already sick.

Is It Too Late To Have Good Health?

I don't think it is ever too late to turn your health around. If you give your body the tools it needs by eating the proper nutrition and exercising. Avoiding things that are not good for you or your health. You will see major improvements in your health.

The body is extremely remarkable. As soon as you get sick your body goes to work to fight off any sickness that you have gotten. It has the ability to heal itself. That's why you should make the decision right now to take care of your health. After all, your body is always taking care of you. It deserves the same rights.

So many people have made that decision and are now seeing great results. It's a new year. Why not make it a healthier and happier one. Get disciplined! You don't have to be addicted to sugar,cigarretes, or whatever has been keeping your health down in the past.

As soon as you start making these health changes you are going to look and feel better. Who doesn't want that? Don't wait, because it's not too late to have good health!

Leave Your Shoes At The Front Door

Leave your shoes at the front door, because you don't want to track dirt, dust, feces, chemicals and pesticides throughout your house. If you are wearing your shoes in the house those are just some of the things that are on your carpets and floors. You might say to yourself," I have my carpet cleaned", or "I wash my floors". You cannot do that enough, because you are continually walking through your home with your shoes on spreading that filth around daily. You would have to clean your carpet and wash your floors every single day. Who has time to do that?

We are fighting germs every single day. No one wants these things in their homes. Removing your shoes is a great way to keep those things right where they belong. Outside!

Wearing shoes in the house has become convenient, because people don't want to take the time even to remove their shoes. Doing things, because they are convenient aren't always good reasons to do them. As we have learned with our eating habits.

If you just have to wear shoes in the house get some house shoes or slippers that you only wear in the house and not outside. Ask people who visit your home also, to remove their shoes. If they ask you why. Give them the above reasons. You may also want to have a sign made and post it on a wall right beside the door. That way a person cannot miss it.

There Is No Quick Way To Healing

Is there a quick way to heal from sickness? If there is one, I'd really like to know about it. This is a question everyone has on their minds. There is no overnight cure for sickness. Our bodies are not like vehicles. When something is not working properly, we take it to the shop get it fixed, and than we are good to go. It takes time for the body to heal, and there is no quick way. It's the same for losing weight too.

That's the reason why many people opt to have surgery. They figure they go in get operated on have this replaced, this liposuctioned, or this removed. Sure, they know they will be down for a little while, but in the back of their minds they believe it is much faster, than putting the effort into changing their lifestyle. What the doctors don't tell them is they have not solved the problem, and in a couple of years or maybe months they will be right back where they started from or even in worse shape. Another fact to consider is all surgeries are not successful, and some are irreversible.

Let me explain myself because, I don't want people to get the wrong impression. I don't think surgery is bad, because it has saved many people's lives when done for the right reasons. However, I don't think surgery should be the first option on the list, and more so because one does not want to make lifestyle changes. Also, I believe surgery has become an epidemic especially here in the United States. It seems that no one is even looking at alternative solutions anymore.

I've seen first hand that it takes time to heal and there is no quick method. My mom's friend husband found out he had rectal cancer this past May. His wife had been telling him for years that he should start eating healthier. He would never listen to her. He continued to eat at fast food restaurants, and loads of junk food. He would cook for the family, and of course the food that he cooked did not qualify as being healthy. Even after he found out that he was sick it was a struggle for him to change his eating habits. Friends were concerned too, and they let him know about it.

My mom's friend and her husband continued going to the doctor. The doctors told him that he would need surgery to remove the cancer. They told him the worse case scenario would be that he would have to get a colostomy bag. My Mom's friend told my mom that they would were going to look at some alternative solutions in the mean time. Her husband was still having a hard time making the necessary lifestyle changes he needed to help him fight this cancer. A friend wanted to put him on a natural health program. He refused.

He decided to go ahead and have the surgery which was scheduled in July. He had the surgery. The doctor told my mom's friend (his wife) that it was the worse case scenario. They had to remove his anal sphincter. Therefore he would now have to have a colostomy bag for the rest of his life. It was not the news he or the family wanted to hear.

Now, he has to make lifestyle changes, and it is not easy. I don't think he thought it was going to be the worse case scenario. I think he thought he was going to go in and have the surgery, and in a few months he was going to be back to living the unhealthy lifestyle that probably got him in that way in the first place. It would have been easier if he had went ahead and made those changes in the beginning.

It's not a quick fix to anything, and you shouldn't want one regarding your health. Don't wait until you get sick to start making the health changes you need to. Regardless, of what the doctor or anyone else tells you. The fact of the matter is there is no quick way to healing.

Avoid Products With GMO With The GMO Shopping Guide

What does GMO stand for? It stands for genetically modified organism. A genetically modified organism or genetically engineered organism whose genetic material has been altered using genetic engineering techniques.

We have been hearing GMO for a while now, and the reasons that we should not be eating products that are GMO'd. The main products that are usually GMO's include: Corn, Soybeans, Canola, and Cottonseed. Buying organic is the best way that we can avoid GMO because, they are not allowed to use GMO.

I know this is a lot to process right now, and you are probably thinking to yourself. Dang, what can I eat? Is everything trying to kill me? This is a normal reaction, but you have to take into consideration that you are lucky enough to receive this information, because some people don't get it at all or until it is too late. You should look for Non GMO Labels. A Non GMO Label means that the product does not contain GMO. If you are not sure if a product contains GMO or not you should contact the company and see what the company says. It is so important to read the ingredients list. Everyone should do so before purchasing products these days. It is very important that we know what is going into our bodies. Than, if we do get sick, (I pray that no one does) we can have an idea as to knowing what and how to fight the disease. Again, knowing this information and acting on it can hopefully, protect us from getting sick.

Hopefully, by not purchasing products that have GMO in it we can force companies to not use GMO. Why should we give our money to companies that don't have our best interest at hand?

Here is the the GMO Shopping Guide. The GMO Shopping guide gives you a list of companies that use GMO and companies that don't use GMO. It is a very extensive list. You can get it for free. You can download the shopping guide, and it is also in pdf form. Please share this information with your friends and family. You can print the shopping guide out and take it with you to the grocery store so you can know what foods to purchase and what foods to avoid.

