Friday, February 5, 2010

The Obama Administration is Violating the Hippocratic Oath of Policy: First, Fund No Harm




What's in a name? Good question. Sometimes, as we all know, government agencies have names that run counter to their true function. The most extreme examples come from George Orwell, of course, Uncle Sam, our federal government, can run a close second. And so it is, for example, that an agency dedicated to advancing science is actually spending its money to diminish science.

Robert M. Goldberg, vice president of the Center for Medicine in the Public Interest, goes digging into the Obama budget proposal, and finds some astounding skeletons rattling around in there. Skeletons that, of course, we are paying for.

Specifically, he observes that the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), whose motto reads, "Advancing Excellence in Health Care," is actually funding groups that are making healthcare worse. The big issue right now is vaccines; everyone knows that some fringe groups have come out against vaccines, and had influence. But not everyone knows that AHRQ, for which Obama wants $640 million next year, is funding some of those groups. Take a look:

AHRQ's involvement with anti-vaccine groups is also longstanding. It has given millions a year to Consumers United for Evidence Based Care (CUE) an organization that "advocates for local and federal legislative changes," in favor of CER. CUE includes groups like the Center for Science in the Public Interest and the National Center for Trangender Health. The anti-vaccine groups SAFEMINDS and the National Vaccine Information Center are also active parts of CUE.


Goldberg makes the further point that AHRQ is funding the worst and sloppiest sort of Comparative Effectiveness Research, the kind that reaches broad conclusions about "efficacy," without noticing that people are different, and that some treatments work better for some people than for others. That is, bad CER is a formula for the worst kind of "one size fits all" government policymaking. As Goldberg explains:

So, for instance, in reviewing the "science" of mammography, AHRQ ignored "differences in outcomes among certain risk subgroups, such as women with BRCA1 or BRCA2 genetic susceptibility mutations, women who are healthier or sicker than average, or black women who seem to have more disease at younger ages than white women." As a result, the study only provided "estimates of the average benefits and harms."

That's why Nobel Prize winner and NIH Director Francis Collins who helped map the human genome worries that CER studies are a step backwards because they consider "everybody equivalent, which we know they are not." Collins says that CER -- and AHRQ by extension -- fails to use "all that we have gained in understanding how individuals differ and how that could be factored into better diagnostics and preventive strategies."


From here, it's just a hop, skip, and a jump to Lysenkoism. It's bad enough that this is bad science--but remember: these are your tax dollars at work!

So when someone from the government comes up to you and says, "I'm from the Agency for Health Care Research and Quality, and we are here to help your healthcare"--please understand that, at best, the picture is more complicated than that.

Goldberg concludes:

Given the deficit, AHRQ's budget should be cut, starting with is funding of outdated science, transgender advocacy and anti-vaccine movements. That would insure CER actually improved the public health.

Here's the text of the Goldberg article, which appears in The American Spectator this morning:

This week the British medical journal Lancet officially retracted an already discredited article it published by Andrew Wakefield which falsely claimed vaccines caused autism. (See how the journal was shamed into doing the right thing here.)

At the same time, President Obama increased the budget of the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) -- charged with developing information about what are the best and most cost-effective medical treatments -- by $640 million, including money for anti-vaccine groups who regard Wakefield as a hero and push studies examining the effectiveness of treatments and diets based on Wakefield's study for reversing or curing autism.

AHRQ is the same agency that provided the United States Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) the data for recommending women under the age of 50 not get a regular mammogram. Before every major health group rejected the decision, the administration said the guideline was based on the "best available science."

Mentioned twelve times in the health bill, AHRQ states its goal is "translating research into improved health care practice and policy. " In fact, AHRQ was and is the administration's go-to agency for "bending the healthcare cost curve." Hence, in 2009 AHRQ's budget increased from $300 million to $1 billion for "comparative effectiveness research" (CER): studies looking at two or more treatments or a diagnostic for the same disease to see if one delivers equal or better results for the same amount of money. The studies would be used to create government guidelines for hundreds of medical treatments like the mammogram decision.

Proponents claim that CER helps doctors make better "patient-centered" decisions instead of one-size fits all recommendations. But AHRQ spends all its money making comparisons based on research -- as it did in producing the study recommending against routine mammography for women under 50 -- that ignores individual differences in patients.

