Natural medicine is under siege, as
pharmaceutical company lobbyists urge lawmakers to deprive Americans
of the benefits of dietary supplements. Drug-company front groups have
launched slanderous media campaigns to discredit the value of healthy
lifestyles. The FDA continues to interfere with those who offer
natural products that compete with prescription drugs.
These attacks against natural medicine
obscure a lethal problem that until now was buried in thousands of
pages of scientific text. In response to these baseless challenges to
natural medicine, the Nutrition Institute of America commissioned an
independent review of the quality of “government-approved” medicine.
The startling findings from this meticulous study indicate that
conventional medicine is “the leading cause of death” in the United
States .
The Nutrition Institute of America is a
nonprofit organization that has sponsored independent research for the
past 30 years. To support its bold claim that conventional medicine is
America 's number-one killer, the Nutritional Institute of America
mandated that every “count” in this “indictment” of US medicine be
validated by published, peer-reviewed scientific studies.
What you are about to read is a stunning
compilation of facts that documents that those who seek to abolish
consumer access to natural therapies are misleading the public. Over
700,000 Americans die each year at the hands of government-sanctioned
medicine, while the FDA and other government agencies pretend to
protect the public by harassing those who offer safe alternatives.
A definitive review of medical peer-reviewed journals and
government health statistics shows that American medicine frequently
causes more harm than good.
Each year approximately 2.2 million US hospital patients experience
adverse drug reactions (ADRs) to prescribed medications.(1)
In 1995, Dr. Richard Besser of the federal Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC) estimated the number of unnecessary antibiotics
prescribed annually for viral infections to be 20 million; in 2003,
Dr. Besser spoke in terms of tens of millions of unnecessary
antibiotics prescribed annually.(2,
2a) Approximately 7.5 million unnecessary medical and surgical
procedures are performed annually in the US,(3)
while approximately 8.9 million Americans are hospitalized
unnecessarily.(4)
As shown in the following table, the estimated total number of
iatrogenic deaths—that is, deaths induced inadvertently by a physician
or surgeon or by medical treatment or diagnostic procedures— in the US
annually is 783,936. It is evident that the American medical system is
itself the leading cause of death and injury in the US . By
comparison, approximately 699,697 Americans died of heart in 2001,
while 553,251 died of cancer.(5)
Using Leape's 1997 medical and drug error rate of 3
million(14) multiplied by the
14% fatality rate he used in 1994(16)
produces an annual death rate of 420,000 for drug errors and medical
errors combined. Using this number instead of Lazorou's 106,000 drug
errors and the Institute of Medicine 's (IOM) estimated 98,000 annual
medical errors would add another 216,000 deaths, for a total of
999,936 deaths annually.
The enumerating of unnecessary medical events is very important in
our analysis. Any invasive, unnecessary medical procedure must be
considered as part of the larger iatrogenic picture. Unfortunately,
cause and effect go unmonitored. The figures on unnecessary events
represent people who are thrust into a dangerous health care system.
Each of these 16.4 million lives is being affected in ways that could
have fatal consequences. Simply entering a hospital could result in
the following:
- In 16.4 million people, a 2.1% chance (affecting 186,000) of a
serious adverse drug reaction(1)
- In 16.4 million people, a 5-6% chance (affecting 489,500) of
acquiring a nosocomial infection(9)
- In16.4 million people, a 4-36% chance (affecting 1.78 million)
of having an iatrogenic injury (medical error and adverse drug
reactions).(16)
- In 16.4 million people, a 17% chance (affecting 1.3 million) of
a procedure error.(40)
These statistics represent a one-year time span. Working with the
most conservative figures from our statistics, we project the
following 10-year death rates.
Our estimated 10-year total of 7.8 million iatrogenic deaths is
more than all the casualties from all the wars fought by the US
throughout its entire history.
Our projected figures for unnecessary medical events occurring over
a 10-year period also are dramatic.
These figures show that an estimated 164 million people—more than
half of the total US population—receive unneeded medical treatment
over the course of a decade.
INTRODUCTION
Never before have the complete statistics on the multiple causes of
iatrogenesis been combined in one article. Medical science amasses
tens of thousands of papers annually, each representing a tiny
fragment of the whole picture. To look at only one piece and try to
understand the benefits and risks is like standing an inch away from
an elephant and trying to describe everything about it. You have to
step back to see the big picture, as we have done here. Each
specialty, each division of medicine keeps its own records and data on
morbidity and mortality. We have now completed the painstaking work of
reviewing thousands of studies and putting pieces of the puzzle
together.
Is American Medicine Working?
US health care spending reached $1.6 trillion in 2003, representing
14% of the nation's gross national product.(15)
Considering this enormous expenditure, we should have the best
medicine in the world. We should be preventing and reversing disease,
and doing minimal harm. Careful and objective review, however, shows
we are doing the opposite. Because of the extraordinarily narrow,
technologically driven context in which contemporary medicine examines
the human condition, we are completely missing the larger picture.
Medicine is not taking into consideration the following critically
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 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 spent on preventing disease.
Underreporting of Iatrogenic
Events
As few as 5% and no more than 20% 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 an annual iatrogenic death toll much higher
than 783,936. In 1994, Leape said his figure of 180,000 medical
mistakes resulting in death annually was equivalent to three jumbo-jet
crashes every two days.(16)
Our considerably higher figure is equivalent to six jumbo jets are
falling out of the sky each day.
