Death by Medicine, Part I
by
Gary Null, PhD
Carolyn Dean, MD, ND
Martin Feldman, MD
Debora Rasio, MD
Dorothy Smith, PhD
Death By
Medicine, Part II
Death By
Medicine, References
ABSTRACT
A
definitive review and close reading of medical peer-review
journals, and government health statistics shows that American
medicine frequently causes more harm than good.
- The
number of people having in-hospital, adverse drug reactions
(ADR) to prescribed medicine is 2.2 million.1
- Dr.
Richard Besser, of the CDC, in 1995, said the number of
unnecessary antibiotics prescribed annually for viral
infections was 20 million. Dr. Besser, in 2003, now refers to
tens of millions of unnecessary antibiotics.2, 2a
- The
number of unnecessary medical and surgical procedures
performed annually is 7.5 million.3
- The
number of people exposed to unnecessary hospitalization
annually is 8.9 million.4
- The
total number of iatrogenic deaths shown in the following table
is 783,936.
It
is evident that the American medical system is the leading cause
of death and injury in the United States. The 2001 heart disease
annual death rate is 699,697; the annual cancer death rate,
553,251.5
TABLES
AND FIGURES
(see Section on Statistical Tables and Figures, below, for
exposition)
ANNUAL
PHYSICAL AND ECONOMIC COST OF MEDICAL INTERVENTION
Condition |
Deaths |
Cost |
Author |
Adverse Drug Reactions |
106,000 |
$12 billion |
Lazarou1 Suh49 |
Medical error |
98,000 |
$2 billion |
IOM6 |
Bedsores |
115,000 |
$55 billion |
Xakellis7 Barczak8 |
Infection |
88,000 |
$5 billion |
Weinstein9 MMWR10 |
Malnutrition |
108,800 |
-------- |
Nurses Coalition11 |
Outpatients |
199,000 |
$77 billion |
Starfield12
Weingart112 |
Unnecessary Procedures |
37,136 |
$122 billion |
HCUP3,13 |
Surgery-Related |
32,000 |
$9 billion |
AHRQ85 |
TOTAL:
|
783,936 |
$282 billion |
|
We
could have an even higher death rate by using Dr. Lucien Leape’s
1997 medical and drug error rate of 3 million. 14
Multiplied by the fatality rate of 14% (that Leape used in 199416
we arrive at an annual death rate of 420,000 for drug errors and
medical errors combined. If we put this number in place of
Lazorou’s 106,000 drug errors and the Institute of Medicine’s
(IOM) 98,000 medical errors, we could add another 216,000 deaths
making a total of 999,936 deaths annually.
Condition |
Deaths |
Cost |
Author |
ADR/med error |
420,000 |
$200 billion |
Leape 199714 |
TOTAL:
|
999,936 |
|
|
ANNUAL
UNNECESSARY MEDICAL EVENTS STATISTICS
Unnecessary
Events |
People Affected |
Iatrogenic
Events |
Hospitalization |
8.9 million 4 |
1.78 million 16 |
Procedures |
7.5 million 3 |
1.3 million 40 |
TOTAL:
|
16.4 million |
3.08 million |
The
enumerating of unnecessary medical events is very important in our
analysis. Any medical procedure that is invasive and not necessary
must be considered as part of the larger iatrogenic picture.
Unfortunately, cause and effect go unmonitored. The figures on
unnecessary events represent people (“patients”) who are
thrust into a dangerous healthcare system. They are helpless
victims. Each one of these 16.4 million lives is being affected in
a way that could have a fatal consequence. Simply entering a
hospital could result in the following:
-
In
16.4 million people, 2.1% chance of a serious adverse drug
reaction,1 (186,000)
-
In
16.4 million people, 5-6% chance of acquiring a nosocomial
infection,9 (489,500)
-
In16.4
million people, 4-36% chance of having an iatrogenic injury in
hospital (medical error and adverse drug reactions),16 (1.78
million)
-
In
16.4 million people, 17% chance of a procedure error,40 (1.3
million)
All
the statistics above represent a one-year time span. Imagine the
numbers over a ten-year period. Working with the most conservative
figures from our statistics we project the following 10-year death
rates.
TEN-YEAR
DEATH RATES FOR MEDICAL INTERVENTION
7,841,360 (7.8 million)
Condition |
10-Year Deaths |
Author |
Adverse Drug Reaction |
1.06 million |
(1) |
Medical error |
0.98 million |
(6) |
Bedsores |
1.15 million |
(7,8) |
Nosocomial Infection |
0.88 million |
(9,10) |
Malnutrition |
1.09 million |
(11) |
Outpatients |
1.99 million |
(12, 112) |
Unnecessary Procedures |
371,360 |
(3,13) |
Surgery-related |
320,000 |
(85) |
TOTAL:
|
7,841,360 (7.8 million) |
|
Our
projected statistic of 7.8 million iatrogenic deaths is more than
all the casualties from wars that America has fought in its entire
history.
Our
projected figures for unnecessary medical events occurring over a
10-year period are also dramatic.
TEN-YEAR
STATISTICS FOR UNNECESSARY INTERVENTION
164 million
Unnecessary
Events |
10-year Number |
Iatrogenic
Events |
Hospitalization |
89 million 4 |
17 million |
Procedures |
75 million 3 |
15 million |
TOTAL:
|
164 million |
|
These
projected figures show that a total of 164 million people,
approximately 56% of the population of the United States, have
been treated unnecessarily by the medical industry – in other
words, nearly 50,000 people per day.
