-Caveat Lector-

http://www.freerepublic.com/forum/a3a65b3871212.htm

Germs Are Bad Enough. Is Social Injustice Enough To Make You
Sick?

Culture/Society News
Source: Wall Street Journal
Published: 1/17/01 Author: SCOTT GOTTLIEB
Posted on 01/17/2001 07:00:23 PST by Pay now bill Clinton

Germs Are Bad Enough. Is Social Injustice Enough To Make You
Sick?
By SCOTT GOTTLIEB
In the early 1990s, some influential doctors
  touted experimental bone-marrow transplants as a breakthrough
cure for breast cancer. But many ill women couldn't get one.
Insurance companies refused to pay.

Women's groups cried foul, of course, including the National
Organization for  Women, which saw such a refusal as evidence of
sexual discrimination. Many insurers relented, exploding the
number of transplants performed, although no rigorous studies had
yet shown whether the $150,000 procedure really worked. Luckily,
some other insurers helped fund four large trials for exactly that
purpose.

When the trials were done, it turned out that the transplants were
probably killing more women than they cured.

Identity politics comes to the medical profession
Doctors in training are taught "evidence-based medicine." But in
the case of such bone-marrow transplants and other procedures
these days, the best medical evidence may collide with social
goals and ideological expectations. And when it does, accusations
of racial and sexual bias are never far behind. This is hardly
surprising, argues Sally Satel in "PC, M.D." (Basic, 285 pages,
$27), her excellent study of medicine and society. It is now our
culture's habit to presume that racial and sexual discrimination lies
beneath the surface of  nearly every aspect of American life.

Dr. Satel, a practicing psychiatrist, draws on her own clinical
experience and public controversies to describe how activists are
pursuing (supposedly) better health through social justice. And she
shows how this dubious practice -- defended in the academy by
the "social production theory" of disease -- is muddling doctors'
ability to deliver good medical care.

An example? A celebrated study published last year in the New
England Journal of Medicine found differences in the treatment of
lung cancer between black and white patients. Black patients were
less likely to undergo curative surgery and to survive their illness. A
sensible person might wonder: Are black patients more likely to
have aggressive cancers, or do they "present late," showing
evidence of disease after cancer has already metastasized?

These are first-order medical questions, but the authors of the
study did not answer them, offering only invidious innuendo. That
didn't stop countless others who read the study, including the
president of the National Medical Association, an organization of
black doctors, from charging racial bias among doctors.

Another widely reported study -- published in the same journal --
looked at the number of black patients undergoing cardiac
catheterization, discovering that black patients were 40% less
likely to be referred for it than white counterparts.

This "finding," too, caused an enormous commotion. But the
journal ended up retracting the study's main conclusion six months
later, due to a misleading use of statistics in the study, an event
virtually ignored by the mainstream media.

A large share of the blame for this climate of accusation, Dr. Satel
believes, rests with public-health officials, who allow ideology to
infect their interpretation of illness and its causes, blaming large
social forces and ignoring the particulars of conduct and
environment. In my clinic, located in Spanish Harlem, black
patients are more likely to follow dietary habits that promote
diseases such as hypertension and diabetes. Unprotected sex is
common in the inner city, too, where fear of  AIDS infection is
muted by the mistaken belief that it is a "gay disease."

But the public-health crowd often ignores these kinds of unpopular
truths, substituting social goals such as income redistribution and
affirmative action for bona fide health prescriptions. As a result, the
most practical measures for fighting disease are ignored, if not
actively avoided. "Indoctrinologists who want nothing less than
revolution in the name of health," writes Dr. Satel, "have been quick
to condemn practical hygiene efforts as dangerous social
intrusion."

Little wonder that the official theme of a recent annual meeting of
the American Public Health Association was "Empowering the
Disadvantaged: Social Justice in Public Health."

Lost in the din of identity politics are real differences, among
groups, in the incidence of illness and response to therapy. For
example, certain types of new and expensive anti-hypertension
medications called ACE inhibitors don't work as well in black
patients as diuretics, an old and cheap alternative. Doctors
routinely start black patients on the older drugs, not because
they're cheaper but because they work better. Where others find
racial bias, doctors see good medicine.

It is appalling that such sound logic may one day be subject to an
ideological assault. But in the current climate of politicized
thinking, it is all too possible.

Thank goodness that Dr. Satel brings more scientific precision and
moral rigor to the treatment of her subject than some doctors and
public-health officials bring to the treatment of their patients.

Dr. Gottlieb is a resident in Internal Medicine at the Mount Sinai
Hospital in New York and a staff writer for the British Medical
Journal.




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