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Some medical issues (Read 284 times)
bogarde73
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Some medical issues
Oct 31st, 2013 at 10:08am
 
1. Chatting with a cardiologist, I was astonished to hear that Australia is 10-15 years behind the US, UK and others in the diagnostic techniques relating to cardio-vascular and stroke patients.
One of the common procedures used here, the angiogram, is years out of date as a tool. It seems that it fails to find serious problems in 1 out of 3 cases and has been replaced as the technique of choice by a much more advanced test.
And, apparently, the roadblock in the way of keeping up with the rest of the world is not funding but resistance from the medical profession in keeping up to date and from vested financial interests in continuing current practices.
Another test which is available overseas but is rarely used here is one that can determine the probability, for patients who have had an initial stroke, of a further strokes occurring.

2. The cost of "fat beds" in hospitals is one of those increased cost burdens you'd think we could do without.
The increasing incidence of obesity has seen hospitals forced to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars in acquiring a stock of wider and heavier weight-bearing beds and chairs, as well as trolleys and operating tables.
Unbelievable isn't it?
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bogarde73
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Re: Some medical issues
Reply #1 - Oct 31st, 2013 at 10:21am
 
Major prostate cancer study flawed: doctors
 
DateOctober 29, 2013

Leading doctors have called for an independent reappraisal of a powerful prostate cancer study after a review found it may have misled men into believing PSA screening tests can save lives.

Every year millions of men have a prostate specific antigen (PSA) blood test in the belief it will detect early-stage prostate cancer, giving them the best chance at swift and potentially lifesaving treatment.

The pivotal research underpinning this claim is the European Randomised Study of Screening for Prostate Cancer, which randomly allocated 162,000 men aged in their 50s and 60s to either a screening or control group. Those screened were given PSA blood tests every four years.

After 11 years, the study concluded that the screened men had a 21 per cent reduced chance of dying from prostate cancer.

However, a new Australian review of the study, published this month in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, has cast serious doubt on its results after finding a large disparity in the treatments given to those diagnosed with prostate cancer in the control group compared with those who were screened.

It found that men with prostate cancer in the control group were twice as likely as those in the screening group to receive androgen-deprivation therapy alone – a hormone treatment that is known to produce inferior outcomes for early-stage cancer and may even encourage some cancer cells to grow.

The apparent bias appears to have increased the chances of earlier death for men in the control group rather than reducing the chances of death for those receiving PSA screening.

The review was conducted by adjunct clinical associate professor Ian Haines, an oncologist at Monash University and Cabrini Hospital, and Dr George Miklos, a scientist who heads Secure Genetics in Sydney. It found that if only 11 men in the control group had not died of prostate cancer, there would have been no lifesaving effect attributed to screening in the European study.

"The picture that emerges from the European trial is a sobering one. The claim of lives saved by screening and treatment is so flawed as to be clinically meaningless," Dr Miklos said.
PSA tests are controversial because they can cause "overdiagnosis" of prostate cancer that is so slow-growing it was never going to cause men harm. It is now estimated that for every man thought to be saved by the test, another 12 to 47 will be diagnosed with cancer that will not kill them. Many will have surgery and other interventions that can lead to sexual impotence and incontinence.

In response to the Australian review of the European study, chief medical officer of the American Cancer Society Otis Brawley called for the European researchers to provide their raw data for independent analysis. Dr Brawley’s call was backed by two public health experts at Bond University and Sydney University, professors Chris Del Mar and Bruce Armstrong.

Two of the researchers who worked on the European study, Professor Fritz Schroder and Dr Monique J. Roobol, would not say if they planned to release their raw data for independent analysis, but Professor Schröder said he disagreed with the Australian findings. In an email, Dr Roobol said all their data had been "analysed with great care".

A spokesman for the Urological Society of Australia and New Zealand, Shomik Sengupta, said he did not think higher rates of hormone therapy had caused higher death rates in the study's control group. He said the European study and others suggested PSA testing saved lives and that urologists were doing their best to limit the potential harms associated with the tests.

‘‘Men continue to die from prostate cancer and PSA testing offers an opportunity to find the disease at an earlier stage and address it,’’ he said.
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ian
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Re: Some medical issues
Reply #2 - Oct 31st, 2013 at 10:26am
 
What we need to start doing is rationing medcial resources. We cannot continue to keep throwing unlimited medical resources at people who have all these lifestyle illnesses. If you want to eat yourself into the grave, then do it but not on the taxpayers dime.
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cods
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Re: Some medical issues
Reply #3 - Oct 31st, 2013 at 11:06am
 
surely early detection would make a difference..?? and if people had the screening maybe from a certain age onwards..especially if it is a family disease

that would have to be better..

this news would surely make even less men go to the doctor???
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