One of these days soon I hope to be able to have a small garden so I can grow my own food, because that is what it is coming too. No one can care more about you, your family, and your friends health more than you do.

Don't Wait Until You Get Sick To Start Your Health Goals

There are so many things that you can do to get healthy today. Don't wait until you get sick to make a health plan. Sometimes we don't have to get sick to see what will happen to us if we do not start making healthy life changes in our life now. It is even harder when you get sick, because you must make those health changes immediately, the chances of you recovering and feeling good will be hard. Don't keep making excuses not to get healthy. You shouldn't wait until you have a major health ailment to start getting healthy today. The more you put it off the closer you will become to getting health ailments that no one wants.

Whether you want to lose weight, eat healthier, or stop a bad habit. Don't let excuses get in the way of you achieving your goals. Don't let another year pass without you achieving these goals. We don't have to get sick ourselves to know how hard it will be if you do not make these changes. Many of us have friends and family members that are struggling with health problems. So, we know what can happen to us if we keep delaying making these health changes.

Also, don't get offended if someone invites you to a healthier lifestyle. It doesn't mean that they are saying that you are fat. No one has to tell you if you need to lose some weight. Deep down you know the answer to this question. You should be grateful that they took the time even to say something to you. Because true friends tell you what you like to hear but also what you don't like to hear. It's called keeping it real.

It's a lot easier to make health changes when you are healthy instead of waiting until you get sick. Dont' wait until you get sick to make these health changes. Let's start making them today. So, after you have read this blog post. If you haven't already started making those health changes. Make them today.

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Sunday, July 25, 2010

Health Care Resources | Health care financing in America

The richest country in the world, the best health resources for citizens. Unfortunately, the United States, even in the Top 10 on Health Systems. The truth is that medical facilities in America, usually owned and operated by private firms. In addition, insurance is largely provided by the private sector are available. can not afford to inflation, a significant percentage of Americans are health resources, including primary care and prevention, safety of medicines and medical supplies and equipment, etc.

Currently, there are a lot of controversy on the issue of health care reform, President Barack Obama, who will address the lack of access to medical resources. It focuses on the restructuring of insurance to protect consumers. In general, these reforms are aimed at improving the general state of American health

So far, only low-cost resources, health services are as follows.

Health programs:

* Medicare - an insurance program for people age 65 and older, covers

* Medicaid - a health program of the federal government and state governments to individuals and families with low incomes and resources funding.

* Children's Insurance Program - Program U. S. Department of Health and Human Services, which finances medical services for eligible children under the age of 19 years

* veterans - a program to provide medical assistance from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, where a variety of clinics, hospitals, medical centers and institutions work.

* military system - an integral part of the U. S. Department of Defense, provides health care for active duty and retired U.S. military personnel and their families.

Indian * services - responsible for providing medical assistance to persons recognized tribes and Alaska Natives. IHS is part of the Department of Health and Human Services.

Sanitary:

* State Hospital - a two-thirds of all urban hospitals in a row. It is used by the government (local, regional and federal level), support of poor, the uninsured patients of funding. Other Non-profit hospitals, usually with a religious community or a nonprofit organization linked.

Outpatient surgery centers * - aka surgicenters, ambulatory surgical centers, or centers of everyday surgery, medical facilities to perform this operation as outpatients. The value of transactions conducted in these centers do not require hospitalization, is expensive and less complicated for patients.

* provide social centers - sanitation in municipalities with low income or the uninsured patients, migrant and seasonal farm workers, homeless and people in social housing.

* Hill-Burton Services - consists of hospitals, nursing homes and other health facilities construction / renovation grants and loans in 1946, received in exchange for these structures are responsible for providing services to patients in poor areas. There are currently 200 homes on the national level to health care in patients' rights.

Health information:

* resources on health and management - the information center, which provides publications, resources and referrals for medical care, especially for low-income, uninsured patients and those associated with special health care needs.

* U. S. Public Health - includes all health care and social services and housing contract in order to ensure public health and to promote the prevention and the promotion of health sciences.

Health Care Resources | Medical care focused on health concerns


You can almost half of the dollar in almost 5000000000000 medicine and healthcare related includes the United States. It 'clear that our country is well educated professional, excellent technology and a wide range of medicines to address public health. But why so expensive medical care and problems of people think so much?

The growth of medical care

The more developed countries of the world in the medical field is one of the largest industries. If you count the money generated by sales of pharmaceuticals, diagnostics, nursing homes, hospitals, doctors and other supporting activities is relatively easy to understand why the medical sector accounts for 10-20% of gross area.

Only the U.S. has nearly 800,000 physicians, hospitals and more than 5,000 million health workers. One of every ten Americans now works in health care and this number is expected to grow. Yet there are not enough workers and facilities for 20 million patients currently receiving treatment every day. It is not shocking from outpatient visits average daily number of patients in hospital four -5000000.

The massive, complex health care in the United States, which attracts people from all over the world. Switzerland and Germany, both major medical industry, these countries run their health care differ from the U.S.. Would it be possible that the health of our nations to a radical form of a rapid phase of change?

The answers are hard to find

Is the answer to the dilemma of current health care as simple as the nationalization of health care for all? This possibility will only worsen the situation? How will the distribution of medical resources among the various segments of our society? These are just some of the questions awaiting an answer.

controversial issue

has become modern health problem of medical litigation for many groups of citizens. There is the restoration of the health system as we know it today. We also heard predictions that the government has tried to restructure the health system in the nation. Although much of this advertising reitric for several years, it seems that people are always polaraithe by changes that can now heads forever.

Their care for the elderly

The elderly population in the United States is closely what is being proposed as a result of drugs and health care concern issues important to them to look. And medical insurance for 65 years and many changes since 1980. Older people are very vocal about their disapproval of the way Medicare is addressing the problems and are worried about what the future holds. The cost of health care and medication needs fíorard for the elderly in their entirety. Every year there is a fear that the benefits of longer cut and now are new concerns for medical care.

