Take a
good look at our health care methods—How close are they to nature? A sick
person needs quiet rest and loving care—have you found that in any hospital
recently? The only sleep you can get is if you are knocked out with drugs!
—temcat
Doctors
Are The Third Leading Cause of Death in the US,
Causing 250,000 Deaths Every Year
This article in the Journal of the American
Medical Association (JAMA) is the best article I have ever seen written in the
published literature documenting the tragedy of the traditional medical
paradigm.
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This information is a follow-up of the Institute
of Medicine report which hit the papers in December of last year, but the
data was hard to reference as it was not in peer-reviewed journal. Now it is
published in JAMA which is the most widely circulated medical periodical in the
world.
The author is Dr. Barbara Starfield of the
Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health and she desribes how the US
health care system may contribute to poor health.
ALL THESE ARE DEATHS PER YEAR:
- 12,000 -- unnecessary
surgery 8
- 7,000 -- medication
errors in hospitals 9
- 20,000 -- other errors in
hospitals 10
- 80,000 -- infections in
hospitals 10
- 106,000
-- non-error, negative effects of drugs 2
These total to 250,000
deaths per year from iatrogenic causes!!
What does the word iatrogenic mean? This term
is defined as induced in a patient by a physician's activity, manner, or
therapy. Used especially of a complication of treatment.
Dr. Starfield offers several warnings in
interpreting these numbers:
- First, most of the data are
derived from studies in hospitalized patients.
- Second, these estimates are
for deaths only and do not include negative effects that are associated with
disability or discomfort.
- Third, the estimates of
death due to error are lower than those in the IOM report.1
If the higher estimates are used, the deaths
due to iatrogenic causes would range from 230,000 to 284,000. In any case,
225,000 deaths per year constitutes the third leading cause of death in the
United States, after deaths from heart disease and cancer. Even if these figures
are overestimated, there is a wide margin between these numbers of deaths and
the next leading cause of death (cerebrovascular disease).
Another analysis 11
concluded that between 4% and 18% of consecutive patients experience negative
effects in outpatient settings,with:
- 116 million extra physician
visits
- 77 million extra
prescriptions
- 17 million emergency
department visits
- 8 million hospitalizations
- 3 million long-term
admissions
- 199,000 additional deaths
- $77 billion in extra costs
The high cost of the health care system is
considered to be a deficit, but seems to be tolerated under the assumption that
better health results from more expensive care.
However, evidence from a few studies
indicates that as many as 20% to 30% of patients receive inappropriate care.
An estimated 44,000 to 98,000 among them die
each year as a result of medical errors.2
This might be tolerated if it resulted in
better health, but does it? Of 13 countries in a recent comparison,3,4
the United States ranks an average of 12th (second from the bottom) for 16
available health indicators. More specifically, the ranking of the US on several
indicators was:
- 13th (last) for
low-birth-weight percentages
- 13th for neonatal mortality
and infant mortality overall 14
- 11th for postneonatal
mortality
- 13th for years of potential
life lost (excluding external causes)
- 11th for life expectancy at 1
year for females, 12th for males
- 10th for life expectancy at
15 years for females, 12th for males
- 10th for life expectancy at
40 years for females, 9th for males
- 7th for life expectancy at 65
years for females, 7th for males
- 3rd for life expectancy at 80
years for females, 3rd for males
- 10th for age-adjusted
mortality
The poor performance of the US was recently
confirmed by a World Health Organization study, which used different data and
ranked the United States as 15th among 25 industrialized countries.
There is a perception that the American
public "behaves badly" by smoking, drinking, and perpetrating
violence." However the data does not support this assertion.
- The proportion of females who
smoke ranges from 14% in Japan to 41% in Denmark; in the United States, it
is 24% (fifth best). For males, the range is from 26% in Sweden to 61% in
Japan; it is 28% in the United States (third best).
- The US ranks fifth best for
alcoholic beverage consumption.
- The US has relatively low
consumption of animal fats (fifth lowest in men aged 55-64 years in 20
industrialized countries) and the third lowest mean cholesterol
concentrations among men aged 50 to 70 years among 13 industrialized
countries.
These estimates of death due to error are
lower than those in a recent Institutes of Medicine report, and if the higher
estimates are used, the deaths due to iatrogenic causes would range from 230,000
to 284,000.
Even at the lower estimate of 225,000 deaths
per year, this constitutes the third leading cause of death in the US, following
heart disease and cancer.
Lack of technology is certainly not a
contributing factor to the US's low ranking.
- Among 29 countries, the
United States is second only to Japan in the availability of magnetic
resonance imaging units and computed tomography scanners per million
population. 17
- Japan, however, ranks
highest on health, whereas the US ranks among the lowest.
- It is possible that the high
use of technology in Japan is limited to diagnostic technology not matched
by high rates of treatment, whereas in the US, high use of diagnostic
technology may be linked to more treatment.