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 obvious
that we cannot 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 of what stands in the way of change: powerful
pharmaceutical and medical technology companies, along with other
powerful 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 new therapies and drugs. You have only to
look at the people who make up the hospital, medical, and government
health advisory boards to see conflicts 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 study
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)
As former editor of the New England Journal of Medicine ,
Dr. Marcia Angell struggled to bring greater attention to the problem
of commercializing scientific research. In her outgoing editorial
entitled “ Is Academic Medicine for Sale?” Angell said that growing
conflicts of interest are tainting science and called for stronger
restrictions on pharmaceutical stock ownership and other financial
incentives for researchers:(20)
“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 New England Journal in June 2000. In June
2002, the New England Journal of Medicine announced that it
would accept journalists who accept money from drug companies because
it was too difficult to find ones who have no ties. Another former
editor of the journal, Dr. Jerome Kassirer, said that was not the case
and that plenty of researchers are available who do not work for drug
companies.(21) According to
an ABC news report, pharmaceutical companies spend over $2 billion a
year on over 314,000 events attended by doctors.
The ABC news report also noted that a survey of clinical trials
revealed that when a drug company funds a study, there is a 90% chance
that the drug will be perceived as effective whereas a
non-drug-company-funded study will show favorable results only 50% of
the time. It appears that money can't buy you love but it can buy any
"scientific" result desired.
Cynthia Crossen, a staffer for the Wall Street Journal, i n 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 wrote: “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. By l991, this
figure had risen to $2.1 billion.
Dr. Lucian L. Leape opened medicine's Pandora's box in his 1994
paper, “Error in Medicine,” which appeared in the Journal of the
American Medical Association (JAMA).(16)
He found that Schimmel reported in 1964 that 20% of hospital patients
suffered iatrogenic injury, with a 20% fatality rate. In 1981 Steel
reported that 36% of hospitalized patients experienced iatrogenesis
with a 25% fatality rate, and adverse drug reactions were involved in
50% of the injuries. In 1991, Bedell reported that 64% of acute heart
attacks in one hospital were preventable and were mostly due to
adverse drug reactions.
Leape focused on the “Harvard Medical Practice Study” published in
1991, (16a) which found a 4%
iatrogenic injury rate for patients, with a 14% fatality rate, in 1984
in New York State. From the 98,609 patients injured and the 14%
fatality rate, he estimated that in the entire U.S. 180,000 people die
each year partly as a result of iatrogenic injury.
Why Leape chose to use the much lower figure of 4% injury for his
analysis remains in question. Using instead the average of the rates
found in the three studies he cites
(36%, 20%, and 4%) would have produced a 20% medical error
rate. The number of iatrogenic deaths using an average rate of injury
and his 14% fatality rate would be 1,189,576.
Leape acknowledged that the literature on medical errors is sparse
and represents only the tip of the iceberg, noting that when errors
are specifically sought out, reported rates are “distressingly high.”
He cited several autopsy studies with rates as high as 35-40% of
missed diagnoses causing death. He also noted that an intensive care
unit reported an average of 1.7 errors per day per patient, and 29% of
those errors were potentially serious or fatal.
Leape calculated the error rate in the intensive care unit study.
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% failure rate. This may not seem like much,
but Leape cited industry standards showing that in aviation, a 0.1%
failure rate would mean two unsafe plane landings per day at Chicago's
O'Hare International Airport; in the US Postal Service, a 0.1% failure
rate would mean 16,000 pieces of lost mail every hour; and in the
banking industry, a 0.1% failure rate would mean 32,000 bank checks
deducted from the wrong bank account.
In trying to determine why there are so many medical errors, Leape
acknowledged the lack of reporting of medical errors. Medical errors
occur in thousands of different locations and are perceived as
isolated and unusual events. But the most important reason that the
problem of medical errors is unrecognized and growing, according to
Leape, is that doctors and nurses are unequipped to deal with human
error because of 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. No one is taught what to do when medical errors do occur.
Leape cites 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 medical practitioners “to
fundamentally change the way they think about errors and why they
occur.” It has been almost a decade since this groundbreaking work,
but the mistakes continue to soar.
In 1995, a JAMA report noted, "Over a million patients are
injured in US 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 1997 press conference, Leape released a nationwide poll on
patient iatrogenesis conducted by the National Patient Safety
Foundation (NPSF), which is sponsored by the American Medical
Association (AMA). Leape is a
founding member of NPSF. The survey found that more than 100 million
Americans have been affected directly or indirectly by a medical
mistake. Forty-two percent were affected directly and 84% personally
knew of someone who had experienced a medical mistake.(14)
At this press conference, Leape updated his 1994 statistics, noting
that as of 1997, medical errors in inpatient hospital settings
nationwide could be as high as 3 million and could cost as much as
$200 billion . Leape used a 14% fatality rate to determine a medical
error death rate of 180,000 in 1994.(16)
In 1997, using Leape's base number of 3 million errors, the annual
death rate could be as high as 420,000 for hospital inpatients alone.