Risk groups

Is just a few weeks galvanized many citizens, health governor Sarah Palin and her comments on the panel to predict death and nationalized care. Although many people are around her statements, the mere possibility that a radical concept, initiated by the shock wave country. This was particularly worrying many of the older population. The concern among advocates for the poor and disabled. Parents and carers of people with physical and mental health were still afraid and threatened.

Future health resource allocation?

Would it be possible to professionals, it would perhaps even a medical committee to allocate health resources deemed a more worthy? Here, both terrifying and thought "Orwellian" in perspective. careful review found that no written documentation that in fact these possibilities, but does not reduce anxiety and uncertainty for many citizens. Just the idea that access to hospital or medication restrictions, one day was enough to cause panic on a small scale in many communities across the nation.

Problems, problems, problems

medical concerns are healthcare and affordable medicines planning a major concern for everyone today. Insurance is very expensive. A growing trend among smaller companies to employees and family benefits for cost reduction. In some cases it is difficult for workers to participate in their insurance policies offered by employers. But a growing number of families are short of ATM only pay the premiums for health insurance. This is creating a "catch" type environment with 22 people to pay for the costs of illness and cost to insure.

Collaboration is the answer

It 'hard to know where are the biggest problems in health. Many people find fault with well-paid doctors and medical specialists and others point the finger at the hospital, which seemed to attract the billions of dollars annually, but always complain too small. malpractice lawyers, government regulators and the insurance companies involved have also participated in the health care of the current misery. The answer will not be easy to find, and any group associated with the medical industry must step up the plate and help.

Health Care Resources | Health Resources

Are you awake after a night of sleep, still tired? Do you prefer that your health and lack of energy to run the performance of daily tasks and activities you hold?

If so, tired.

Fatigue is a lack of energy a day, is not free from sleep. Someone feel exhausted at all times in body and spirit and can result from several factors are, in context. In most common causes are stress and lifestyle choices, as in the adoption of unhealthy diets lose weight. Conditions could only medical reasons for fatigue are diagnosed.

Fatigue strength, because

Someone keep pace with an emphasis on reason or feel like your body into overdrive. constant flood of adrenaline and fatigue in Body Kits released

Stress related to work environment - it's a lot of noise, boredom, or the concentration of repetitive tasks - personally to be tired. Burnout, the concerns about security have of the workplace.

How diet affects energy levels

Meet calories for basic needs

The estimated daily caloric intake big for a person below 55 kg weight of about 2100 calories to maintain weight and energy enough to carry out legitimate activities.

Get enough protein

Protein is important for our bodies to repair damaged and aging body and tissue repair. Humans need about 60 kg weight 63 kg protein per day.

Drink plenty of fluids

preventing About 8 glasses of water per day to increase dehydration another factor to reduce our energy. The classic symptoms of fatigue díhiodráitíodh light.

Friday, July 23, 2010

More About What We Don't Know About the Contaminated Heparin from China

We last blogged about the case of Baxter International's adulterated heparin here.  (For a more detailed summary of the case, look here.)

In summary, Baxter International imported the "active pharmaceutical ingredient" (API) of heparin, that is, in plainer language, the drug itself, from China. That API was then sold, with some minor processing, as a Baxter International product with a Baxter International label. The drug came from a sketchy supply chain that Baxter did not directly supervise, apparently originating in small "workshops" operating under primitive and unsanitary conditions without any meaningful inspection or supervision by the company, the Chinese government, or the FDA. The heparin proved to have been adulterated with over-sulfated chondroitin sulfate (OSCS), and many patients who received got seriously ill or died. While there have been investigations of how the adulteration adversely affected patients, to date, there have been no publicly reported investigations of how the OSCS got into the heparin, and who should have been responsible for overseeing the purity and safety of the product. Despite the facts that clearly patients died from receiving this adulterated drug, no individual has yet suffered any negative consequence for what amounted to poisoning of patients with a brand-name but adulterated pharmaceutical product.

Now, an article in the Wall Street Journal by Alicia Mundy tells us more about what we don't know,
The Chinese government didn't pursue an investigation into contaminated heparin sent to the U.S. in 2007 and 2008, despite repeated requests from the U.S. for help, according to a congressional probe.

Two House Republicans said Food and Drug Administration officials recently told them that the agency has been "severely hampered" by the lack of cooperation from China in finding those responsible.

Furthermore,
'It is shocking to find out two years after Chinese-made heparin was killing Americans, the Chinese government still has done no investigating to find out why,' said Mr. Barton, the top Republican on the House Energy and Commerce Committee. He called on ... [FDA Commissioner Margaret] Hamburg to air the issue with Chinese officials.

Chinese officials denied there is a problem,
Yan Jiangying, spokeswoman for China's State Food and Drug Administration, said the congressmen's accusations are 'not true.'

Ms. Yan said her agency 'did a very thorough investigation, including very detailed inspection and testing, and surveys of enterprises as well. We signed an agreement with the FDA on drug safety in the end of 2007, and strengthened the monitoring of heparin.'

Note that their investigation, such as it was, did not appear to identify any misconduct or wrong-doing by anyone.

So now we know more about what we do not know about the deadly adulterated heparin from China.

But remember this is a case about heparin sold in the USA by Baxter International, an American company as an American product, resulting in the death of Americans.  Also, remember that the American company obtained the heparin from another American company, Scientific Protein Laboratories LLC, which in turn obtained it from a factory in China operated by Changzhou SPL, which in turn was owned by Scientific Protein Laboratories and by Changzhou Techpool Pharmaceutical Co. 

Since Baxter International sold the heparin under its own label, should not its leaders be responsible for the safety and purity of the product?  Since Scientific Protein Laboratories LLC furnished the active pharmaceutical agreement to Baxter, and obtained it from a factory it partially owned in China, should not its leaders also be responsible for the safety and purity of the product?

It would be important to find out ultimately where in China the adulterated heparin entered the supply chain, but the current uncertainty about the initial origin of the contamination does not absolve those in the US who sold the active pharmaceutical ingredient, and then sold that ingredient in bottles with a US company label of responsibility for the safety and purity of the drug.

Why have we heard nothing more from Baxter International's and Scientific Protein Laboratories' leaders about the deadly heparin which they had sold?  Why have we heard nothing more about any investigation of these US based participants in this case? 