- Supporting this possibility
are data showing that the number of employees per bed (full-time
equivalents) in the United States is highest among the countries ranked,
whereas they are very low in Japan, far lower than can be accounted for by
the common practice of having family members rather than hospital staff
provide the amenities of hospital care.
Journal
American Medical Association 2000 Jul 26;284(4):483-5
DR.
MERCOLA'S COMMENT:
Folks, this is what they call a
"Landmark Article". Only several ones like this are published every
year. One of the major reasons it is so huge as that it is published in JAMA
which is the largest and one of the most respected medical journals in the
entire world.
I did find it most curious that the best
wire service in the world, Reuter's, did not pick up this article. I have no
idea why they let it slip by.
I would encourage you to bookmark this
article and review it several times so you can use the statistics to counter the
arguments of your friends and relatives who are so enthralled with the
traditional medical paradigm. These statistics prove very clearly that the
system is just not working. It is broken and is in desperate need of repair.
I was previously fond of saying that drugs
are the fourth leading cause of death in this country. However, this article
makes it quite clear that the more powerful number is that doctors are the third
leading cause of death in this country killing nearly a quarter million people a
year. The only more common causes are cancer and heart disease.
This statistic is likely to be seriously
underestimated as much of the coding only describes the cause of organ failure
and does not address iatrogenic causes at all.
Japan seems to have benefited from
recognizing that technology is wonderful, but just because you diagnose
something with it, one should not be committed to undergoing treatment in the
traditional paradigm. Their health statistics reflect this aspect of their
philosophy as much of their treatment is not treatment at all, but loving care
rendered in the home.
Care, not treatment, is the answer. Drugs,
surgery and hospitals are rarely the answer to chronic health problems.
Facilitating the God-given healing capacity that all of us have is the key.
Improving the diet, exercise, and lifestyle are basic.
Effective interventions for the underlying
emotional and spiritual wounding behind most chronic illness are also important
clues to maximizing health and reducing disease.
Medical
Mistakes Kill 100,000 Americans A Year
The promise every doctor makes is “First,
do no harm.” But doctors and hospitals do make mistakes. And the November 30
shocking report from the Institute of Medicine showed medical mistakes are a
common and potentially life-threatening risk. If medical mistakes counted among
the leading causes of death in America, they would be eighth.
Surgical gaffes like amputating the wrong
foot or a deadly chemotherapy overdose make headlines. But patients may never
hear of the more subtle errors, like a delay in diagnosis or testing that costs
precious time to fight off disease. Medical mistakes costing lives. Medical
mistakes are a stunningly huge problem, says a new report by the Institute of
Medicine. It quoted studies estimating that at least 44,000 and perhaps as many
as 98,000 hospitalized Americans die every year from errors. To put that into
sharper and more alarming perspective, even the lower figure of 44,000 deaths
exceeds the number of people who die each year either on the highways, of breast
cancer or of AIDS.
It is an intolerable situation, especially
when it's taking place in the United States, which leads the world in medical
advances. The cause, according to the Institute of Medicine, is not as much
recklessness on the part of doctors, nurses and other health providers as it is
basic flaws in the way hospitals, clinics and pharmacies operate. That kind of
problem is fixable.
As a matter of fact, safeguards have already
been implemented to reduce the likelihood of such lethal medical errors. Some
hospitals are now using computerized prescriptions to ensure that pharmacists
don't misread doctors' scrawled prescriptions. At the urging of
anesthesiologists, anesthesia equipment is being standardized. And the Food and
Drug Administration is trying to reduce confusion by ensuring that the names of
new drugs don't sound too similar to drugs already on the market.
Doctors' notoriously poor handwriting too
often leaves pharmacists squinting to decipher a dose C was it 10 milligrams or
10 micrograms? C or even the name of the prescribed drug. Too many drug names
sound confusingly alike. Consider the painkiller Celebrex and the anti-seizure
drug Cerebyx; or Narcan, which treats morphine overdoses, and Norcuron, which
can paralyze breathing muscles.
But far more is needed: a concerted and
comprehensive effort to raise the bar on consumer safety in the health care
industry, not unlike what has already taken place in other industries. Since
many doctors already feel beleaguered by financial constraints imposed on their
care, insurers and health maintenance organizations must also bear the burden of
improving safety.
At a minimum, the Institute of Medicine wants
to reduce medical errors by half within five years. Considering the number of
people who die each year in hospitals - where they presumably go to get better -
even that goal may be too conservative.
Keeping Up
with Changes
Health care is a decade behind other
high-risk industries in improving safety, the report said. It pointed to the
transportation industry as a model: Just as engineers design cars so they cannot
start in reverse, and airlines limit pilotsí flying time to keep them rested,
so can health care be improved. Some fixes already are under way: Some hospitals
have computerized prescriptions. The Food and Drug Administration is hunting
ways to catch sound-a-like drugs.
Anesthesiologists persuaded many
manufacturers to standardize equipment and thus decreased technology-caused
errors. Many doctors now literally mark the spot of surgical incisions before
patients are put to sleep, so everyone agrees on what will be cut.