ONLY A FRACTION OF MEDICAL ERRORS ARE
REPORTED
In 1994, Leape said he was well aware that medical errors were not
being reported.(16) A study
conducted in two obstetrical units in the UK found that only about
one-quarter of adverse incidents were ever reported, to protect staff,
preserve reputations, or for fear of reprisals, including lawsuits.(24).
An analysis by Wald and Shojania found that only 1.5% of all adverse
events result in an incident report, and only 6% of adverse drug
events are identified properly. The authors learned that the American
College of Surgeons estimates that surgical incident reports routinely
capture only 5-30% of adverse events. In one study, only 20% of
surgical complications resulted in discussion at morbidity and
mortality rounds.(25) From
these studies, it appears that all the statistics gathered on medical
errors may substantially underestimate the number of adverse drug and
medical therapy incidents. They also suggest that our statistics
concerning mortality resulting from medical errors may be in fact be
conservative figures.
An article in Psychiatric Times (April 2000) outlines the
stakes involved in reporting medical errors.(26)
The authors 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, testified
before a House subcommittee hearing on medical errors that "the full
magnitude of their threat to the American public is unknown” and
"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
underreporting of errors. The Psychiatric Times noted that
the AMA strongly opposes mandatory reporting of medical errors.(26)
If doctors are not reporting, what about nurses? A survey of nurses
found that they also fail to 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.(29) Yet
the public depends on this tremendously flawed system of voluntary
reporting by doctors to know whether a drug or a medical intervention
is harmful.
Pharmacology texts also will 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 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 it is not difficult to understand why
only 1 in 20 side effects is reported to either hospital
administrators or the FDA.(31, 31a)
If hospitals admitted to the actual number of errors for which they
are responsible, which is about 20 times what is reported, they would
come under intense scrutiny.(32)
Jerry Phillips, associate director of the FDA's Office of Post
Marketing Drug Risk Assessment, confirms this number. “In the broader
area of adverse drug reaction data, the 250,000 reports received
annually probably represent only 5% of the actual reactions that
occur.”(33) Dr. Jay Cohen,
who has extensively researched adverse drug reactions, notes that
because only 5% of adverse drug reactions are reported, there are in
fact 5 million medication reactions each year.(34)
A 2003 survey is all the more distressing because there seems to be
no improvement in error reporting, even with all the attention given
to this topic. Dr. Dorothea Wild surveyed medical residents at a
community hospital in Connecticut and found that only half were aware
that the hospital had a medical error-reporting system, and that the
vast majority did not 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. Wild adds that error reporting is
the first step in locating the gaps in the medical system and fixing
them. Not even that first step has been taken to date.(35)
PUBLIC SUGGESTIONS ON IATROGENESIS
In a telephone survey, 1,207 adults ranked the effectiveness of the
following measures in reducing preventable medical errors that result
in serious harm.(36)
(Following each measure is the percentage of respondents who ranked
the measure as “very effective.”)
- giving doctors more time to spend with patients (78%)
- requiring hospitals to develop systems to avoid medical errors
(74%)
- better training of health professionals (73%)
- using only doctors specially trained in intensive care medicine
on intensive care units (73%)
- requiring hospitals to report all serious medical errors to a
state agency (71%)
- increasing the number of hospital nurses (69%)
- reducing the work hours of doctors in training to avoid fatigue
(66%)
- encouraging hospitals to voluntarily report serious medical
errors to a state agency (62%).
DRUG IATROGENESIS
Prescription drugs constitute 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 study(1) showed.
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% of patients admitted to these hospitals each year.
The authors concluded that at least 90,895 patients annually were
harmed by medication errors in the US as a whole.(37)
A 2002 study shows that 20% of hospital medications for patients
had dosage errors. Nearly 40% of these errors were considered
potentially harmful to the patient. In a typical 300-patient hospital,
the number of errors per day was 40.(38)
Problems involving patients' medications were even higher the
following year. The error rate intercepted by pharmacists in this
study was 24%, 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 setting (requiring highly specialized skills,
technology, or support services). Seventy-six patients (19%) had
adverse events. Adverse drug events were the most common, at 66% of
all events. The next most common event was procedure-related injuries,
at 17%.(40)
In a New England Journal of Medicine 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, "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 New England Journal
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 selective
serotonin reuptake inhibitors ( SSRIs), nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory
drugs (NSAIDs), and calcium-channel blockers. Reuters also reported
that prior research has suggested that nearly 5% 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 that one of the reasons for this failure is that in nearly
two-thirds of the cases, doctors could not diagnose drug side effects
or the side effects persisted because the doctor failed to heed the
warning signs.
Medicating Our Feelings
Patients seeking a more joyful existence and relief from worry,
stress, and anxiety often fall victim to the messages endlessly
displayed on TV and billboards. Often, instead of gaining relief, they
fall victim to the myriad iatrogenic side effects of antidepressant
medication.
Moreover, a whole generation of antidepressant users has been
created 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
rather than with their inner resources. As adults, these medicated
youth reach for alcohol, drugs, or even street drugs to cope.
According to JAMA , “Ritalin acts much like cocaine.”(43)
Today's marketing of mood-modifying drugs such as Prozac and Zoloft ®
makes them not only socially acceptable but almost a necessity in
today's stressful world.
