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Posted by Albert Fuchs, M.D.
The healthcare reform debate has generated much heat but very little light. (And it’s also getting a lot of coverage, so there’s very little else to report about this week.)
I wrote a couple of months ago my opinion of two simple (but unpopular) steps that would make high-quality healthcare affordable to virtually everyone: abolishing the employer tax deduction for health insurance, and slowly phasing out Medicare. The entire national debate is going in the opposite direction, with one party offering Medicare (or something like it) to everyone, and the other party opposing this because it would threaten Medicare.
In this hullabaloo, there is one word being shouted that I think deserves more explanation: rationing.
Classical economics is founded on a rule called the principle of scarcity which states that the sum of everything that everyone wants exceeds everything that exists. People want more stuff than all the stuff in the world. That means that some desires go unmet. Every economic system is essentially a system to address scarcity by establishing rules that determine who gets what – which needs are met and which are not. That is the definition of rationing: a method of distributing stuff in a world of finite resources and infinite demands.
That means that every economic system that has ever existed has used rationing in one way or another. In a feudal system, the local lord distributed land to his vassals. In centrally planned economies the government allocates all goods and sets prices.
Free economies have rationing too. In free economies virtually all transactions are voluntary. No one is forced to buy or sell a good or service, and the price depends only on the consent of the involved parties. No one is forced to sell me apples, I don’t have to buy apples, and the price of apples can be whatever I and the grocer both agree to. This is also a kind of rationing; it is rationing by price.
Rationing by price has lots of advantages. The first is that I ultimately decide which of my desires are met and which are not by choosing what I will buy in exchange for my finite dollars. Since everyone has different values, preferences and goals, there is no better way of getting the most for your dollars than in making these decisions yourself.
Rationing by price also results in the best products and services at the cheapest prices. Suppliers, forced to compete with each other for customers, can only survive by continually making better stuff cheaper.
Now, there are some goods and services that, by their nature, just can’t be distributed through free markets because they are delivered to entire groups, not to individuals. For example clean air, local law enforcement and national defense couldn’t be pragmatically purchased by each individual citizen in whatever quantity she chooses. But for the vast majority of other goods and services, rationing by price has led to better products at cheaper prices than any other method. Moreover, in a history marked almost entirely by grinding poverty, free markets and rationing by price is the only method that has produced societies with any degree of comfort and affluence for its average citizens.
If healthcare is important, maybe we should consider distributing it the way that works best – by each of us spending what we can afford to get what we believe we need. There would still be a role for government programs and private charities in the care of the indigent, but the rest of us would have access to terrific inexpensive care.
Instead we spend our (and our employers’) money on an insurance policy and wait for them to tell us what’s covered, while our elected officials debate whether government should control more of the healthcare marketplace or all of it.
Learn more:
For someone (like me) with virtually no formal background in economics, I know of no better introduction than ”Basic Economics” by Thomas Sowell.
My post in June: The Healthcare Meltdown – Part IV, A Recipe for Reform
Important legal mumbo jumbo:
Anything you read on the web should be used to supplement, not replace, your doctor’s advice. Anything that I write is no exception. I’m a doctor, but I’m not your doctor despite the fact that you read or comment on my posts. Leaving a comment on a post is a wonderful way to enter into a discussion with other readers, but I will not respond to comments (just because of time constraints).

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August 21, 2009 | 1:39 pm
Posted by Albert Fuchs, M.D.

Our office just received our first batch of influenza vaccines, so it’s time for the annual flu shot post.
The seasonal flu vaccine does not protect against novel H1N1 (swine) flu. Availability of the swine flu vaccine is still at least a couple of months away, and I’ll write about it in more detail when it becomes available.
This year the CDC is recommending flu vaccination for the following people:
The following people should not receive the vaccine:
So if you should receive the vaccine call your doctor’s office (or your local pharmacy or your workplace vaccination program) and get your flu shot.