INTRODUCTION
Never
before have the complete statistics on the multiple causes of
iatrogenesis been combined in one paper. Medical science amasses
tens of thousands of papers annually--each one a tiny fragment of
the whole picture. To look at only one piece and try to understand
the benefits and risks is to stand one inch away from an elephant
and describe everything about it. You have to pull back to reveal
the complete picture, such as we have done here. Each specialty,
each division of medicine, keeps their own records and data on
morbidity and mortality like pieces of a puzzle. But the numbers
and statistics were always hiding in plain sight. We have now
completed the painstaking work of reviewing thousands and
thousands of studies. Finally putting the puzzle together we came
up with some disturbing answers.
Is
American Medicine Working?
At
14 percent of the Gross National Product, health care spending
reached $1.6 trillion in 2003.15 Considering this enormous
expenditure, we should have the best medicine in the world. We
should be reversing disease, preventing disease, and doing minimal
harm. However, careful and objective review shows the opposite.
Because of the extraordinary narrow context of medical technology
through which contemporary medicine examines the human condition,
we are completely missing the full picture.
Medicine
is not taking into consideration the following monumentally
important aspects of a healthy human organism: (a) stress and how
it adversely affects the immune system and life processes; (b)
insufficient exercise; (c) excessive caloric intake; (d)
highly-processed and denatured foods grown in denatured and
chemically-damaged soil; and (e) exposure to tens of thousands of
environmental toxins. Instead of minimizing these disease-causing
factors, we actually cause more illness through medical
technology, diagnostic testing, overuse of medical and surgical
procedures, and overuse of pharmaceutical drugs. The huge
disservice of this therapeutic strategy is the result of little
effort or money being appropriated for preventing disease.
Under-reporting
of Iatrogenic Events
As
few as 5 percent and only up to 20 percent of iatrogenic acts are
ever reported.16,24,25,33,34 This implies that if medical errors
were completely and accurately reported, we would have a much
higher annual iatrogenic death rate than 783,936. Dr. Leape, in
1994, said his figure of 180,000 medical mistakes annually was
equivalent to three jumbo-jet crashes every two days.16 Our report
shows that six jumbo jets are falling out of the sky each and
every day.
Correcting
a Compromised System
What
we must deduce from this report is that medicine is in need of
complete and total reform: from the curriculum in medical schools
to protecting patients from excessive medical intervention. It is
quite obvious that we can’t change anything if we are not honest
about what needs to be changed. This report simply shows the
degree to which change is required.
We
are fully aware that what stands in the way of change are powerful
pharmaceutical companies, medical technology companies, and
special interest groups with enormous vested interests in the
business of medicine. They fund medical research, support medical
schools and hospitals, and advertise in medical journals. With
deep pockets they entice scientists and academics to support their
efforts. Such funding can sway the balance of opinion from
professional caution to uncritical acceptance of a new therapy or
drug.
You
only have to look at the number of invested people on hospital,
medical, and government health advisory boards to see conflict of
interest. The public is mostly unaware of these interlocking
interests. For example, a 2003 study found that nearly half of
medical school faculty, who serve on Institutional Review Boards
(IRB) to advise on clinical trial research, also serve as
consultants to the pharmaceutical industry.17 The authors were
concerned that such representation could cause potential conflicts
of interest.
A
news release by Dr. Erik Campbell, the lead author, said,
"Our previous research with faculty has shown us that ties to
industry can affect scientific behavior, leading to such things as
trade secrecy and delays in publishing research. It's possible
that similar relationships with companies could affect IRB
members' activities and attitudes.”18
Medical
Ethics and Conflict of Interest in Scientific Medicine
Jonathan
Quick, director of Essential Drugs and Medicines Policy for the
World Health Organization (WHO) wrote in a recent WHO Bulletin:
"If clinical trials become a commercial venture in which
self-interest overrules public interest and desire overrules
science, then the social contract which allows research on human
subjects in return for medical advances is broken."19
Former
editor of the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM), Dr. Marcia
Angell, struggled to bring the attention of the world to the
problem of commercializing scientific research in her outgoing
editorial titled “Is Academic Medicine for Sale?”20 Angell
called for stronger restrictions on pharmaceutical stock ownership
and other financial incentives for researchers. She said that
growing conflicts of interest are tainting science.
She
warned that, “When the boundaries between industry and academic
medicine become as blurred as they are now, the business goals of
industry influence the mission of medical schools in multiple
ways.” She did not discount the benefits of research but said a
Faustian bargain now existed between medical schools and the
pharmaceutical industry.
Angell
left the NEMJ in June 2000. Two years later, in June 2002, the
NEJM announced that it would now accept biased journalists (those
who accept money from drug companies) because it is too difficult
to find ones who have no ties. Another former editor of the
journal, Dr. Jerome Kassirer, said that was just not the case,
that there are plenty of researchers who don’t work for drug
companies.21 The ABC report said that one measurable tie between
pharmaceutical companies and doctors amounts to over $2 billion a
year spent for over 314,000 events that doctors attend.
The
ABC report also noted that a survey of clinical trials revealed
that when a drug company funds a study, there is a 90 percent
chance that the drug will be perceived as effective whereas a
non-drug company-funded study will show favorable results 50
percent of the time. It appears that money can’t buy you love
but it can buy you any "scientific" result you want. The
only safeguard to reporting these studies was if the journal
writers remained unbiased. That is no longer the case.
Cynthia
Crossen, writer for the Wall Street Journal in 1996, published
Tainted Truth: The Manipulation of Fact in America, a book about
the widespread practice of lying with statistics.22 Commenting on
the state of scientific research she said that, “The road to
hell was paved with the flood of corporate research dollars that
eagerly filled gaps left by slashed government research
funding.” Her data on financial involvement showed that in l981
the drug industry “gave” $292 million to colleges and
universities for research. In l991 it “gave” $2.1 billion.