Television Diagnosis
To reach the widest audience possible, drug companies are no longer
just targeting medical doctors with their marketing of
antidepressants. By 1995, drug companies had tripled the amount of
money allotted to direct advertising of prescription drugs to
consumers. The majority of this money is spent on seductive television
ads. From 1996 to 2000, spending rose from $791 million to nearly $2.5
billion.(44) This $2.5
billion represents only 15% of the total pharmaceutical advertising
budget. While the drug companies maintain that direct-to-consumer
advertising is educational, Dr. Sidney M. Wolfe of the Public Citizen
Health Research Group in Washington, DC, argues that the public often
is misinformed about these ads.(45)
People want what they see on television and are told to go to their
doctors for a prescription. Doctors in private practice either
acquiesce to their patients' demands for these drugs or spend valuable
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. Drugs generally are tested on
individuals who are fairly healthy and not on other medications that
could interfere with findings. But when these new drugs are declared
“safe” and enter the drug prescription books, they are naturally going
to be used by people who are on a variety of other medications and
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 federal government's General Accounting Office "found that of the
198 drugs approved by the FDA between 1976 and 1985... 102 (or 51.5%)
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)
NBC Television's investigative show “Dateline” wondered if your
doctor is moonlighting as a drug company representative. After a
yearlong investigation, NBC 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 untested
uses of these medications, even though these drugs are approved only
for the specific indications for which they have been tested.(48)
The leading causes of adverse drug reactions are antibiotics
(17%), cardiovascular drugs
(17%), chemotherapy
(15%), and analgesics and
anti-inflammatory agents (15%).(49)
Specific Drug Iatrogenesis: Antibiotics
According to William Agger, MD, director of microbiology and chief
of infectious disease at Gundersen Lutheran Medical Center in La
Crosse, WI, 30 million pounds of antibiotics are used in America each
year.(50) Of this amount, 25
million pounds are used in animal husbandry, and 23 million pounds are
used to try to prevent disease and the stress of shipping, as well as
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 and in various
waterways around the world, much of it seeping in from animal farms.
Egger contends that overuse of antibiotics results in food-borne
infections resistant to antibiotics. Salmonella is found in 20% of
ground meat, but the constant exposure of cattle to antibiotics has
made 84% of salmonella resistant to at least one anti-salmonella
antibiotic. Diseased animal food accounts for 80% of salmonellosis in
humans, or 1.4 million cases per year. The conventional approach to
countering this epidemic is to radiate food to try to kill all
organisms while continuing to use the antibiotics that created the
problem in the first place. Approximately 20% of chickens are
contaminated with Campylobacter jejuni, an organism that
causes 2.4 million cases of illness annually. Fifty-four percent of
these organisms are resistant to at least one anti-campylobacter
antimicrobial agent.
Denmark banned growth-promoting antibiotics beginning in 1999,
which cut their use by more than half within a year, from 453,200 to
195,800 pounds. A report from Scandinavia found that removing
antibiotic growth promoters had no or minimal effect on food
production costs. Egger warns that the current crowded, unsanitary
methods of animal farming in the US support constant stress and
infection, and are geared toward high antibiotic use.
In the US, 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 U.S. still receive antibiotics from their doctor.(51)
According to the CDC, 90% of upper respiratory infections are viral
and should not be treated with antibiotics. In Germany, the prevalence
of systemic antibiotic use in children aged 0-6 years was 42.9%.(52)
Data obtained from nine US health insurers on antibiotic use in
25,000 children from 1996 to 2000 found that rates of antibiotic use
decreased. Antibiotic use in children aged three months to under 3
years decreased 24%, from 2.46 to 1.89 antibiotic prescriptions per
patient per year. For children aged 3 to under 6 years, there was a
25% 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%
reduction from 0.85 to 0.69 antibiotic prescriptions per patient per
year.(53) Despite these
reductions, 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, with penicillin and
erythromycin the only recommended treatment. Ninety percent of
sore-throat cases, however, are viral. Antibiotics were used in 73% of
the estimated 6.7 million adult annual visits for sore throat in the
US between 1989 and 1999. Furthermore, patients treated with
antibiotics were prescribed non-recommended broad-spectrum antibiotics
in 68% of visits. This period saw a significant increase in the use of
newer, more expensive broad-spectrum antibiotics and a decrease in use
of the recommended antibiotics penicillin and erythromycin.(54)
A ntibiotics being prescribed in 73% of sore-throat cases instead of
the recommended 10% resulted in a total of 4.2 million unnecessary
antibiotic prescriptions from 1989 to 1999.
The Problem with Antibiotics
In September 2003, the CDC re-launched a program started in 1995
called “Get Smart: Know When Antibiotics Work.”(55)
This $1.6 million campaign is designed to educate patients about the
overuse and inappropriate use of antibiotics. Most people involved
with alternative medicine have known about the dangers of antibiotic
overuse for decades. Finally the government is focusing on the
problem, yet it is spending only a miniscule amount of money on an
iatrogenic epidemic that is costing billions of dollars and thousands
of lives. The CDC warns that 90% of upper respiratory infections,
including children's ear infections, are viral and that antibiotics do
not treat viral infection. More than 40% of about 50 million
prescriptions for antibiotics written each year in physicians' offices
are inappropriate.(2) U sing
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)
The CDC, however, seems to be blaming patients for misusing
antibiotics even though they are available only by prescription from
physicians. According to Dr. Richard Besser, head of “Get Smart”:
"Programs that have just targeted physicians have not worked.
