delay in diagnosis

Kevin Pho M.D. has written that a screening test incidentaloma can make healthy people ill.  This is a theme that appears too frequently in the medical literature. When I previously addressed this issue in a prior article it did not then occur to me that the argument might be used to impair patients receiving recommended screening.

Medicine constantly searches for safer more specific screening tests to permit early diagnosis of treatable, but otherwise deadly diseases. Before a new strategy is introduced generally or prescribed in the care of a particular patient, considerable thought has been given to the sensitivity and specificity and cost of the method. Complications associated with a particular method are considered. Complications associated with such follow-up as may be employed in the pursuit of false positives is very much a part of the process.  A nodule appearing on an imaging study doesn’t automatically require a biopsy or invasive form of follow-up.   The distinction between findings that require follow-up and the particular kind of follow-up required is a matter of ongoing study, and it should be.

Earlier I addressed the idiocy of ignoring unexpected findings made on a diagnostic study. Example: A chest x-ray is performed because pneumonia is suspected. The film when interpreted by the radiologist reveals a mass. Should one  ignore the mass since that is not what was expected? The same logic could be employed to ignore a mass seen on a CT scan of the brain performed because of a recent head trauma. What is common to this point of view is the assumption that a physician’s initial assessment represents the universe of possibilities.

We once believed the earth was flat. Knowledge is acquired when we put aside assumptions that stand in the way of recognizing what is real.

What do you think?

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Echocardiogram Bait and Switch

by Jerry Meyers on June 3, 2010

ANEMONA HARTOCOLLIS in a recent New York Times article describes outrageous behavior by the clinical director and medical director of Harlem medical center. Under the direction of these former hospital officers (they have since been fired and demoted,  respectively) the cardiology department of the Medical Center permitted 4,000 echocardiograms performed on patients suffering from suspected cardiac problems to be read only by technicians. The tests supposed to be read by cardiologists were not submitted to any doctor for review. An investigation  conducted by physicians from another medical center suggests hundreds of these patients may have suffered serious harm as a consequence of inadequately skilled technicians reviewing these tests instead of cardiologists.  In an apparent cost cutting move, Harlem Medical Center had allowed their staff of cardiologists to be reduced. The cardiologists claimed the back log of echocardiograms requiring physician review accumulated at the rate of 2500 per year. The Harlem Medical Center cardiologists’ cries for additional staff went unheeded.  Harlem Medical Center continues to deny that any patient suffered harm.

Certainly patients who trusted the Harlem Medical Center  have been betrayed. Can anyone believe that similar problems are not occurring with some frequency elsewhere? The only real oversight is limited help that medical malpractice lawyers can provide victims after the fact.  And yet trial lawyers are besieged in the Legislature of most states and by members of the Congress who are blind and deaf to the pleas of victims  to not restrict the only tool available to most victims to uncover the truth and seek justice.

What do you think?

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See No Evil-Speak No Evil

January 4, 2010

January 1, 2010 Journal Watch summarizes a remarkable article entitled “Investigation of incidental findings on cardiac CT.”  The article was based on a study conducted at a Canadian institution where the investigators evaluated the incidence, clinical importance, and costs of these incidental findings. It’s first important to note that these researchers used the word incidental [...]

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Hospital Conceals Airway Accident Resulting in Brain Damage of Child

August 18, 2009

The mother heard speaking in the above ad was present when a teenage driver recklessly careened down a quiet street striking her young son.  The teen pulled into the nearby driveway of his home not even having realized he had hit and dragged the child.  Miraculously, the child had only suffered severe scrapes and bruises. [...]

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Patients Not Informed of Clinically Significant Outpatient Test Results

July 10, 2009

The Archives of Internal Medicine, June 22, 2009, published results of a retrospective medical record review involving nineteen community based and four academic medical center primary care practices.  The researchers were intent upon examining how frequently patients were not informed of clinically significant abnormal outpatient test results.  The researcher’s conclusion was that it is common [...]

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Cancer Misdiagnosed in 12% of Cases: Study by Alan Mozes

March 11, 2009

According to Alan Mozes’ report, Monday October 10 in Health Day Reporter, a new study suggests more than 12 percent of cancer patients in the U.S. are undiagnosed initially. Apparently this leads to treatment delays and lost opportunities for better outcomes. The study was conducted by a team of researchers from Canada, China and the [...]

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MGUS (Monoclonal Gammopathy of Undetermined Significance)

June 5, 2008

Each year many die of multiple myeloma. It is a cancer principally affecting bone but capable of metastasizing to the lung and soft tissue. A man or woman in their 40’s or 50’s suddenly suffering a fracture of some spinal element without any precedent trauma that they can recall is certainly a possible victim of [...]

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Hospital Acquired Infections

May 12, 2008

According to the CDC 99,000 people die annually from hospital-acquired infections. As Betsy McCaughey Ross, the former Lieutenant Governor of New York put it, “You don’t often come across such a big problem that you can prevent.” McCaughey started the committee to reduce infection deaths in New York. In Pennsylvania we suffer similar problems from [...]

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