THE
FIRST IATROGENIC STUDY
Dr.
Lucian L. Leape opened medicine’s Pandora’s box in his 1994
JAMA paper, “Error in Medicine”.16 He began the paper by
reminiscing about Florence Nightingale’s maxim--“first do no
harm.” But he found evidence of the opposite happening in
medicine. He found that Schimmel reported in 1964 that 20 percent
of hospital patients suffered iatrogenic injury, with a 20 percent
fatality rate. Steel in 1981 reported that 36 percent of
hospitalized patients experienced iatrogenesis with a 25 percent
fatality rate and adverse drug reactions were involved in 50
percent of the injuries. Bedell in 1991 reported that 64 percent
of acute heart attacks in one hospital were preventable and were
mostly due to adverse drug reactions.
However,
Leape focused on his and Brennan’s “Harvard Medical Practice
Study” published in 1991.16a They found that in 1984, in New
York State, there was a 4 percent iatrogenic injury rate for
patients with a 14 percent fatality rate. From the 98,609 patients
injured and the 14 percent fatality rate, he estimated that in the
whole of the U.S. 180,000 people die each year, partly as a result
of iatrogenic injury. Leape compared these deaths to the
equivalent of three jumbo-jet crashes every two days.
Why
Leape chose to use the much lower figure of four percent injury
for his analysis remains in question. Perhaps he wanted to tread
lightly. If Leape had, instead, calculated the average rate among
the three studies he cites (36 percent, 20 percent, and 4
percent), he would have come up with a 20 percent medical error
rate. The number of fatalities that he could have presented, using
an average rate of injury and his 14 percent fatality, is an
annual 1,189,576 iatrogenic deaths, or over ten jumbo jets
crashing every day.
Leape
acknowledged that the literature on medical error is sparse and we
are only seeing the tip of the iceberg. He said that when errors
are specifically sought out, reported rates are “distressingly
high”. He cited several autopsy studies with rates as high as 35
percent to 40 percent of missed diagnoses causing death. He also
commented that an intensive care unit reported an average of 1.7
errors per day per patient, and 29 percent of those errors were
potentially serious or fatal. We wonder: what is the effect on
someone who daily gets the wrong medication, the wrong dose, the
wrong procedure; how do we measure the accumulated burden of
injury; and when the patient finally succumbs after the tenth
error that week, what is entered on the death certificate?
Leape
calculated the rate of error in the intensive care unit. First, he
found that each patient had an average of 178 “activities”
(staff/procedure/medical interactions) a day, of which 1.7 were
errors, which means a 1 percent failure rate. To some this may not
seem like much, but putting this into perspective, Leape cited
industry standards where in aviation a 0.1 percent failure rate
would mean 2 unsafe plane landings per day at O’Hare airport; in
the U.S. Mail, 16,000 pieces of lost mail every hour; or in
banking, 32,000 bank checks deducted from the wrong bank account
every hour.
Analyzing
why there is so much medical error Leape acknowledged the lack of
reporting. Unlike a jumbo-jet crash, which gets instant media
coverage, hospital errors are spread out over the country in
thousands of different locations. They are also perceived as
isolated and unusual events. However, the most important reason
that medical error is unrecognized and growing, according to
Leape, was, and still is, that doctors and nurses are unequipped
to deal with human error, due to the culture of medical training
and practice.
Doctors
are taught that mistakes are unacceptable. Medical mistakes are
therefore viewed as a failure of character and any error equals
negligence. We can see how a great deal of sweeping under the rug
takes place since nobody is taught what to do when medical error
does occur. Leape cited McIntyre and Popper who said the
“infallibility model” of medicine leads to intellectual
dishonesty with a need to cover up mistakes rather than admit
them. There are no Grand Rounds on medical errors, no sharing of
failures among doctors and no one to support them emotionally when
their error harms a patient.
Leape
hoped his paper would encourage medicine “to fundamentally
change the way they think about errors and why they occur”.
It’s been almost a decade since this groundbreaking work, but
the mistakes continue to soar.
One
year later, in 1995, a report in JAMA said that, "Over a
million patients are injured in U.S. hospitals each year, and
approximately 280,000 die annually as a result of these injuries.
Therefore, the iatrogenic death rate dwarfs the annual automobile
accident mortality rate of 45,000 and accounts for more deaths
than all other accidents combined."23
At
a press conference in 1997 Dr. Leape released a nationwide poll on
patient iatrogenesis conducted by the National Patient Safety
Foundation (NPSF), which is sponsored by the American Medical
Association. The survey found that more than 100 million Americans
have been impacted directly and indirectly by a medical mistake.
Forty-two percent were directly affected and a total of 84 percent
personally knew of someone who had experienced a medical
mistake.14 Dr. Leape is a founding member of the NPSF.
Dr.
Leape at this press conference also updated his 1994 statistics
saying that medical errors in inpatient hospital settings
nationwide, as of 1997, could be as high as three million and
could cost as much as $200 billion. Leape used a 14 percent
fatality rate to determine a medical error death rate of 180,000
in 1994.16 In 1997, using Leape’s base number of three million
errors, the annual deaths could be as much as 420,000 for
inpatients alone. This does not include nursing home deaths, or
people in the outpatient community dying of drug side effects or
as the result of medical procedures.