Both US companies doubtless saved money by buying the heparin from the cheapest Chinese sources they could find, by not directly inspecting and supervising its production, and by at best ignoring the lack of regulation of producers of active pharmaceutical ingredients in China.  They and their leaders benefited from this out-sourced, off-shore production.  (Note that Baxter CEO Robert L Parkinson Jr received total compensation of $14,361,305 according to the company's proxy statement, and six named officers all received more than $2,200,000.) Why aren't they being held accountable for its bad results?

As we have said until being blue in the face, as long as the leaders of health care organizations are not held accountable for the results of their decisions on health care quality, cost, and access (even in such extreme quality violations as those resulting in multiple patient deaths), we can expect continuing decisions that sacrifice quality, increase costs, and worsen access, but that are in the self-interest of the people making them.

To really reform health care, we must hold health care organizations and their leaders accountable (and not blame all the problems on doctors, other health care professionals, patients, and society at large).

Hat tip to Ed Silverman on the PharmaLot blog.

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Open Letter to Dr. Josephine Briggs

Josephine P. Briggs, M.D.
Director, National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine

Dear Dr. Briggs,

As you know, we've met twice. The first time was at the Yale "Integrative Medicine" Symposium in March. The second was in April, when Drs. Novella, Gorski and I met with you for an hour at the NCCAM in Bethesda. At the time I concluded that you favor science-based medicine, although you are in the awkward position of having to appear 'open-minded' about nonsense.

More about that below, but first let me address the principal reason for this letter: it is disturbing that you will shortly appear at the 25th Anniversary Convention of the American Association of Naturopathic Physicians (AANP). It is disturbing for two reasons: first, it suggests that you know little about the tenets and methods of the group that you'll be addressing; second, your presence will be interpreted as an endorsement of those methods and of that group---whether or not that is your intention. If you read nothing more of this letter or its links, please read the following articles (they're "part of your education," as my 91 y.o. mother used to say to me):

Naturopathy: A Critical Appraisal

Naturopathy, Pseudoscience, and Medicine: Myths and Fallacies vs Truth

The first article is an introduction to the group to which you will be speaking; the second is my response to complaints, from that group and a few of its apologists, about the first article. It was a surprise to me that the editor, George Lundberg, preferred that I make my response a comprehensive one.

Thus the second article inevitably became the crash course---call it CAM for Smarties---that your predecessors never offered you, replete with examples of useless and dangerous pseudoscientific methods, real science being brought to bear in evaluating such methods, proponents' inaccurate or cherry-picked citations of biomedical literature, bits of pertinent but little-known history, the standard logical fallacies, embarrassing socio-political machinations, wasteful and dangerous 'research' (funded---unwittingly, I'm sure---by the NCCAM), bait-and-switch labeling of rational methods as "CAM," vacuous assertions about 'toxins' and "curing the underlying cause, not just suppressing the symptoms," anti-vaccination hysteria, misleading language, the obligatory recycling of psychokinesis claims, and more.

Please excuse me if this sounds preachy; I admit that it does, but understand that I'm writing in good faith. My own views of "CAM" did not dawn on me overnight, but were the result of years of research. My 'internship,' as it were, consisted of sitting on a state commission from the fall of 2000 until the spring of 2002, listening to AANP members (including at least one with whom you will share the podium), reading about 'naturopathic medicine,' and attempting (unsuccessfully) to engage its advocates in rational discussion. I began that task open to forming opinions based on whatever information became available; by its end it had become abundantly clear that the group is best characterized as a pseudoscientific cult, and nothing since has altered that opinion.

Regarding your presence at the convention being tantamount to an endorsement of 'naturopathic medicine,' this is so obviously true that it ought not be necessary to mention it. Previous experience, however, has taught me to expect an air of---please don't take this personally---utter cluelessness whenever I've raised such an issue. If you've read the second naturopathy article linked above, you already know that according to proponents,

The validity of naturopathic medicine is demonstrated by its support in government (including accreditation of its schools and NIH-funded research), on medical school Web sites, and in other parts of the public domain.

An appearance at their annual convention by the most important "CAM" administrator at the NIH surely has the political arm of the AANP licking its chops. NDs, as they call themselves, are currently licensed in 14 or 15 states and a couple of provinces, and aggressively seek licensure throughout the U.S. and Canada. They appear to wield political clout well out of proportion to their numbers, no doubt thanks in part to the legislative language that created the NCCAM's National Advisory Council for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NACCAM):

Of the 18 appointed members...Nine...shall be practitioners licensed in one or more of the major systems with which the Center is involved. Six of the members shall be appointed by the Secretary from the general public and shall include leaders in the fields of public policy, law, health policy, economics, and management. Three of the six shall represent the interests of individual consumers of complementary and alternative medicine.

Thus there have been 1-3 NDs on the NACCAM since its inception in 1999, although their numbers in general are, by any measure, miniscule: I reckoned there were about 2500 in the U.S. in 2003; the AANP now places that number at 6000. By comparison, there are about 800,000 MDs and 50,000 DOs in the U.S.

NDs claim to be well trained to practice what most people think of as family medicine or primary care medicine, although their version of training is chock full of pseudoscientific nonsense and lacks a true residency program. They began by purporting to use only "natural medicines," but in regions where they've become politically connected they've sought, and been granted, the license to prescribe numerous drugs. Predictably, they've recently begun to bump people off with such exotic choices as intravenous colchicine and disodium ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (that pesky TACT drug), in addition to more folksy nostrums such as acupuncture, vitamin B12, and an "herbal tincture" for a teenage girl who would shortly die of asthma.

I see that your talk is titled "Complementary and Alternative Medicine: Promising Ideas from Outside the Mainstream." I imagine that it will cover some of the material that you covered at the Yale Symposium, where you used the similar phrase, “Quirky Ideas from Outside the Mainstream.” Without reading more into that word substitution than is warranted, let me assure you that there are no promising ideas emanating from naturopathy, even if there are plenty of quirky ones, e.g., inflating balloons in the nasopharynx to effect a “controlled release of the connective tissue tension to unwind the body and return it toward to its original design."