Direct-to-consumer advertising of drugs is to blame in some cases.”
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)
What constitutes the “best care”? The CDC does not elaborate and
ignores the latest research on the dozens of nutraceuticals that have
been scientifically proven to treat viral infections and boost
immune-system function. Will doctors recommend vitamin C, echinacea,
elderberry, vitamin A, zinc, or homeopathic oscillococcinum? Probably
not. The CDC's common-sense recommendations that most people follow
anyway include getting proper rest, drinking plenty of fluids, and
using a humidifier.
The pharmaceutical industry claims it supports limiting the use of
antibiotics. The drug company Bayer sponsors a program called
“Operation Clean Hands” through an organization called LIBRA.(57)
The CDC also is involved in trying to minimize antibiotic resistance,
but nowhere in its 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 tunnel vision and
refusal to recommend the available non-drug alternatives is
unfortunate when the CDC is desperately trying to curb the overuse of
antibiotics.
Drugs Pollute Our Water Supply
We have reached the point of saturation with prescription drugs.
Every body of water tested contains measurable drug residues. 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 also are 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
way to know the long-term health consequences of ingesting a mixture
of drugs and drug-breakdown products. These drugs represent another
level of iatrogenic disease that we are unable to completely measure.(58-67)
Specific Drug Iatrogenesis: NSAIDs
It's not just the US that is plagued by iatrogenesis. A survey of
more than 1,000 French general practitioners (GPs) tested their basic
pharmacological knowledge and practice in prescribing NSAIDs, which
rank first among commonly prescribed drugs for serious adverse
reactions. The study results suggest that GPs do not 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, German biostatistician Ulrich Abel, PhD, wrote a monograph
entitled “Chemotherapy of Advanced Epithelial Cancer.” It was later
published in shorter form in a peer-reviewed medical journal.(70)
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 with which we are most familiar, arising
from epithelium found in the lining of body organs such as the breast,
prostate, lung, stomach, and bowel. From these sites, cancer usually
infiltrates adjacent tissue and spreads to the bone, liver, lung, or
brain. With his exhaustive review, Abel concluded there is no direct
evidence that chemotherapy prolongs survival in patients with advanced
carcinoma; in small-cell lung cancer and perhaps ovarian cancer, the
therapeutic benefit is only slight. According to Abel, “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 Abel's exhaustive review of chemotherapy, there
seems no decrease in its use for advanced carcinoma. For example, when
conventional chemotherapy and radiation have not worked to prevent
metastases in breast cancer, high-dose chemotherapy (HDC) along with
stem-cell transplant (SCT) is the treatment of choice. In March 2000,
however, 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) with even a
slightly lower survival rate for the HDC/SCT group. Serious adverse
effects occurred more often in the HDC group than the standard-dose
group. One treatment-related death (within 100 days of therapy) was
recorded in the HDC group, but none was recorded in the conventional
chemotherapy group. The women in this trial were highly selected as
having the best chance to respond.
Unfortunately, no all-encompassing follow-up study such as Dr.
Abel's exists to indicate whether there has been any improvement in
cancer-survival statistics since 1989. In fact, research should be
conducted to determine 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
are not used.
Drug Companies Fined
Periodically, the FDA fines a drug manufacturer when its abuses are
too glaring and impossible to cover up. In May 2002, The
Washington Post reported that Schering-Plough Corp., the maker of
Claritin, was to pay a $500 million dollar fine to the FDA for
quality-control problems at four of its factories.(72)
The indictment came after the Public Citizen Health Research Group,
led 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.
The FDA tabulated infractions involving 125 products, or 90% of the
drugs made by Schering-Plough since 1998. Besides paying the fine, the
company was forced to halt the manufacture of 73 drugs or suffer
another $175 million fine. Schering-Plough's news releases told
another story, assuring consumers that they should still feel
confident in the company's products.
This large settlement served 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
has paid a $100 million fine for failing to meet quality standards in
the production of medical test kits, while Wyeth Laboratories paid $30
million in 2000 to settle accusations of poor manufacturing practices.
UNNECESSARY SURGICAL PROCEDURES
In 1974, 2.4 million unnecessary surgeries were performed,
resulting in 11,900 deaths at a cost of $3.9 billion.(73,74)
In 2001, 7.5 million unnecessary surgical procedures were performed,
resulting in 37,136 deaths at a cost of $122 billion (using 1974
dollars).(3)
It is very difficult to obtain accurate statistics when studying
unnecessary surgery. In 1989, Leape wrote that perhaps 30% of
controversial surgeries—which include cesarean section, tonsillectomy,
appendectomy, hysterectomy, gastrectomy for obesity, breast implants,
and elective breast implants(74)—
are unnecessary. In 1974, the Congressional Committee on Interstate
and Foreign Commerce held hearings on unnecessary surgery. It found
that 17.6% 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)
According to the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project within the
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality(13),
in 2001 the 50 most common medical and surgical procedures were
performed approximately 41.8 million times in the US. Using the 1974
House Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations' figure of 17.6% as
the percentage of unnecessary surgical procedures, and extrapolating
from the death rate in 1974, produces nearly 7.5 million (7,489,718)
unnecessary procedures and a death rate of 37,136, at a cost of $122
billion (using 1974 dollars).