ONLY
A FRACTION OF MEDICAL ERRORS ARE REPORTED
Leape,
in 1994, said that he was well aware that medical errors were not
being reported.16 According to a study in two obstetrical units in
the U.K., only about one quarter of the adverse incidents on the
units are ever reported for reasons of protecting staff or
preserving reputations, or fear of reprisals, including law
suits.24 An analysis by Wald and Shojania found that only 1.5
percent of all adverse events result in an incident report, and
only 6 percent of adverse drug events are identified properly.
The
authors learned that the American College of Surgeons gives a very
broad guess that surgical incident reports routinely capture only
5-30 percent of adverse events. In one surgical study only 20
percent of surgical complications resulted in discussion at
Morbidity and Mortality Rounds.25 From these studies it appears
that all the statistics that are gathered may be substantially
underestimating the number of adverse drug and medical therapy
incidents. It also underscores the fact that our mortality
statistics are actually conservative figures.
An
article in Psychiatric Times outlines the stakes involved with
reporting medical errors.26 They found that the public is fearful
of suffering a fatal medical error, and doctors are afraid they
will be sued if they report an error. This brings up the obvious
question: who is reporting medical errors? Usually it is the
patient or the patient’s surviving family. If no one notices the
error, it is never reported. Janet Heinrich, an associate director
at the U.S.
General
Accounting Office responsible for health financing and public
health issues, testifying before a House subcommittee about
medical errors, said that, "The full magnitude of their
threat to the American public is unknown.” She added,
"Gathering valid and useful information about adverse events
is extremely difficult." She acknowledged that the fear of
being blamed, and the potential for legal liability, played key
roles in the under-reporting of errors. The Psychiatric Times
noted that the American Medical Association is strongly opposed to
mandatory reporting of medical errors.26 If doctors aren’t
reporting, what about nurses? In a survey of nurses, they also did
not report medical mistakes for fear of retaliation.27
Standard
medical pharmacology texts admit that relatively few doctors ever
report adverse drug reactions to the FDA.28 The reasons range from
not knowing such a reporting system exists to fear of being sued
because they prescribed a drug that caused harm. 29 However, it is
this tremendously flawed system of voluntary reporting from
doctors that we depend on to know whether a drug or a medical
intervention is harmful.
Pharmacology
texts will also tell doctors how hard it is to separate drug side
effects from disease symptoms. Treatment failure is most often
attributed to the disease and not the drug or the doctor. Doctors
are warned, “Probably nowhere else in professional life are
mistakes so easily hidden, even from ourselves.”30 It may be
hard to accept, but not difficult to understand, why only one in
twenty side effects is reported to either hospital administrators
or the FDA.31,31a
If
hospitals admitted to the actual number of errors and mistakes,
which is about 20 times what is reported, they would come under
intense scrutiny.32 Jerry Phillips, associate director of the
Office of Post Marketing Drug Risk Assessment at the FDA, confirms
this number. “In the broader area of adverse drug reaction data,
the 250,000 reports received annually probably represent only five
percent of the actual reactions that occur.”33 Dr. Jay Cohen,
who has extensively researched adverse drug reactions, comments
that because only five percent of adverse drug reactions are being
reported, there are, in reality, five million medication reactions
each year.34
It
remains that whatever figure you choose to believe about the side
effects from drugs, all the experts agree that you have to
multiply that by 20 to get a more accurate estimate of what is
really occurring in the burgeoning “field” of iatrogenic
medicine.
A
2003 survey is all the more distressing because there seems to be
no improvement in error-reporting even with all the attention on
this topic. Dr. Dorothea Wild surveyed medical residents at a
community hospital in Connecticut. She found that only half of the
residents were aware that the hospital had a medical
error-reporting system, and the vast majority didn’t use it at
all. Dr. Wild says this does not bode well for the future. If
doctors don’t learn error-reporting in their training, they will
never use it. And she adds that error reporting is the first step
in finding out where the gaps in the medical system are and fixing
them. That first baby step has not even begun.35
PUBLIC
SUGGESTIONS ON IATROGENESIS
In
a telephone survey, 1,207 adults were asked to indicate how
effective they thought the following would be in reducing
preventable medical errors that resulted in serious harm:36
- giving
doctors more time to spend with patients: very effective 78
percent
- requiring
hospitals to develop systems to avoid medical errors: very
effective 74 percent
- better
training of health professionals: very effective 73 percent
- using
only doctors specially trained in intensive care medicine on
intensive care units: very effective 73 percent
- requiring
hospitals to report all serious medical errors to a state
agency: very effective 71 percent
- increasing
the number of hospital nurses: very effective 69 percent
- reducing
the work hours of doctors-in-training to avoid fatigue: very
effective 66 percent
- encouraging
hospitals to voluntarily report serious medical errors to a
state agency: very effective 62 percent
DRUG
IATROGENESIS
Drugs
comprise the major treatment modality of scientific medicine. With
the discovery of the “Germ Theory” medical scientists
convinced the public that infectious organisms were the cause of
illness. Finding the “cure” for these infections proved much
harder than anyone imagined. From the beginning, chemical drugs
promised much more than they delivered. But far beyond not
working, the drugs also caused incalculable side effects. The
drugs themselves, even when properly prescribed, have side effects
that can be fatal, as Lazarou’s study1 shows. But human error
can make the situation even worse.