Learn more:
CDC patient information for the flu shot
Important legal mumbo jumbo:
Anything you read on the web should be used to supplement, not replace, your doctor’s advice. Anything that I write is no exception. I’m a doctor, but I’m not your doctor despite the fact that you read or comment on my posts. Leaving a comment on a post is a wonderful way to enter into a discussion with other readers, but I will not respond to comments (just because of time constraints).
August 14, 2009 | 6:47 pm
Posted by Albert Fuchs, M.D.
One of my goals for these posts is to use individual studies to point out the broader trends they suggest. This week I want to focus on our increasing understanding of the value of exercise after illness or injury. A generation ago a heart attack meant weeks of bed rest in the hospital followed by strict instructions from the doctor to take it easy. The weakened heart couldn’t take much exertion, we thought. Now after a heart attack patients are told to start exercising as soon as they’re out of the hospital. Similarly, patients with acute back pain were prescribed bed rest for days; now we encourage staying active and gradually increasing activity to decrease the pain.
This week the New England Journal of Medicine continues that trend for breast cancer patients. One of the most uncomfortable consequences of breast cancer surgery is lymphedema in the arm. Lymphedema is the accumulation of fluid that can happen after lymph nodes are removed during breast cancer surgery. The affected arm can become swollen, painful and prone to skin infections.
The typical advice for women with lymphedema has been to avoid weight lifting or vigorous exercise with the affected arm, fearing that this would worsen the swelling or injure the susceptible limb. This week’s study tested that assumption, randomizing women with arm lymphedema after breast cancer surgery to a group that engaged in closely supervised weight lifting and another group that did not.
Surprisingly, the women who were lifting weights had fewer exacerbations of their lymphedema, and had milder lymphedema symptoms than those who were not lifting weights. Not surprisingly, the women who were lifting weights also developed better upper body strength.
So there are increasingly fewer medical reasons to be sedentary, and we can add breast-cancer-related lymphedema to the many conditions that are improved by exercise.
Learn more:
New England Journal of Medicine Article: Weight Lifting in Women with Breast-Cancer–Related Lymphedema
CNN article: Weight lifting benefits breast cancer survivors
Important legal mumbo jumbo:
Anything you read on the web should be used to supplement, not replace, your doctor’s advice. Anything that I write is no exception. I’m a doctor, but I’m not your doctor despite the fact that you read or comment on my posts. Leaving a comment on a post is a wonderful way to enter into a discussion with other readers, but I will not respond to comments (just because of time constraints).
August 7, 2009 | 1:57 pm
Posted by Albert Fuchs, M.D.
Osteoporosis, the demineralization and weakening of bones, is common in older patients. A potentially incapacitating consequence of osteoporosis is a vertebral fracture, in which one of the vertebrae in the spine collapses and breaks under the weight it’s carrying. Like other broken bones, this is frequently very painful. Sometimes the fractured vertebra heals and the pain resolves after some time, but other times the pain can be incapacitating and prolonged.
A few years ago a procedure called vertebroplasty was developed to stabilize fractured vertebrae and provide some pain relief. In it, a radiologist numbs the skin over the broken vertebra with a local anesthetic, then inserts a needle into the broken vertebra and injects some surgical cement. The thought is that as the cement hardens it fuses the broken fragments of the vertebra and thereby gets rid of the pain. Last year this minor surgery was done about 100,000 times in the U.S. It is occasionally spectacularly successful. Some patients who are initially bed-bound in pain are walking comfortably a day later.
We physicians want to help patients and need to believe we are helping patients. So it’s perhaps not surprising that this new procedure which was generally assumed to be helpful was never rigorously tested, until now. Two studies in this week’s New England Journal of Medicine tested the effectiveness of vertebroplasty for vertebral fractures.