In 1995, researchers conducted a similar analysis of back surgery
procedures, using the 1974 “unnecessary surgery percentage” of 17.6.
Testifying before the Department of Veterans Affairs, they estimated
that of the 250,000 back surgeries performed annually in the US at a
hospital cost of $11,000 per patient, the total number of unnecessary
back surgeries approaches 44,000, costing as much as $484 million.(75)
Like prescription drug use driven by television advertising,
unnecessary surgeries are escalating. Media-driven surgery such as
gastric bypass for obesity “modeled” by Hollywood celebrities seduces
obese people to think this route is safe and sexy. Unnecessary
surgeries have even been marketed on the Internet.(76)
A study in Spain declares that 20-25% of total surgical practice
represents unnecessary operations.(77)
According to data from the National Center for Health Statistics
for 1979 to 1984, the total number of surgical procedures increased 9%
while the number of surgeons grew 20%. The study notes that the large
increase in the number of surgeons was not accompanied by a parallel
increase in the number of surgeries performed, and expressed concern
about an excess of surgeons to handle the surgical caseload.(78)
From 1983 to 1994, however, the incidence of the 10 most commonly
performed surgical procedures jumped 38%, to 7,929,000 from 5,731,000
cases. By 1994, cataract surgery was the most common procedure with
more than 2 million operations, followed by cesarean section (858,000
procedures) and inguinal hernia operations (689,000 procedures). Knee
arthroscopy procedures increased 153% while prostate surgery declined
29%.(79)
The list of iatrogenic complications from surgery is as long as the
list of procedures themselves. One study examined catheters that were
inserted to deliver anesthetic into the epidural space around the
spinal nerves 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 found “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% of coronary angiography procedures, 32%
of carotid endarterectomy procedures, and 17% of upper
gastrointestinal tract endoscopy procedures.(82)
Based on the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP) statistics
provided by the government for 2001, 697,675 upper gastrointestinal
endoscopies (usually entailing biopsy) were performed, as were 142,401
endarterectomies and 719,949 coronary angiographies.(13)
Extrapolating the JAMA study's inappropriate surgery rates to
2001 produces 118,604 unnecessary endoscopy procedures, 45,568
unnecessary endarterectomies, and 122,391 unnecessary coronary
angiographies. These are all forms of medical iatrogenesis.
MEDICAL AND SURGICAL PROCEDURES
It is instructive to know the mortality rates associated with
various medical and surgical procedures. Although we must sign release
forms when we undergo any procedure, many of us are in denial about
the true risks involved; because medical and surgical procedures are
so commonplace, they often are seen as both necessary and safe.
Unfortunately, allopathic medicine itself is a leading cause of death,
as well as the most expensive way to die.
Perhaps the words “health care” confer the illusion that medicine
is about health. Allopathic medicine is not a purveyor of health care
but of disease care. The HCUP figures are instructive,(13)
but the computer program that calculates annual mortality statistics
for all US hospital discharges is only as good as the codes entered
into the system. In email correspondence, HCUP indicated that the
mortality rates for each procedure indicated only that someone
undergoing that procedure died either from the procedure or from some
other cause.
Thus there is no way of knowing exactly how many people die from a
particular procedure. While codes for “poisoning & toxic effects of
drugs” and “complications of treatment” do exist, the mortality
figures registered in these categories are very low and do not
correlate with what is known from research such as the 1998 JAMA study(1)
that estimated an average of 106,000 prescription medication deaths
per year. No codes exist for adverse drug side effects, surgical
mishaps, or other types of medical error. Until such codes exist, the
true mortality rates tied to of medical error will remain buried in
the general statistics.
AN HONEST LOOK AT US
HEALTH CARE
In 1978, the US Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) reported:
“Only 10-20% of all procedures currently used in medical practice have
been shown to be efficacious by controlled trial."(83)
In 1995, the OTA compared medical technology in eight countries (
Australia , Canada, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Sweden, the UK,
and the US ) and again noted that few medical procedures in the US
have been subjected to clinical trial. It also reported that US infant
mortality was high and life expectancy low compared to other developed
countries.(84)
Although almost 10 years old, much of what was written in the OTA
report holds true today. The report blames the high cost of American
medicine on the medical free-enterprise system and failure to create a
national health care policy. It attributes the government's failure to
control health care costs to market incentives and profit motives
inherent in the current financing and organization of health care,
which includes such interests as private health insurers, hospital
systems, physicians, and the drug and medical-device industries.
“Health Care Technology and Its Assessment in Eight Countries” is the
last report prepared by the OTA, which was disbanded in 1995. It also
is perhaps the US government's last honest, detailed examination of
the nation's health care system. An appendix summarizing this 60-page
report follows this article.
SURGICAL ERRORS FINALLY REPORTED
An October 2003 JAMA study from the US government's Agency
for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) documented 32,000 mostly
surgery-related deaths costing $9 billion and accounting for 2.4
million extra hospital days in 2000.(85)
Data from 20% of the nation's hospitals were analyzed for 18 different
surgical complications, including postoperative infections, foreign
objects left in wounds, surgical wounds reopening, and post-operative
bleeding.
In a press release accompanying the study, AHRQ director Carolyn M.