Medication
Errors
A
survey of a 1992 national pharmacy database found a total of
429,827 medication errors from 1,081 hospitals. Medication errors
occurred in 5.22 percent of patients admitted to these hospitals
each year. The authors concluded that a minimum of 90,895 patients
annually were harmed by medication errors in the country as a
whole.37
A
2002 study shows that 20 percent of hospital medications for
patients had dosage mistakes. Nearly 40 percent of these errors
were considered potentially harmful to the patient. In a typical
300-patient hospital the number of errors per day were 40.38
Problems
involving patients’ medications were even higher the following
year. The error rate intercepted by pharmacists in this study was
24 percent, making the potential minimum number of patients harmed
by prescription drugs 417,908.39
Recent
Adverse Drug Reactions
More
recent studies on adverse drug reactions show that the figures
from 1994 (published in Lazarou’s 1998 JAMA article) may be
increasing. A 2003 study followed 400 patients after discharge
from a tertiary care hospital (hospital care that requires highly
specialized skills, technology or support services). Seventy-six
patients (19 percent) had adverse events. Adverse drug events were
the most common at 66 percent. The next most common events were
procedure-related injuries at 17 percent.40
In
a NEJM study an alarming one-in-four patients suffered observable
side effects from the more than 3.34 billion prescription drugs
filled in 2002.41 One of the doctors who produced the study was
interviewed by Reuters and commented that, "With these
10-minute appointments, it's hard for the doctor to get into
whether the symptoms are bothering the patients."42 William
Tierney, who editorialized on the NEJM study, said “… given
the increasing number of powerful drugs available to care for the
aging population, the problem will only get worse.”
The
drugs with the worst record of side effects were the SSRIs, the
NSAIDs, and calcium-channel blockers. Reuters also reported that
prior research has suggested that nearly five percent of hospital
admissions--over 1 million per year--are the result of drug side
effects. But most of the cases are not documented as such. The
study found one of the reasons for this failure: in nearly
two-thirds of the cases, doctors couldn’t diagnose drug side
effects or the side effects persisted because the doctor failed to
heed the warning signs.
Medicating
Our Feelings
We
only need to look at the side effects of antidepressant drugs,
which give hope to a depressed population. Patients seeking a more
joyful existence and relief from worry, stress and anxiety, fall
victim to the messages blatantly displayed on TV and billboards.
Often, instead of relief, they also fall victim to a myriad of
iatrogenic side effects of antidepressant medication.
Also,
a whole generation of antidepressant users has resulted from young
people growing up on Ritalin. Medicating youth and modifying their
emotions must have some impact on how they learn to deal with
their feelings. They learn to equate coping with drugs and not
their inner resources. As adults, these medicated youth reach for
alcohol, drugs, or even street drugs, to cope. According to the
Journal of the American Medical Association, “Ritalin acts much
like cocaine.”43 Today’s marketing of mood-modifying drugs,
such as Prozac or Zoloft, makes them not only socially acceptable
but almost a necessity in today’s stressful world.
Television
Diagnosis
In
order to reach the widest audience possible, drug companies are no
longer just targeting medical doctors with their message about
antidepressants. By 1995 drug companies had tripled the amount of
money allotted to direct advertising of prescription drugs to
consumers. The majority of the money is spent on seductive
television ads. From 1996 to 2000, spending rose from $791 million
to nearly $2.5 billion.44 Even though $2.5 billion may seem like a
lot of money, the authors comment that it only represents 15
percent of the total pharmaceutical advertising budget.
According
to medical experts “there is no solid evidence on the
appropriateness of prescribing that results from consumers
requesting an advertised drug.” However, the drug companies
maintain that direct-to-consumer advertising is educational. Dr.
Sidney M. Wolfe, of the Public Citizen Health Research Group in
Washington, D.C., argues that the public is often misinformed
about these ads.45 People want what they see on television and are
told to go to their doctor for a prescription.
Doctors
in private practice either acquiesce to their patients’ demands
for these drugs or spend valuable clinic time trying to talk
patients out of unnecessary drugs. Dr. Wolfe remarks that one
important study found that people mistakenly believe that the
“FDA reviews all ads before they are released and allows only
the safest and most effective drugs to be promoted directly to the
public.”46
How
Do We Know Drugs Are Safe?
Another
aspect of scientific medicine that the public takes for granted is
the testing of new drugs. Unlike the class of people that take
drugs who are ill and need medication, in general, drugs are
tested on individuals who are fairly healthy and not on other
medications that can interfere with findings. But when they are
declared “safe” and enter the drug prescription books, they
are naturally going to be used by people on a variety of other
medications and who also have a lot of other health problems.
Then,
a new Phase of drug testing called Post-Approval comes into play,
which is the documentation of side effects once drugs hit the
market. In one very telling report, the General Accounting Office
(an agency of the U.S. Government) "found that of the 198
drugs approved by the FDA between 1976 and 1985 … 102 (or 51.5
percent) had serious post-approval risks … the serious
post-approval risks (included) heart failure, myocardial
infarction, anaphylaxis, respiratory depression and arrest,
seizures, kidney and liver failure, severe blood disorders, birth
defects and fetal toxicity, and blindness."47
The
investigative show NBC’s “Dateline” wondered if your doctor
is moonlighting as a drug rep. After a year-long investigation
they reported that because doctors can legally prescribe any drug
to any patient for any condition, drug companies heavily promote
"off-label" and frequently inappropriate and non-tested
uses of these medications in spite of the fact that these drugs
are only approved for specific indications they have been tested
for.48
The
leading causes of adverse drug reactions are antibiotics (17
percent), cardiovascular drugs (17 percent), chemotherapy (15
percent), and analgesics and anti-inflammatory agents (15
percent).49
Specific
Drug Iatrogenesis: Antibiotics
Dr.
