Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Obama says preventive medicine is the answer, not tests. Uh, now they’re going after the tests that are part of preventive health care.

“But finding those insignificant cancers is the reason the breast and prostate cancer rates soared when screening was introduced, Dr. Kramer said. And those cancers, he said, are the reason screening has the problem called overdiagnosis — labeling innocuous tumors cancer and treating them as though they could be lethal when in fact they are not dangerous.

“Overdiagnosis is pure, unadulterated harm,” he said.

Dr. Peter Albertsen, chief and program director of the urology division at the University of Connecticut Health Center, said that had not been an easy message to get across. “Politically, it’s almost unacceptable,” Dr. Albertsen said. “If you question overdiagnosis in breast cancer, you are against women. If you question overdiagnosis in prostate cancer, you are against men.”

Dr. Esserman hopes that as research continues on how to advance beyond screening, distinguishing innocuous tumors from dangerous ones, people will be more realistic about what screening can do.

“Someone may say, ‘I don’t want to be screened’ ” she said. “Another person may say, ‘Of course I want to be screened.’ Just like everything in medicine, there is no free lunch. For every intervention, there are complications and problems.””

  Wait. Didn’t Obama tell us that preventive medicine would solve health care cost problems? It’s those “needless” tests that run up costs, says Obama. And now the American Cancer Society is telling us, ever so conveniently, that we really don’t need those pesky tests.

  Maybe I should test my BS sniffer because something smells here.

Read it all here.

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