Regarding the implicit requirement of your office that you appear open-minded even to medical absurdities, you made that clear in your own account of our NCCAM meeting and of another that you'd had a few weeks earlier, involving a group of homeopaths and associated crackpots who called themselves "the leading scientists in the field":

Recently, I hosted two meetings with groups that represent disparate views of CAM research. These meetings have given me a renewed appreciation for the value of listening to differing voices and perspectives about the work we do.

My NCCAM colleagues and I know there are differing views of the value of doing CAM research. On one side, we have stakeholders who are staunch CAM advocates, and on the other side, we have CAM skeptics.

Each group has its own beliefs and opinions on the direction, importance, and value of the work that NCCAM funds. The advocates would like to see more research dollars
supporting various CAM approaches while the skeptics see our research investment as giving undue credibility to unfeasible CAM modalities and want less research funding.

As I've stated before, our position is that science must remain neutral, and we should be strictly objective. There are compelling reasons to explore many CAM modalities, and the science should speak for itself. (emphasis yours)

Certainly science must remain neutral in the face of not-yet-seen data from rigorous studies, but that is different from what you, in your dual roles as "CAM" Explicator-in-Chief and Steward of Public Funds, must remain. You typically face questions that are, for all purposes relevant to the NIH, to modern medicine, and to the American citizenry, already settled---whether by basic science, clinical studies, rational thinking, or all three. I've offered several examples in the two naturopathy articles linked above.

Consider homeopathy, a core claim of "naturopathic medicine" and the subject of your meeting with the "staunch CAM advocates." It makes no more sense for you to remain neutral on that topic than it would for the NIMH Director to remain neutral on exorcisms, or for the NCI Director to remain neutral on Krebiozen. Edzard Ernst, a one-time homeopath whose own portfolio of "CAM" investigations dwarfs the entire output of the NCCAM, puts it this way:

Should we keep an open mind about astrology, perpetual motion, alchemy, alien abduction, and sightings of Elvis Presley? No, and we are happy to confess that our minds have closed down on homeopathy in the same way.

Science and skepticism, moreover, are not distinct. Good science involves, first and foremost, skepticism. This is true for the design of any experiment, in which the primary goal is to attempt to falsify the hypothesis, and also for scientific thinking in general. Bruce Alberts, the editor of Science, discussed this in a 2008 editorial titled "Considering Science Education":

...society may less appreciate the advantage of having everyone acquire, as part of their formal education, the ways of thinking and behaving that are central to the practice of successful science: scientific habits of mind. These habits include a skeptical attitude toward dogmatic claims and a strong desire for logic and evidence. As famed astronomer Carl Sagan put it, science is our best "bunk" detector. Individuals and societies clearly need a means to logically test the onslaught of constant clever attempts to manipulate our purchasing and political decisions. (emphasis added)

I believe that you know all this at some level, but that your current job demands that you bend over backward to frame skeptics as extreme---distinguishing them from "neutral" scientists. Thus you, like many reporters, have placed skeptics of homeopathy or naturopathy at one end of a contrived belief spectrum, and "staunch CAM advocates" at the other. Please indulge me while I compare this version of 'neutrality' with others that exist in the popular domain:

  • Some people feel strongly that the moon landings were a collective hoax. Others feel just as strongly that they really happened.
  • Some people believe that the Holocaust didn't happen. Others believe that it did.
  • Some people believe that the variety of species on earth is a product of Intelligent Design (ID). Others believe in the theory of evolution by variation and natural selection.

This could go on and on, but you probably get the point. The last bullet is more pertinent to your tacit endorsement of the AANP than you might imagine. What follows is a representative view of herbalism offered by Thomas Kruzel, with whom you will also share the podium at the convention (he will discuss "Emunctorology"; don't ask). Kruzel is Past President of the AANP and the former Vice President of Clinical Affairs and Chief Medical Officer at the Southwest College of Naturopathic Medicine. He was selected Physician of the Year by the AANP in 2000, and Physician of the Year by the Arizona Naturopathic Medical Association in 2003:

Herbal Medicine: Naturopathic physicians have been trained in the art and science of prescribing medications derived from plant sources. The majority of prescription drugs are derived as well from plants but are often altered and used as single constituents. What makes herbal medicine unique is that plants have evolved along with human beings and have been used as non-toxic medications for centuries.

If there is any problem with herbal medicines it is that unless one knows how to prescribe them, they may not be effective. Herbal medications should be prescribed based on the symptoms that the person presents rather than for the name of the disease. Herbal medications are much more effective at relieving the patients symptoms when prescribed in this manner. When prescribed the medicines act with the body’s own innate healing mechanism to restore balance and ultimately allows healing to occur.

What’s nice about plant or herbal medicines is that because they are derived from the whole plant they are considerably less toxic to the body. The plant medicine has evolved to work in harmony with the normal body processes rather than taking over its function as many drug therapies do. Because of this herbal medicines may be taken for longer periods of time without the side effects so often experienced with drugs.

You are particularly impressed, I hope, by the magical, ID-like claim that "plant medicine has evolved to work in harmony with the normal body processes." Other curious assertions include the conflation of herbal medicine with the core claims of either homeopathy or the non-existent 'allopathy' (we can't tell which)---"...should be prescribed based on the symptoms..."---demonstrating that the author doesn't know much about even the fanciful methods for which he claims expertise; and the dangerously false statement that medicines "derived from the whole plant are considerably less toxic" (than are well-researched and precisely dosed "prescription drugs").

Dr. Briggs, please consider the possibility that you no longer must hide your considerable scientific prowess in order to be a good NCCAM Director. Your 'stakeholders' include not only very small numbers of naturopaths, homeopaths, and other fringe practitioners, but also far larger numbers of citizens who wonder about the validity of what those practitioners are peddling. It is to those citizens that you should be directing your efforts, which ought to begin with sober, objective, skeptical, scientific considerations of the various claims, the vast majority of which can, like balloons in the nasopharynx, be deflated in milliseconds by anyone with even a modest understanding of nature. They don't require clinical trials.