Egger, in a recent editorial, wrote that after 50 years of
increasing use of antibiotics, 30 million pounds of antibiotics
are used in America per year.50 Twenty-five million pounds of this
total are used in animal husbandry. The vast majority of this
amount, 23 million pounds, is used to try to prevent disease, the
stress of shipping, and to promote growth. Only 2 million pounds
are given for specific animal infections. Dr. Egger reminds us
that low concentrations of antibiotics are measurable in many of
our foods, rivers, and streams around the world. Much of this is
seeping into bodies of water from animal farms.
Egger
says overuse of antibiotics results in food-borne infections
resistant to antibiotics. Salmonella is found in 20 percent of
ground meat but constant exposure of cattle to antibiotics has
made 84 percent of salmonella resistant to at least one
anti-salmonella antibiotic. Diseased animal food accounts for 80
percent of salmonellosis in humans, or 1.4 million cases per year.
The
conventional approach to dealing with this epidemic is to radiate
food to try to kill all organisms but keep using the antibiotics
that cause the original problem. Approximately 20 percent of
chickens are contaminated with Campylobacter jejuni causing 2.4
million human cases of illness annually. Fifty-four percent of
these organisms are resistant to at least one anti-campylobacter
antimicrobial.
A
ban on growth-promoting antibiotics in Denmark began in 1999,
which led to a decrease from 453,200 pounds to 195,800 pounds
within a year. Another report from Scandinavia found that taking
away antibiotic growth promoters had no or minimal effect on food
production costs. Egger further warns that in America the current
crowded, unsanitary methods of animal farming support constant
stress and infection, and are geared toward high antibiotic use.
He says these conditions would have to be changed along with
cutting back on antibiotic use.
In
America, over 3 million pounds of antibiotics are used every year
on humans. With a population of 284 million Americans, this amount
is enough to give every man, woman and child 10 teaspoons of pure
antibiotics per year. Egger says that exposure to a steady stream
of antibiotics has altered pathogens such as Streptococcus
pneumoniae, Staplococcus aureus, and entercocci, to name a few.
Almost
half of patients with upper respiratory tract infections in the
United States still receive antibiotics from their doctor.51
According to the CDC, 90 percent of upper respiratory infections
are viral and should not be treated with antibiotics. In Germany
the prevalence for systemic antibiotic use in children aged 0 to 6
years was 42.9 percent.52
Data
taken from nine U.S. health plans between 1996 and 2000 on
antibiotic use in 25,000 children found that rates of antibiotic
use decreased. Antibiotic use in children, aged 3 months to under
3 years, decreased 24 percent, from 2.46 to 1.89 antibiotic
prescriptions per/patient per/year. For children, 3 years to under
6 years, there was a 25 percent reduction from 1.47 to 1.09
antibiotic prescriptions per/patient per/year. And for children
aged 6 to under 18 years, there was a 16 percent reduction from
0.85 to 0.69 antibiotic prescriptions per/ patient /per year.53
Although there was a reduction in antibiotic use, the data
indicate that on average every child in America receives 1.22
antibiotic prescriptions annually.
Group
A beta-hemolytic streptococci is the only common cause of sore
throat that requires antibiotics, penicillin and erythromycin
being the only recommended treatment. However, 90 percent of sore
throats are viral. The authors of this study estimated there were
6.7 million adult annual visits for sore throat between 1989 and
1999 in the United States. Antibiotics were used in 73 percent of
visits. Furthermore, patients treated with antibiotics were given
non-recommended broad-spectrum antibiotics in 68 percent of
visits.
The
authors noted, that from 1989 to 1999, there was a significant
increase in the newer and more expensive broad-spectrum
antibiotics and a decrease in use of penicillin and erythromycin,
which are the recommended antibiotics.54 If antibiotics were given
in 73 percent of visits and should have only been given in 10
percent, this represents 63 percent, or a total of 4.2 million
visits for sore throat that ended in unnecessary antibiotic
prescriptions between1989 and 1999. In 1995, Dr. Besser and the
CDC cited 2003 cited much higher figures of 20 million unnecessary
antibiotic prescriptions per year for viral infections.2 Neither
of these figures takes into account the number of unnecessary
antibiotics used for non-fatal conditions such as acne, intestinal
infection, skin infections, ear infections, etc.
The
Problem with Antibiotics: They are Anti-Life
On
September 17, 2003 the CDC relaunched a program, started in 1995,
called “Get Smart: Know When Antibiotics Work.”55 This is a
$1.6 million campaign to educate patients about the overuse and
inappropriate use of antibiotics. Most people involved with
alternative medicine have known about the dangers of overuse of
antibiotics for decades. Finally the government is focusing on the
problem, yet they are only putting a miniscule amount of money
into an iatrogenic epidemic that is costing billions of dollars
and thousands of lives.
The
CDC warns that 90 percent of upper respiratory infections,
including children’s ear infections, are viral, and antibiotics
don’t treat viral infection. More than 40 percent of about 50
million prescriptions for antibiotics each year in physicians'
offices were inappropriate.2 And using antibiotics, when not
needed, can lead to the development of deadly strains of bacteria
that are resistant to drugs and cause more than 88,000 deaths due
to hospital-acquired infections.9
However,
the CDC seems to be blaming patients for misusing antibiotics even
though they are only available on prescription from a doctor who
should know how to prescribe properly. Dr. Richard Besser, head of
“Get Smart,” says "Programs that have just targeted
physicians have not worked. Direct-to-consumer advertising of
drugs is to blame in some cases.” Dr. Besser says the program
“teaches patients and the general public that antibiotics are
precious resources that must be used correctly if we want to have
them around when we need them. Hopefully, as a result of this
campaign, patients will feel more comfortable asking their doctors
for the best care for their illnesses, rather than asking for
antibiotics."56
And
what does the “best care” constitute? The CDC does not
elaborate and patently avoids the latest research on the dozens of
nutraceuticals scientifically proven to treat viral infections and
boost the immune system. Will their doctors recommend vitamin C,
echinacea, elderberry, vitamin A, zinc, or homeopathic
oscillococcinum? No, they won’t. The archaic solutions offered
by the CDC include a radio ad, “Just Say No--Snort, sniffle,
sneeze--No antibiotics please." Their commonsense
recommendations, that most people do anyway, include resting,
drinking plenty of fluids, and using a humidifier.