So, for instance, in reviewing the "science" of mammography, AHRQ ignored "differences in outcomes among certain risk subgroups, such as women with BRCA1 or BRCA2 genetic susceptibility mutations, women who are healthier or sicker than average, or black women who seem to have more disease at younger ages than white women." As a result, the study only provided "estimates of the average benefits and harms."

That's why Nobel Prize winner and NIH Director Francis Collins who helped map the human genome worries that CER studies are a step backwards because they consider "everybody equivalent, which we know they are not." Collins says that CER -- and AHRQ by extension -- fails to use "all that we have gained in understanding how individuals differ and how that could be factored into better diagnostics and preventive strategies."

Meanwhile AHRQ allows CER researchers to hand out money to each other.

For instance, Dr. Alan M. Garber of Stanford University has received millions of dollars of AHRQ grants over the years and is a member of member of AHRQ's panel for determining what evidence should be packaged into guidelines. Garber also advises Congress on what AHRQ should spend money on. HMO's also happen to operate CER research centers that get much of AHRQ's funding.

Dr. Mark Helfand -- who contributed research to the mammogram decision -- runs the Oregon Health & Science University Drug Effectiveness Review Project that receives millions from AHRQ each year. Helfand also directs AHRQ's "science" board for its CER program.

Sean Tunis, another AHRQ consultant also advised Congress on the AHRQ agenda. Tunis once said he never saw adequate evidence to justify paying for new medical technology.

AHRQ's involvement with anti-vaccine groups is also longstanding. It has given millions a year to Consumers United for Evidence Based Care (CUE) an organization that "advocates for local and federal legislative changes," in favor of CER. CUE includes groups like the Center for Science in the Public Interest and the National Center for Trangender Health. The anti-vaccine groups SAFEMINDS and the National Vaccine Information Center are also active parts of CUE.

CUE participants use CER to push their own political agenda with AHRQ help. In 2005 CUE coordinator Dr. Kay Dickersin (another AHRQ grant recipient) and transgender advocacy groups challenged Washington State's Medicaid program decision not to cover sex change operations. SAFEMinds used CER to claim that you couldn't rule out vaccines "causing" autism.

And now AHRQ is funding the NVIC/SAFEMINDS pet project that looks at the effectiveness of controversial and dangerous autism treatments such as chelation therapy, which have killed several children.

Given the deficit, AHRQ's budget should be cut, starting with is funding of outdated science, transgender advocacy and anti-vaccine movements. That would insure CER actually improved the public health.


There should, indeed, be some sort of oath that government health officials should have to take: First do no harm. And second, don't fund it!

4 comments:

  1. Looks like these fellows (AHRQ consultants), stripped of their medical degrees would look and act like ACORNS!

    Jim: A line drive home run through Center field, although seldom done, is a beautiful thing to behold, like this column that I just read.
    I’m forwarding it on to ‘my son the doctor.’ BTW, in all you have written on Healthcare, he takes no exception to any of your words or thoughts.

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  2. These widely unknown missteps in the medical field are just further examples of how money is being thrown around and around and the vast numbers of needy Americans never know where it is coming from when they get sick or lose their job. They do not get help they just get it. Maybe I digress for the moment but I keep thinking and wondering why, with all this spending on spec the City of Detroit is starting to resemble the American version of Zaire with 50% unemployment.Instead of the racetrack allotments that regular folks are unaware of I would finance Detroit first, an American city.

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  3. Seems like a lot of inside baseball. More for the consumption of medical researchers. Not relevant to the average voter.

    Anthem insurance in California is raising its rates from between 12 to 40 %.

    I wonder what the GOP is going to say to that, if Obama raises that issue.

    Thing is, if all the insurance companies follow suit and raise their rates, what will the GOP no-to-everything crowd say?

    I have a feeling that even if the Obama plan fails this year, it will be back with a vengeance if the insurance companies have their way.

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  4. EASY answer for the last comment on price rises for insurance.
    Two repub ideas.1. cross state lines with healthcare 2. Tort reform will lower costs effectively.

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