The designs of the studies were ingenious. Patients with vertebral fractures were randomized to vertebroplasty or sham surgery. The patients agreed at enrolment that they would not know which procedure they received. The sham surgery consisted of the application of the local anesthetic, and in one study even the insertion of the needle into the broken vertebra, but without the infusion of the cement. Because the cement has a strong scent, the radiologist even opened a container of cement during the sham surgeries to let the odor fill the room.
Both studies showed the same surprising result: patients receiving the sham surgery had as much pain relief as patients receiving vertebroplasty. Both the sham and vertebroplasty groups improved, both immediately and months later. But there was no benefit of vertebroplasty over sham surgery.
How can this be? How can we have done hundreds of thousands of procedures which are no better than placebo? Asked another way: how can the placebo be so good?
One explanation is that the natural history of vertebral fractures is very favorable. Fractures tend to heal naturally. So just as with colds, anything you do for a vertebral fracture will appear effective since you’re intervening in a problem that is likely to improve anyway.
Another explanation is what statisticians call regression to the mean. Illnesses tend come to medical attention when symptoms are at their worst, so on average symptoms for stable illnesses will improve after medical attention no matter what is done.
The final explanation is the power of the placebo effect. Patients want to get better, and they know that the physician expects them to improve. For subjective outcomes such as pain, expectations are a powerful treatment. Many studies have shown the surprising efficacy of placebos, and some have shown that an invasive procedure has an even stronger placebo effect than a sugar pill.
The lesson for doctors is that we need to keep reminding ourselves to test our assumptions. Just because we mean well doesn’t mean we’re helping. The lesson for patients is that just because you’re better doesn’t mean we helped.
Learn more:
New England Journal of Medicine articles and editorial:
A Randomized Trial of Vertebroplasty for Painful Osteoporotic Vertebral Fractures A Randomized Trial of Vertebroplasty for Osteoporotic Spinal Fractures Balancing Science and Informed Choice in Decisions about Vertebroplasty
Wall Street Journal article: Spine Surgery Found No Better Than Placebo
Important legal mumbo jumbo:
Anything you read on the web should be used to supplement, not replace, your doctor’s advice. Anything that I write is no exception. I’m a doctor, but I’m not your doctor despite the fact that you read or comment on my posts. Leaving a comment on a post is a wonderful way to enter into a discussion with other readers, but I will not respond to comments (just because of time constraints).
July 31, 2009 | 12:21 pm
Posted by Albert Fuchs, M.D.
H1N1, the flu previously known as swine, is still in the news, but this week for a good reason.
Most of us still have little to worry about. The CDC estimates that over a million Americans have been sick with H1N1 flu as of July 24. The vast majority of illnesses were mild and resolved without incident, many without any treatment. As of that same date there have been 5,011 hospitalizations and 302 deaths. That means that getting sick with H1N1 flu caries half a percent chance of hospitalization and a probability of death that is 3 percent of 1 percent.
But there is a special population that may be at increased risk: pregnant women. This week Lancet published a paper studying the statistics from the U.S. on pregnant women with H1N1 flu. The numbers were much more worrisome than those for the general population. Of 34 confirmed or probable H1N1 flu cases in pregnant women, 11 (32%) were hospitalized and six (about 18%) died. All the pregnant women who died were healthy prior to developing the flu.
Pregnant women should therefore seek medical attention immediately if they develop flu symptoms. They should receive treatment with antiviral medicines (Tamiflu or Relenza) as early as possible.
Pregnant women will also be a high-priority target group for the H1N1 vaccine, but vaccine availability is at least 3 months away. I’ll have more to say about the H1N1 vaccine before then.
Learn more:
Lancet article: H1N1 2009 influenza virus infection during pregnancy in the USA
Wall Street Journal article: CDC: Pregnant Women With Flu Symptoms Should Receive Anti-Viral Drugs
Important legal mumbo jumbo:
Anything you read on the web should be used to supplement, not replace, your doctor’s advice. Anything that I write is no exception. I’m a doctor, but I’m not your doctor despite the fact that you read or comment on my posts. Leaving a comment on a post is a wonderful way to enter into a discussion with other readers, but I will not respond to comments (just because of time constraints).