The
pharmaceutical industry claims they are all for limiting the use
of antibiotics. In order to make sure that happens, the drug
company Bayer is sponsoring a program called, “Operation Clean
Hands,” through an organization called LIBRA.57 The CDC is also
involved with trying to minimize antibiotic resistance, but
nowhere in their publications is there any reference to the role
of nutraceuticals in boosting the immune system nor to the
thousands of journal articles that support this approach.
This
recalcitrant tunnel vision and refusal to use available non-drug
alternatives is absolutely inappropriate when the CDC is
desperately trying to curb the nightmare of overuse of
antibiotics. The CDC should also be called to task because it is
only focusing on the overuse of antibiotics. There are similar
nightmares for every class of drug being prescribed today.
Drugs
Pollute Our Water Supply
We
have reached the point of saturation with prescription drugs. We
have arrived at the point where every body of water tested
contains measurable drug residues. We are inundated with drugs.
The tons of antibiotics used in animal farming, which run off into
the water table and surrounding bodies of water, are conferring
antibiotic resistance to germs in sewage, and these germs are also
found in our water supply.
Flushed
down our toilets are tons of drugs and drug metabolites that also
find their way into our water supply. We have no idea what the
long-term consequences of ingesting a mixture of drugs and
drug-breakdown products will do to our health. It’s another
level of iatrogenic disease that we are unable to completely
measure.58-67
Specific
Drug Iatrogenesis: NSAIDs
It’s
not just America that is plagued with iatrogenesis. A survey of
1,072 French general practitioners (GPs) tested their basic
pharmacological knowledge and practice in prescribing NSAIDs.
Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) rank first among
commonly prescribed drugs for serious adverse reactions. The
results of the study suggested that GPs don’t have adequate
knowledge of these drugs and are unable to effectively manage
adverse reactions.68
A
cross-sectional survey of 125 patients attending specialty pain
clinics in South London found that possible iatrogenic factors
such as “over-investigation, inappropriate information, and
advice given to patients as well as misdiagnosis, over-treatment,
and inappropriate prescription of medication were common.”69
Specific
Drug Iatrogenesis: Cancer Chemotherapy
In
1989, a German biostatistician, Ulrich Abel PhD, after publishing
dozens of papers on cancer chemotherapy, wrote a monograph
“Chemotherapy of Advanced Epithelial Cancer.” It was later
published in a shorter form in a peer-reviewed medical journal.70
Dr. Abel presented a comprehensive analysis of clinical trials and
publications representing over 3,000 articles examining the value
of cytotoxic chemotherapy on advanced epithelial cancer.
Epithelial cancer is the type of cancer we are most familiar with.
It arises from epithelium found in the lining of body organs such
as breast, prostate, lung, stomach, or bowel.
From
these sites cancer usually infiltrates into adjacent tissue and
spreads to bone, liver, lung, or the brain. With his exhaustive
review Dr. Abel concludes that there is no direct evidence that
chemotherapy prolongs survival in patients with advanced
carcinoma. He said that in small-cell lung cancer and perhaps
ovarian cancer the therapeutic benefit is only slight. Dr. Abel
goes on to say, “Many oncologists take it for granted that
response to therapy prolongs survival, an opinion which is based
on a fallacy and which is not supported by clinical studies.”
Over
a decade after Dr. Abel’s exhaustive review of chemotherapy,
there seems no decrease in its use for advanced carcinoma. For
example, when conventional chemotherapy and radiation has not
worked to prevent metastases in breast cancer, high-dose
chemotherapy (HDC) along with stem-cell transplant (SCT) is the
treatment of choice. However, in March 2000, results from the
largest multi-center randomized controlled trial conducted thus
far showed that, compared to a prolonged course of monthly
conventional-dose chemotherapy, HDC and SCT were of no benefit.71
There was even a slightly lower survival rate for the HDC/SCT
group. And the authors noted that serious adverse effects occurred
more often in the HDC group than the standard-dose group. There
was one treatment-related death (within 100 days of therapy) in
the HDC group, but none in the conventional chemotherapy group.
The women in this trial were highly selected as having the best
chance to respond.
There
is also no all-encompassing follow-up study like Dr. Abel’s that
tells us if there is any improvement in cancer-survival statistics
since 1989. In fact, we need to research whether chemotherapy
itself is responsible for secondary cancers instead of progression
of the original disease. We continue to question why
well-researched alternative cancer treatments aren’t used.
Drug
Companies Fined
Periodically,
a drug manufacturer is fined by the FDA when the abuses are too
glaring and impossible to cover up. The May 2002 Washington Post
reported that the maker of Claritin, Schering-Plough Corp., was to
pay a $500 million fine to the FDA for quality-control problems at
four of its factories.72 The FDA tabulated infractions that
included 90 percent, or 125 of the drugs they made since 1998.
Besides the fine, the company had to stop manufacturing 73 drugs
or suffer another $175 million fine. PR statements by the company
told another story. The company assured consumers that they should
still feel confident in its products.