Things are changing elsewhere. My colleague Steve Novella has just written about substantial efforts to deny insurance coverage for homeopathy in the land of its birth, Germany. In the UK, homeopathy has been far more popular than it is here, even to the point of its being funded by the National Health Service. One of the "staunch CAM advocates" who reportedly attended your meeting by teleconference was Peter Fisher, Homeopath to the Queen. Yet both the British Medical Association and the House of Commons Science and Technology Committee have seen through the ruse of pseudoscience that is homeopathy, the former declaring it "witchcraft" and latter making this statement:

The Committee concurred with the Government that the evidence base shows that homeopathy is not efficacious (that is, it does not work beyond the placebo effect) and that explanations for why homeopathy would work are scientifically implausible.

American citizens want and deserve, for their tax money, exactly that sort of definitive evaluation of such claims. Your first responsibility, Dr. Briggs, is to them---it is not to the AANP, other "CAM stakeholders," Tom Harkin, Orrin Hatch, or Dan Burton, and certainly not to the members of the NACCAM. Yes, we "skeptics see [the NCCAM] research investment as giving undue credibility to unfeasible CAM modalities," because the evidence is overwhelming that this is the case. We also see your appearing at conventions of pseudomedical pseudoprofessional organizations as giving undue credibility to unfeasible and dangerous claims.

Sincerely yours,

Kimball C. Atwood, M.D.
Skeptic

This letter has been cross-posted on Science-Based Medicine.

Duke Scientist Bringing Millions from NIH and Pharma Suspended Over Rhodes Scholar Claims

The New York Times reports that a medical researcher faked claims to being a Rhodes Scholar, and that a major scandal that has erupted.

The scenario is very familiar to readers of Healthcare Renewal, with universities collecting millions from public sources and the pharmaceutical industry, turning a blind eye to credentials discrepancies of faculty "taxpayers", and the public possibly put at risk through faulty research and suspect "reviews":

Duke Scientist Suspended Over Rhodes Scholar Claims
New York Times
July 20, 2010

Duke University School of Medicine has suspended a researcher and stopped patient enrollment in three cancer studies upon learning of reports that the researcher had overstated his academic credentials.

One of the lead investigators on the cancer studies, Dr. Anil Potti, was placed on administrative leave, said Douglas J. Stokke, a spokesman for Duke, while the university investigates allegations that Dr. Potti had falsely claimed that he was a Rhodes scholar.

The controversy erupted late last week after an article published in The Cancer Letter (PDF), a weekly publication for cancer specialists, reported that Dr. Potti, an assistant professor of medicine, had on occasion exaggerated his credentials. (A spokeswoman at Rhodes House at Oxford confirmed on Tuesday that Dr. Potti had not received the scholarship.)

The scientist, Anil Potti, was engaged in cancer clinical trials using questionable and possbily erroneous analytical methods (prediction models).

In addition, several dozen biostatisticians and cancer researchers at Harvard, Princeton, Johns Hopkins and other academic institutions are now questioning the methodology behind the three clinical trials, urging a halt to the Duke studies — two on lung cancer and one on breast cancer — in a letter sent to the director of the National Cancer Institute.

He'd used the fake credentials to get American Cancer Society money:

When questions about Dr. Potti’s credentials became public, the American Cancer Society suspended payments of a five-year, $729,000 grant awarded to Dr. Potti to study the genetics of lung cancer. The society awarded the grant based in part on a résumé from the doctor that included the Rhodes honor, said Dr. Otis W. Brawley, the chief medical officer of the cancer society.

According to The Cancer Letter's exposé linked above:

A high-profile cancer genomics researcher at Duke University claimed in multiple grant applications that he had been a Rhodes scholar, when, in fact, the Rhodes Trust states flatly that he was not.

Documents obtained by The Cancer Letter show that in biographies submitted to NIH, Duke oncologist and genomics researcher Anil Potti claimed variously to have won the prestigious scholarship in 1995 or 1996, depending on the version of the biography.

Potti also made the Rhodes claim in an application that resulted in a $729,000 grant from the American Cancer Society. “We don’t have any record that Anil Potti was a Rhodes scholar,” spokesman for the Rhodes Trust said to The Cancer Letter.

Assuming the fabrications are proven, a number of questions arise:

  • How can a Duke scientist have gotten away with exaggerated credentials on a CV used in a grant applicationa to NIH, the American Cancer Society, and perhaps other organizations, claiming to be a Rhodes Scholar?
  • Did he make similar exaggerations in his application to Duke itself?
  • Do the exaggerations made in NIH and/or other federal grant applications constitute a crime, e.g., under Title 18 of U.S. Code, Section 1001 which makes it a federal crime to make a false statement to the government, according to one contributor to The Cancer Letter article?
  • Will Duke act on fabrications as criminal matters?
  • What were the Duke grants office and/or credentials-checking staff doing during their working hours?
  • Why did this exaggeration come out in The Cancer Letter?

Patients may be at risk:

[MD Anderson Cancer Center biostatisticians] Keith Baggerly and Kevin Coombes said they devoted about 1,500 hours to checking Potti’s and Nevins’s work. These efforts—dubbed “forensic bioinformatics”—resulted in a paper in the November 2009, issue of the Annals of Applied Statistics.

“Unfortunately, poor documentation can shift from an inconvenience to an active danger when it obscures not just methods but errors,” the paper stated. “Patients in clinical trials are currently being allocated to treatment arms on the basis of these results.”

The two raised questions about Duke’s randomized phase II single-institution trials that used the Nevins and Potti technology to assign patients to treatment (NCT00545948, NCT00509366, and NCT00636441). Baggerly and Coombes argued that these trials “may be putting patients at risk.”

Duke initially suspended but then restarted the trials after an "investigation" by outside scientists. However:

Experts asked by The Cancer Letter to review these [investigation] documents [obtained under the FOIA] noted that Duke deans Cuffe and Kornbluth were inaccurate in their description of the document’s substance and conclusions when they announced completion of the investigation and resumption of the clinical trials earlier this year.