July 24, 2009 | 7:09 pm
Posted by Albert Fuchs, M.D.

The news is still flooded with stories about Swine Flu, which will continue to demand the attention of public health officials, but probably doesn’t need much more attention from the public.
Meanwhile summertime brings mosquitoes which bring West Nile Virus. West Nile Virus is transmitted to people by mosquito bites. Most infected people have a very mild illness, but some develop encephalitis (brain inflammation) or meningitis (inflammation of the lining of the brain and spinal cord). There is no vaccine or specific treatment. Last year in California 445 people became ill with West Nile Virus and 15 died. This year West Nile Virus has been identified in animals in California, but no people have yet been infected this season.
So instead of worrying about Swine Flu, which there’s not much you can do to avoid, why not take a few steps to prevent getting infected with West Nile Virus? The CDC recommends that you
That’s all. You may return now to wall-to-wall coverage of the Swine Flu.
Tangential miscellany:
In an article in the LA Times this week (link below) Dr. Rahul Parikh extols the virtues of communicating with his patients by email and using electronic medical records! Check it out and forward it to any doctors who still communicate by carrier pigeon or keep records on papyrus.
Learn more:
The Centers for Disease Control webpage on West Nile Virus
LA Times article: The doctor is in and logged on
Important legal mumbo jumbo:
Anything you read on the web should be used to supplement, not replace, your doctor’s advice. Anything that I write is no exception. I’m a doctor, but I’m not your doctor despite the fact that you read or comment on my posts. Leaving a comment on a post is a wonderful way to enter into a discussion with other readers, but I will not respond to comments (just because of time constraints).
July 21, 2009 | 12:55 am
Posted by Albert Fuchs, M.D.

The AMA just endorsed the house version of the healthcare reform bill. The Wall Street Journal excoriates them in this editorial: What’s Up, Docs? If you had any notion that the AMA was concerned with patient welfare, I urge you to read it. Perhaps non-membership in the AMA will soon be a bragging point. I think I’ll post a sign in the reception area: “Not a member of the AMA for over 10 years.”
July 17, 2009 | 5:26 pm
Posted by Albert Fuchs, M.D.
Prolonged immobility has long been known to increase the risk of blood clots forming in veins in the legs (the medical term for which is deep venous thrombosis). Blood clots in the legs can be quite painful and debilitating but they can also travel to the lungs which can be life threatening. So doctors use medicines or inflatable leg squeezing devices to prevent blood clots in hospitalized patients who are bed-bound. But there is a much more common time when we all are fairly immobilized – travel. On long trips we frequently sit still for hours at a time, a perfect setting for blood in our leg veins to pool and clot.
An article in the current issue of Annals of Internal Medicine formally reviewed the existing studies on travel-associated deep venous thrombosis and concluded that travel increases the risk of a blood clot almost threefold, and that each 2 hour increase in the duration of travel increases the risk by 18%.
The likelihood of a blood clot in any single episode of travel wasn’t estimated, but is presumably very low, given the huge number of people who travel. So this should not make you cancel your trip to see Aunt Martha. Instead, follow these common sense suggestions from the Centers for Disease Control anytime you have to sit for longer than four hours:
Tangential miscellany:
That reminds me. If you happen to fly on US Airways this month, pick up their in-flight magazine. They printed my post on cyberchondria.
Learn more:
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Tips for Healthy Living: Deep Vein Thrombosis
Annals of Internal Medicine article: Travel and Risk for Venous Thromboembolism
Important legal mumbo jumbo:
Anything you read on the web should be used to supplement, not replace, your doctor’s advice. Anything that I write is no exception. I’m a doctor, but I’m not your doctor despite the fact that you read or comment on my posts. Leaving a comment on a post is a wonderful way to enter into a discussion with other readers, but I will not respond to comments (just because of time constraints).
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