Clancy, MD, noted: “This study gives us the first direct evidence that
medical injuries pose a real threat to the American public and
increase the costs of health care.”(86)
According to the study's authors, “The findings greatly underestimate
the problem, since many other complications happen that are not listed
in hospital administrative data.” They added: "The message here is
that medical injuries can have a devastating impact on the health care
system. We need more research to identify why these injuries occur and
find ways to prevent them from happening." The study authors said that
improved medical practices, including an emphasis on better hand
washing, might help reduce morbidity and mortality rates. In an
accompanying JAMA editorial, health-risk researcher Dr. Saul
Weingart of Harvard's Beth Israel-Deaconess Medical Center wrote,
“Given their staggering magnitude, these estimates are clearly
sobering.”(87)
UNNECESSARY X-RAYS
When x-rays were discovered, no one knew the long-term effects of
ionizing radiation. In the 1950s, monthly fluoroscopic exams at the
doctor's office were routine, and you could even walk into most shoe
stores and see x-rays of your foot bones. We still do not know the
ultimate outcome of our initial fascination with x-rays.
In those days, it was common practice to x-ray pregnant women to
measure their pelvises and make a diagnosis of twins. Finally, a study
of 700,000 children born between 1947 and 1964 in 37 major maternity
hospitals compared the children of mothers who had received pelvic
x-rays during pregnancy to those of mothers who did not. It found that
cancer mortality was 40% higher among children whose mothers had been
x-rayed.(88)
In present-day medicine, coronary angiography is an invasive
surgical procedure that involves snaking a tube through a blood vessel
in the groin up to the heart. To obtain useful information, X-rays are
taken almost continuously, with minimum dosages ranging from 460 to
1,580 mrem. The minimum radiation from a routine chest x-ray is 2 mrem.
X-ray radiation accumulates in the body, and ionizing radiation used
in X-ray procedures has been shown to cause gene mutation. The health
impact of this high level of radiation is unknown, and often obscured
in statistical jargon such as, “The risk for lifetime fatal cancer due
to radiation exposure is estimated to be 4 in one million per 1,000
mrem.”(89)
Dr. John Gofman has studied the effects of radiation on human
health for 45 years. A medical doctor with a PhD in nuclear and
physical chemistry, Gofman worked on the Manhattan Project, discovered
uranium-233, and was the first person to isolate plutonium. In five
scientifically documented books, Gofman provides strong evidence that
medical technology—specifically x-rays, CT scans, and mammography and
fluoroscopy devices—are a contributing factor to 75% of new cancers.
In a nearly 700-page report updated in 2000, “Radiation from Medical
Procedures in the Pathogenesis of Cancer and Ischemic Heart Disease:
Dose-Response Studies with Physicians per 100,000 Population,”(90)
Gofman shows that as the number of physicians increases in a
geographical area along with an increase in the number of x-ray
diagnostic tests performed, the rate of cancer and ischemic heart
disease also increases. Gofman elaborates that it is not x-rays alone
that cause the damage but a combination of health risk factors that
include poor diet, smoking, abortions, and the use of birth control
pills. Dr. Gofman predicts that ionizing radiation will be responsible
for 100 million premature deaths over the next decade.
In his book, “Preventing Breast Cancer,” Dr. Gofman notes that
breast cancer is the leading cause of death among American women
between the ages of 44 and 55. Because breast tissue is highly
sensitive to radiation, mammograms can cause cancer. The danger can be
heightened other factors including a woman's genetic makeup,
preexisting benign breast disease, artificial menopause, obesity, and
hormonal imbalance.(91)
Even x-rays for back pain can lead someone into crippling surgery.
Dr. John E. Sarno, a well-known New York orthopedic surgeon, found
that there is not necessarily any association between back pain and
spinal x-ray abnormality. He cites studies of normal people without a
trace of back pain whose x-rays indicate spinal abnormalities and of
people with back pain whose spines appear to be normal on x-ray.(92)
People who happen to have back pain and show an abnormality on x-ray
may be treated surgically, sometimes with no change in back pain,
worsening of back pain, or even permanent disability. Moreover,
doctors often order x-rays as protection against malpractice claims,
to give the impression of leaving no stone unturned. It appears that
doctors are putting their own fears before the interests of their
patients.
UNNECESSARY HOSPITALIZATION
Nearly 9 million (8,925,033) people were hospitalized unnecessarily
in 2001.(4) In a study of
inappropriate hospitalization, two doctors reviewed 1,132 medical
records. They concluded that 23% of all admissions were inappropriate
and an additional 17% could have been handled in outpatient clinics.
Thirty-four percent of all hospital days were deemed inappropriate and
could have been avoided.(93)
The rate of inappropriate hospital admissions in 1990 was 23.5%.(94)
In 1999, another study also found an inappropriate admissions rate of
24%, indicating a consistent pattern from 1986 to 1999.(95)
The HCUP database indicates that the total number of patient
discharges from US hospitals in 2001 was 37,187,641,(13)
meaning that almost 9 million people were exposed to unnecessary
medical intervention in hospitals and therefore represent almost 9
million potential iatrogenic episodes.(4)
WOMEN'S EXPERIENCE IN MEDICINE
Dr. Martin Charcot (1825-1893) was world-renowned, the most
celebrated doctor of his time. He practiced in the Paris hospital La
Salpetriere. He became an expert in hysteria, diagnosing an average of
10 hysterical women each day, transforming them into “iatrogenic
monsters” and turning simple “neurosis” into hysteria.(96)
The number of women diagnosed with hysteria and hospitalized rose from
1% in 1841 to 17% in 1883. Hysteria is derived from the Latin
“hystera” meaning uterus. According to Dr. Adriane Fugh-Berman, US
medicine has a tradition of excessive medical and surgical
interventions on women. Only 100 years ago, male doctors believed that
female psychological imbalance originated in the uterus. When surgery
to remove the uterus was perfected, it became the “cure” for mental
instability, effecting a physical and psychological castration. Fugh-Berman
notes that US doctors eventually disabused themselves of that notion
but have continued to treat women very differently than they treat
men.(97) She cites the
following statistics:
- Thousands of prophylactic mastectomies are performed annually.