“Having read the committee’s report, we must disagree with Duke’s representation of the committee’s findings,” Baggerly and Coombes said in an email after reviewing the documents released under FOIA. The committee stated that “In our review of the methods … we were unable to identify a place where the statistical methods were described in sufficient detail to independently replicate the findings of the papers,” and further noted that the Duke investigators “really need” to work on “clearly explaining the specific statistical steps used in developing the predictors and the prospective sample assignments."

Duke has apparently now decided to stonewall:

... The Cancer Letter sent an email with questions to Potti, his collaborator Joseph Nevins, and Duke administration officials. The questions focused on the Rhodes claim, but also touched on other apparent discrepancies.

Responding to everyone on the email CC list, including this reporter, Potti wrote: “Sounds like I need to call him to clarify ...... and probably also talk with you all to clarify. I was a nominee..... and several of the others can also be explained. –Anil.”

After that email, Potti and Duke officials didn’t respond to questions seeking details that could substantiate this response. Multiple calls and emails from The Cancer Letter were not acknowledged.

One reason is that this escapade appears to have many twists and turns regarding credentials claimed by their researcher in the past. See the full article published in The Cancer Letter (PDF). The tale is stunning.

Another reason appears to be this:

Genomic research led by the two scientists [Potti and senior collaborator Joseph Nevins] has brought millions of public and private dollars to Duke. The duo’s connections with the industry are considerable. According to a recent disclosure, Potti is a member of the scientific advisory boards of Eli Lilly and Co., GlaxoSmith-Kline, and CancerGuideDx.

This also raises the questions:

  • Did Potti misrepresent his credentials to these pharmas?
  • Was Nevins aware of these exaggerations himself?

Of course this author is familiar with laxity in Duke's management and academics, and their not replying to pointed questions on their failures.

Perhaps at the time of this grant application, Duke personnel were busy checking the credentials of the Duke Lacrosse team, or of academics such as myself, maligned by Duke professors for having a strong sense of ethics. I then found myself "stonewalled" by Duke's President Richard H. Brodhead on the issues.

(See my Jan. 2008 post "A Truly Appalling Lawsuit Against Duke University" for more on that affair.)

-- SS

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

The National Program for Healthcare IT in the U.S., and the Elephant in the Living Room

The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has begun to address deficient clinical IT usability. A PDF with presentations on the topic from the recent NIST conference on HIT usability is here (warning: very large, 26 MB).

There is a critical "meta-issue" that's being ignored regarding usability, though, yet it is the elephant in the living room.

First, I will detail the elephant, then ask the simple, logical question that arises (the "inconvenient" question that nobody seems to be able to give a straight, non-marketing-spin answer to).

Here are the details of the elephant.

First, poor usability ---> increased risk to patients.

This is a first principle; it is not open to debate.

Now:

If NIST is just now getting involved in "improving HIT usability" (the improvement of which should have occurred at least two decades ago);

While HIMSS's former Chairman of the Board admits the technology remains experimental:
... We’re still learning, in healthcare, about that user interface. We’re still learning about how to put the applications together in a clinical workflow that’s going to be valuable to the patients and to the people who are providing care. Let’s be patient. Let’s give them a chance to figure out the right way to do this. Let’s give the application providers an opportunity to make this better;

While HIMSS itself admits in this 2009 PDF that

"Electronic medical record (EMR)!adoption rates have been slower than expected in the United States, especially in comparison to other industry sectors and other developed countries. A key reason, aside from initial costs and lost productivity during EMR implementation, is lack of efficiency and usability of EMRs currently available";

While the National Research Council (the highest scientific authority in the U.S.) last year reported that :

"Current Approaches to U.S. Health Care Information Technology are Insufficient" and that the technology "does not support clinicians' cognitive needs." The study was chaired by Medical Informatics pioneers Octo Barnett (Harvard/MGH) and William Stead (Vanderbilt);

While it's not just the user experience that's the problem, either...

Insurers are starting to recognize this, e.g., "NORCAL Mutual Insurance Company: "Electronic Health Records: Recognizing and Managing the Risks" ;

While hospitals and vendors cannot yet manage the technology reliably - how many medical mistakes have/will occur as a result of screw ups like this one, now confirmed to have occurred at a religious-denomination hospital chain headquartered in the Great Lakes region of the U.S.?


This patient won't get a second chance, either.

The above issues are the elephant in the living room. Or, shall I say, in the Boardrooms and meeting rooms where health IT is planned and discussed?


Health IT is great stuff, guys; it might actually work well one day!
Let's roll it out nationally and penalize those Luddite doctors
who refuse to "use it meaningfully" because it's not very usable.
Oh, just ignore that strange creature over there in the corner .
..


Considering the size and weight of the elephant, here is my question:

Why are we rolling out this technology nationally under penalty of Medicare garnishment?

I cannot get a straight, unspun answer to that question.

Perhaps we need Bill O'Reilly to ask these questions of health IT officials on his FOX News program, The O'Reilly Factor, where spin is attacked relentlessly (the "No Spin Zone.")

-- SS

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Barry Chaiken, MD, MPH: "Let's be patient" with experimental devices that harm patients

At an interview of Barry Chaiken, MD, MPH, FHIMSS, former Chairman of the Board of health IT trade group HIMSS and chief medical officer of Imprivata, a company specializing in healthcare IT security, Chaiken pleads for the following special accommodations for Health IT relative to other medical sectors:

... We’re still learning, in healthcare, about that user interface. We’re still learning about how to put the applications together in a clinical workflow that’s going to be valuable to the patients and to the people who are providing care. Let’s be patient. Let’s give them a chance to figure out the right way to do this. Let’s give the application providers an opportunity to make this better.

[Why are the health IT applications bad to begin with, I ask? - ed.]

I note the following.

  • If 'we're' still learning (and I don't include people with genuine clinical computing expertise in that subgroup, but it does include the plethora of amateurs in the commercial health IT industry), then the technology is experimental.
  • Worse, it's unregulated - a major special accommodation in and of itself.
  • These sentiments about "being patient" would be appropriate - if the subjects of this experimental technology that vendors need to be "given a chance" to make better were experimental lab rats.