Such
a large settlement serves as a warning to the drug industry about
maintaining strict manufacturing practices and has given the FDA
more clout in dealing with drug company compliance. According to
the Washington Post article, a federal appeals court ruled in 1999
that the FDA could seize the profits of companies that violate
"good manufacturing practices." Since that time Abbott
Laboratories Inc. paid $100 million for failing to meet quality
standards in the production of medical test kits, and Wyeth
Laboratories Inc. paid $30 million in 2000 to settle accusations
of poor manufacturing practices.
The
indictment against Schering-Plough came after the Public Citizen
Health Research Group, lead by Dr. Sidney Wolfe, called for a
criminal investigation of Schering-Plough, charging that the
company distributed albuterol asthma inhalers even though it knew
the units were missing the active ingredient.
UNNECESSARY
SURGICAL PROCEDURES
Summary:
1974:
2.4 million unnecessary surgeries performed annually resulting in
11,900 deaths at an annual cost of $3.9 billion.73,74
2001:
7.5 million unnecessary surgical procedures resulting in 37,136
deaths at a cost of $122 billion (using 1974 dollars).3
It’s
very difficult to obtain accurate statistics when studying
unnecessary surgery. Dr. Leape in 1989 wrote that perhaps 30
percent of controversial surgeries are unnecessary. Controversial
surgeries include Cesarean section, tonsillectomy, appendectomy,
hysterectomy, gastrectomy for obesity, breast implants, and
elective breast implants.74
Almost
30 years ago, in 1974, the Congressional Committee on Interstate
and Foreign Commerce held hearings on unnecessary surgery. They
found that 17.6 percent of recommendations for surgery were not
confirmed by a second opinion. The House Subcommittee on Oversight
and Investigations extrapolated these figures and estimated that,
on a nationwide basis, there were 2.4 million unnecessary
surgeries performed annually, resulting in 11,900 deaths at an
annual cost of $3.9 billion.73
In
2001, the top 50 medical and surgical procedures totaled
approximately 41.8 million. These figures were taken from the
Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project within the Agency for
Healthcare Research and Quality.13 Using 17.6 percent from the
1974 U.S. Congressional House Subcommittee Oversight Investigation
as the percentage of unnecessary surgical procedures, and
extrapolating from the death rate in 1974, we come up with an
unnecessary procedure number of 7.5 million (7,489,718) and a
death rate of 37,136, at a cost of $122 billion (using 1974
dollars).
Researchers
performed a very similar analysis, using the 1974 ‘unnecessary
surgery percentage’ of 17.6, on back surgery. In 1995,
researchers testifying before the Department of Veterans Affairs
estimated that of 250,000 back surgeries in the U.S. at a hospital
cost of $11,000 per patient, the total number of unnecessary back
surgeries each year in the U.S. could approach 44,000, costing as
much as $484 million.75
The
unnecessary surgery figures are escalating just as prescription
drugs driven by television advertising. Media-driven surgery such
as gastric bypass for obesity “modeled” by Hollywood
personalities seduces obese people to think this route is safe and
sexy. There is even a problem of surgery being advertised on the
Internet.76 A study in Spain declares that between 20 percent and
25 percent of total surgical practice represents unnecessary
operations.77
According
to data from the National Center for Health Statistics from 1979
to 1984, there was a nine percent increase in the total number of
surgical procedures, and the number of surgeons grew by 20
percent. The author notes that there has not been a parallel
increase in the number of surgeries despite a recent large
increase in the number of surgeons. There was concern that there
would be too many surgeons to share a small surgical caseload.78
The
previous author spoke too soon--there was no cause to worry about
a small surgical caseload. By 1994, there was an increase of 38
percent for a total of 7,929,000 cases for the top ten surgical
procedures. In 1983, surgical cases totaled 5,731,000. In 1994,
cataract surgery was number one with over two million operations,
and second was Cesarean section (858,000 procedures). Inguinal
hernia operations were third (689,000 procedures), and knee
arthroscopy, in seventh place, grew 153 percent (632,000
procedures) while prostate surgery declined 29 percent (229,000
procedures).79
The
list of iatrogenic diseases from surgery is as long as the list of
procedures themselves. In one study epidural catheters were
inserted to deliver anesthetic into the epidural space around the
spinal nerves to block them for lower Cesarean section, abdominal
surgery, or prostate surgery. In some cases, non-sterile
technique, during catheter insertion, resulted in serious
infections, even leading to limb paralysis.80
In
one review of the literature, the authors demonstrated “a
significant rate of overutilization of coronary angiography,
coronary artery surgery, cardiac pacemaker insertion, upper
gastrointestinal endoscopies, carotid endarterectomies, back
surgery, and pain-relieving procedures.”81
A
1987 JAMA study found the following significant levels of
inappropriate surgery: 17 percent of cases for coronary
angiography, 32 percent for carotid endarterectomy, and 17 percent
for upper gastrointestinal tract endoscopy.82 Using the Healthcare
Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP) statistics provided by the
government for 2001, the number of people getting upper
gastrointestinal endoscopy, which usually entails biopsy, was
697,675; the number getting endarterectomy was 142,401; and the
number having coronary angiography was 719,949.13 Therefore,
according to the JAMA study 17 percent, or 118,604 people had an
unnecessary endoscopy procedure. Endarterectomy occurred in
142,401 patients; potentially 32 percent or 45,568 did not need
this procedure. And 17 percent of 719,949, or 122,391 people
receiving coronary angiography were subjected to this highly
invasive procedure unnecessarily. These are all forms of medical
iatrogenesis.
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