Changes
Coming from Congress
The Institute of Medicine is part of the
National Academy of Sciences, a private organization chartered by Congress to
advise the government on scientific matters. Congress just passed legislation
ordering the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research to hunt strategies to
reduce medical mistakes. The bill will even change the name to the Agency for
Healthcare Research and Quality to reflect the emphasis. President Clinton is
expected to sign the bill soon. But the Institute of Medicine said reducing
medical mistakes requires a bigger commitment.
It recommended that Congress should establish
a federal Center for Patient Safety. It would require $35 million to start and
should eventually spend $100 million a year in safety research.
The report said the total cost of medical
mistakes, lost income and production, cost of disability and health care, totals
$17 to 29 billion a year.
And thatís not mentioning the human toll.
The government should require that hospitals, and eventually other health
organizations, report all serious mistakes to state agencies so experts can
detect patterns of problems and take action. About 20 states now require error
reporting.
But how much and what penalties they impose
varies widely. State licensing boards and medical accreditors should
periodically re-examine health practitioners for competence, stressing safety
practices. Standardized medical equipment and treatment guidelines can help
doctors keep up. Change the "culture of secrecy" that surrounds medical
mistakes, encouraging doctors to discuss errors as well as near misses so
problems are fixed.
But is there something you can do, even from
your sickbed, to protect yourself?
Become an
Expert
First, know what ails you. Ask your doctor
all about it. Research it on the Internet, for instance. Patients should feel
entitled to inquire about their care no matter how sick they are. Second, know
about your drugs. The study shows more than 7,000 die each year because of
medication errors.
Kohn L, ed, Corrigan J, ed,
Donaldson M, ed. To Err Is Human: Building a Safer Health System.
Washington, DC: National Academy Press; 1999
Doctors:
The
Third Leading
Cause
of Death
Dr. Barbara Starfield of the John Hopkins School of Hygiene
and Public Health reports that conventional medical doctors cause 250,000 deaths
in the U.S. each year. This figure represents the third leading cause of death
in America, after cancer and heart disease. It may be a gross underestimation of
the true numbers of people killed each year by doctors.
The study was published in JAMA, the Journal of the American
Medical Association, the most widely circulated peer-reviewed medical journal in
the world.
Of these deaths,
12,000 were due to unnecessary surgery;
7,000 to medication errors in hospital;
20,000 to other hospital errors;
80,000 to infections acquired in hospitals;
106,000 from the negative effects of correctly prescribed and
taken drugs. (JAMA, July 26, 2000)
Zoltan Rona, MD, MSc: "The technical term for
doctor-caused illness is 'iatrogenesis,' a rather sanitized and harmless
sounding word. I submit that a better, more accurate term for this carnage would
be genocide. There is something deeply and seriously wrong with a profession
whose leaders are quite content to criticize and attach natural therapies in the
guise of 'protecting the public,' while turning a blind eye to the slaughter of
millions by 'proven' conventional medicine.
"The next time a doctor tells you that taking vitamins is
dangerous, mention this study and the fact that, according to U.S. poison
control centers, vitamins, minerals, herbs and other natural remedies kill no
one year after year."
"Nearly
all people die of their medicines,
and
not of their
illnesses." Molliere
HEALTH
FRAUD?
We keep hearing about
government and medical association backed programs to combat health fraud. I am
against health fraud and I am sure every person here is against health fraud.
But if you are going to be against health fraud, be against it in all
aspects, not just health food stores, nutritionists and natural healers. I would
like to read to you a transcript
aired Feb. 23,24,25, &27 1986 on TV in St. Paul’s Minnesota, KSTP-
entitled, “Too Quick to Cut.” This information came from a government study
that said every year in the USA 10,000 lives are lost because of it and $4
billion wasted as 2 million surgical operations are performed NEEDLESSLY! I say,
there is more health fraud in that one paragraph than is committed by the whole
alternative healing industry!
There is a man who wrote
a book called ‘Hospital Hazards’ The author states that each year, at least
100,000 lives are lost because of hospital acquired infections. This same topic
was aired on Donahue. But according to the article in a Minneapolis paper, this
is not so. Two doctors from the University of Minnesota, who think they are as
good as the Mayo clinic, probably they are, I don’t know, wrote an article and
said there are 75,000 lives lost because of
hospital infections. So, somewhere between 75,000 and 100,000 must be the
answer.
And what about all this
wonderful research on cancer- Are they doing a good job there? An article in
Business-week Sept. 1986 headlines
“The New War on Cancer” That’s right folks- the New War because we lost
the old one. Read the first line of this article- “ 15 years and 13 Billion
Dollars after USA declared war on Cancer, the progress is still grim.” That
was taxpayer’s money given to the National Cancer Institute, and doesn’t
include what was given to the American cancer society or other private
institutions that are in cancer research.
Cancer is BIG BUSINESS! Are you really naive enough to BELIEVE that they WANT to cure it???
HEALTH
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