Instead, the subjects of the experimental technology are unwitting, unconsenting human beings, who are being used as experimental test subjects for software development, and being put at risk, injured and indeed killed by the disruptions these experimental technologies cause.

Under these realities, the position presented by Chaiken is, in my opinion, ethically perverse.

That such sentiments come from someone who holds the MD degree and who I assume took the Hippocratic oath in some form is stunning.

In the health IT industry, "Primum non nocere" seems to have been replaced with "Kybernetik über alle."

Further, the commercial health IT vendors have had the good part of five decades to "get it right." How long is long enough?

Their software is unavailable for detailed evaluation and open critique of the user experience by impartial experts, unlike open source EHR's like VistA CPRS, demo version available at this link where anyone can:

  • Download the latest version of CPRS today and get access to new features including graphing functionality
  • Use the software as if you were a provider by entering orders, entering documentation, retrieving reports (and graphs) and viewing alerts and notifications that help with decision support
  • Learn first hand how VA’s electronic health record system works

Personally, I've had to use stealth simply to obtain and post graphical representations of some simply inexcusable commercial HIT interface sins (link). Why should a secretive industry be given additional special accommodation?

Dr. Chaiken goes on to state:

Let’s hold them accountable if they don’t [make the applications better]. Absolutely, hold them accountable if they don’t; and the marketplace, I hope, will be able to make those choices and hold them accountable when they don’t. But, we’re still learning.

Again, I'm not sure who the "we're" refers to, but "holding companies accountable" will not really help victims of the experiments who are seriously injured or killed.

A better solution, as I have written on this blog (such as at my Nov. 2008 post "Should The U.S. Call A Moratorium On Ambitious National Electronic Health Records Plans?" and at other sites as well:

Protect patients. Constrain the health IT experiment temporally and geographically, and apply the laws, customs and regulations of medical experimentation until this industry "has learned" whatever lessons Chaiken thinks they need to learn, e.g., from decades of Medical Informatics, Social Informatics, Computer Science, HCI and other research. None of these fields - last time I looked - are classified or protected intellectual property. Share information on patient adverse outcomes and near misses, instead of concealing them and contractually gagging users from openly speaking about problems.

That would be the ethical approach.

Further, how many more decades should we wait for the health IT industry to figure out how to look for better leaders beyond the "school of hard knocks" bias that's existed for at least the past decade? How many substandard health IT leaders were placed in hospitals the past few decades as a result of outrageous attitudes like these below from the major recrutiers, centered on spreading the wealth?

I don't think a degree gets you anything," says healthcare recruiter Lion Goodman, president of the Goodman Group in San Rafael, California about CIO's and other healthcare MIS staffers. Healthcare MIS recruiter Betsy Hersher of Hersher Associates, Northbrook, Illinois, agreed, stating "There's nothing like the school of hard knocks." In seeking out CIO talent, recruiter Lion Goodman "doesn't think clinical experience yields [hospital] IT people who have broad enough perspective. Physicians in particular make poor choices for CIOs. They don't think of the business issues at hand because they're consumed with patient care issues," according to Goodman. Healthcare Informatics, "Who's Growing CIO's."

[No, that line about 'being consumed with patient care issues' as a strike against health IT leadership didn't come from a Scott Adams business-idiot parody cartoon - ed.]

As in clinical medicine itself, if you're going to be anywhere near patient care and making decisions affecting its delivery, a degree damn well "gets you something."

At about the same time the above appeared in Healthcare Informatics, a generalist IT recruiter wrote me this:

... What is happening to MDs trying to change careers is providing a window into broader issues about professionals in society today - narrow training, pigeonholing in the marketplace, difficulty making lateral and cross-industry transition, what a handicap it is to be creative, entrepreneurial, or cross-disciplinary in the current marketplace, and the wasted intellectual capital represented by the high caliber of individuals who can't find ways to fruitfully plug themselves into the marketplace.

I continue to be amazed at this general phenomenon...the remarkable quality of a number of candidates I've met, and the lack of recruiters' ability to get them in the door of good companies. The interesting part of the story is that when I am able to get access to high level execs in some of these companies (not just IT, but devices, pharmaceuticals, etc. also) they are dismayed at the quality of those that they hire. They know that something is wrong in how the recruitment process is working. (eg, one of the major device cos. just devoted the time of 1 FTE in Human Resources to 'finding innovative ways of identifying and recruiting good talent into the company.')

Whose fault were the outrageous, deleterious hiring practices prevalent in this industry that contributed materially to its production of substandard products, hiring practices that persist to this day? (See example here.)

Why should we be "patient", and "give them [yet more chances] to figure out the right way to do this", and why should patients permit themselves to continue to be guinea pigs to such a sloppy, cavalier industry?

I note that Chaiken's credentials appear to fit the template, as colleague Roy Poses describes at various posts including here, of an "executive isolated from the real world of health care" and member of the superclass. From the interview linked above:

... According to your LinkedIn profile, you’re CMO for Imprivata, CMIO for Symphony Corporation, and CMO of DocsNetwork. You’re on a couple of advisory boards, you own a vineyard, and you just finished your term as chair of the HIMSS board.

Perhaps that helps explain the mantra of "computers [and profit] first, patients second."

Finally, in answer to my own question above "Why are the health IT applications bad to begin with", I suggest complacency, incompetence, willful ignorance, and negligence (including criminal negligence) as possible answers.

-- SS

Addendum:

The following in today's WSJ caught my eye ("What we've learned from the Gulf spill", Michio Kaku, July 20, 2010):

The nagging question is: Why did it take so long? Why couldn't they have capped the leak months ago? For three agonizing months, BP's engineers and executives were essentially making things up as they went along, conducting a billion dollar science project with the American people as guinea pigs. The basic science of stopping oil leaks at 5,000 feet below sea level should have been done years ago.

Concepts are similar. With just a few edits, we have this:

The nagging question is: Why is it taking so long? Why couldn't they have learned to create useful health IT decades ago? For at least thirty agonizing years, Health IT vendors' engineers and executives were essentially making things up as they went along, conducting a multibillion dollar science project with the American people as guinea pigs. The basic science of producing safe, effective, usable health IT should have been done years ago.

-- SS