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IT Is Not The Doctor's Real Enemy

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发表于 2011-6-5 09:18:25 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
IT Is Not The Doctor's Real Enemy

Information technology is not medicine's enemy but an ally that can ultimately improve patient care and reduce costs.


By Jason Burke,  InformationWeek
May 25, 2011
URL: http://www.informationweek.com/n ... l-systems/229625530


The latest digital issue of InformationWeek Healthcare featured an intriguing article by Paul Cerrato suggesting that some of my ideas regarding evidence-based medicine are a source of animosity between CIOs and their physician stakeholders--physicians whom he believes consider information technology "the enemy" of good medicine. His article touches on several key issues that should be top of mind for every physician leader and CIO today. But is IT really the enemy of good medicine?

Is Medicine An Art or A Science?

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At the heart of the article is a very old debate: Is medicine an art or a science? I've never understood why it can't be both. But the more important question is the degree to which we pursue the art at the expense of science, Carl Sagan, my childhood idol, once wrote of the origins of modern medicine:

"Hippocrates introduced elements of the scientific method. He urged careful and meticulous observation: 'Leave nothing to chance. Overlook nothing. Combine contradictory observations. Allow yourself enough time.' … He stressed honesty. He was willing to admit the limitations of the physician's knowledge."

The man behind the oath every practicing physician takes was very much an advocate for science. And any physician advocating art over science is ignoring centuries of transformative medical progress made through science. Personally, I don't run into many physicians like that anymore--they are literally a dying breed.

Is Evidence-based Medicine Cookbook Medicine?

"Cookbook medicine" is an extremely poor characterization of evidence-based medicine: It is polarizing, narrowly focused, inaccurate in its objectives, and confuses the process of gaining insight with the process of deciding what to do with the insight. Sagan writes elsewhere in his book:

"Science by itself cannot advocate courses of human action, but it can certainly illuminate the possible consequences of alternative courses of action. … Science invites us to let the facts in, even when they don't conform to our preconceptions."

As one example, SAS has been working with a leading cancer care institution to create EBM (evidence-based medicine) software that lets a medical practitioner obtain specific information about a particular patient, and then look at summarized medical outcomes from all the various treatments of prior patients that resemble this one. The software doesn't tell the physician what to do--every patient is different, and cancer is a complex family of diseases. But the insight from this evidence gives the medical practitioner more information to make better decisions that produce high quality medical outcomes and lower costs.

Cerrato's article also points out that many people equate EBM with the results from clinical trials--a valuable model of research that is incapable of fully addressing real-world heterogeneity. But as just described, EBM is not limited to traditional clinical research. Further, we have relied on clinical trials for medical insight because we have not had alternatives such as information technology that could provide meaningful insight into real-world experiences (e.g., co-morbidities). So if we want to address the shortcomings of clinical research, information technology in the service of EBM is not the disease, it is the cure.

Is The Evidence Poor?

The article also raises concerns about the reliability and validity of conclusions drawn from scientific and statistical approaches to medical outcomes. I agree with two points: clinical research does not address broad enough populations of patients, and it does not mimic the real world. And neither does the experience of an individual physician in a community care setting. EBM is a credible way of overcoming the cognitive limitations of the human mind and the limited experiences of individual medical practitioners.

One of the other ideas in the article was the assertion that Type 2 statistical error erodes the value of EBM and technology. For those that slept through that Stats 101 class, Type 2 statistical error in this case refers to the very real risk of missing a potential beneficial treatment due to flaws in research design and execution. But the article fails to mention two other critical risks: Type 1 statistical error and bias.

Type 1 statistical error is the risk of concluding a therapy works that actually does not. Many practicing physicians get hit with that risk every day--when they incorrectly conclude that because drug A or therapy B worked on the last patient they treated, it will work on the next patient. The question on the table is whether we want to address this risk, because one advantage that science offers over art is that it better balances the risks of Type 1 and Type 2 error.

Bias refers to a broad set of errors that physicians can make when trying to draw conclusions without relying on strong evidence. Unintentional bias can take many forms: looking for answers in just the easy places, seeing what the physician expects to see, and favoring interpretations that somehow benefit the physician or care organization. Information technology such as advanced analytics help medical practitioners--who are human beings unavoidably subject to these biases--to minimize them.

The Real Enemy

So hopefully you can see the flaws in these arguments against EBM. If we observe that there are risks in how we analyze information, then the best course of action would be one that allows us to manage all of those risks, not just one type. If one agrees that research populations are too narrow, then surely the populations served by a single artful physician are also too small.

If one believes that traditional research models do not account for the huge number of variables impacting an individual's health, then surely the human mind--which is only capable of weighing a handful of factors at one time--should be supplemented with technology to draw better conclusions. If one acknowledges that large sample sizes are needed to detect small statistical effects, then it stands to reason we should be using information technology to increase our sample sizes beyond the medical charts of a single physician.

The real enemy of medicine is our natural tendency to cling to what we know--old ways of practicing medicine--in hopes they will produce transformational results. They can't.

So do academic and community physicians disagree on the value of information technology? Definitely. But it is more about costs and usability than the value of evidence-based medicine. Most physicians--whether community or academic-based--want to serve their patients the best that they can, and they are not afraid of new information to aid them in their mission.

Successful health CIOs understand how practitioners will use technology to improve care, and how they can minimize the negative effects of costs and poor usability.

Medicine will always be an art--it deals with people, after all. But we need not turn our backs on science out of fear of the new and unknown. And in 21st century medicine, science is pursued with information technology.

Jason Burke is Managing Director and Chief Strategist of the Center for Health Analytics and Insights at SAS Institute.

The Healthcare IT Leadership Forum is a day-long venue where senior IT leaders in healthcare come together to discuss how they're using technology to improve clinical care. It happens in New York City on July 12. Find out more.
发表于 2011-6-7 14:25:45 | 显示全部楼层
hi,my friend. long time no see..
 楼主| 发表于 2011-6-7 19:04:03 | 显示全部楼层
really long
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