- One-third of US women have had a hysterectomy before menopause.
- Women are prescribed drugs more frequently than are men.
- Women are given potent drugs for disease prevention, which
results in disease substitution due to side effects.
- Fetal monitoring is unsupported by studies and not recommended
by the CDC.(98) It confines
women to a hospital bed and may result in a higher incidence of
cesarean section.(99)
- Normal processes such as menopause and childbirth have been
heavily “medicalized.”
- Synthetic hormone replacement therapy (HRT) does not prevent
heart disease or dementia, but does increase the risk of breast
cancer, heart disease, stroke, and gall bladder attack.(100)
As many as one-third of postmenopausal women use HRT.(101,102)
This number is important in light of the much-publicized Women's
Health Initiative Study, which was halted before its completion
because of a higher death rate in the synthetic estrogen-progestin
(HRT) group.(103)
Cesarean Section
In 1983, 809,000 cesarean sections (21% of live births) were
performed in the US, making it the nation's most common
obstetric-gynecologic (OB/GYN) surgical procedure. The second most
common OB/GYN operation was hysterectomy (673,000), followed by
diagnostic dilation and curettage of the uterus (632,000). In 1983,
OB/GYN procedures represented 23% of all surgery completed in the US.(104)
In 2001, cesarean section is still the most common OB/GYN surgical
procedure. Approximately 4 million births occur annually, with 24%
(960,000) delivered by cesarean section. In the Netherlands, only 8%
of births are delivered by cesarean section. This suggests 640,000
unnecessary cesarean sections—entailing three to four times higher
mortality and 20 times greater morbidity than vaginal delivery(105)—are
performed annually in the US.
The US cesarean rate rose from just 4.5% in 1965 to 24.1% in 1986.
Sakala contends that an “uncontrolled pandemic of medically
unnecessary cesarean births is occurring.”(106)
VanHam reported a cesarean section postpartum hemorrhage rate of 7%, a
hematoma formation rate of 3.5%, a urinary tract infection rate of 3%,
and a combined postoperative morbidity rate of 35.7% in a high-risk
population undergoing cesarean section.(107)
NEVER ENOUGH STUDIES
Scientists claimed there were never enough studies revealing the
dangers of DDT and other dangerous pesticides to ban them. They also
used this argument for tobacco, claiming that more studies were needed
before they could be certain that tobacco really caused lung cancer.
Even the American Medical Association (AMA) was complicit in
suppressing the results of tobacco research. In 1964, when the Surgeon
General's report condemned smoking, the AMA refused to endorse it,
claiming a need for more research. What they really wanted was more
money, which they received from a consortium of tobacco companies that
paid the AMA $18 million over the next nine years during which the AMA
said nothing about the dangers of smoking.(108)
The Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA),
"after careful consideration of the extent to which cigarettes were
used by physicians in practice," began accepting tobacco
advertisements and money in 1933. State journals such as the New
York State Journal of Medicine also began to run advertisements
for Chesterfield cigarettes that claimed cigarettes are "Just as pure
as the water you drink… and practically untouched by human hands." In
1948, JAMA argued "more can be said in behalf of smoking as a
form of escape from tension than against it… there does not seem to be
any preponderance of evidence that would indicate the abolition of the
use of tobacco as a substance contrary to the public health."(109)
Today, scientists continue to use the excuse that more studies are
needed before they will support restricting the inordinate use of
drugs.
ADVERSE DRUG REACTIONS
The Lazarou study(1)
analyzed records for prescribed medications for 33 million US hospital
admissions in 1994. It discovered 2.2 million serious injuries due to
prescribed drugs; 2.1% of inpatients experienced a serious adverse
drug reaction, 4.7% of all hospital admissions were due to a serious
adverse drug reaction, and fatal adverse drug reactions occurred in
0.19% of inpatients and 0.13% of admissions. The authors estimated
that 106,000 deaths occur annually due to adverse drug reactions.
Using a cost analysis from a 2000 study in which the increase in
hospitalization costs per patient suffering an adverse drug reaction
was $5,483, costs for the Lazarou study's 2.2 million patients with
serious drug reactions amounted to $12 billion.(1,49)
Serious adverse drug reactions commonly emerge after FDA approval
of the drugs involved. The safety of new agents cannot be known with
certainty until a drug has been on the market for many years.(110)
BEDSORES
Over one million people develop bedsores in U.S. hospitals every
year. It's a tremendous burden to patients and family, and a $55
billion dollar healthcare burden.
(7) Bedsores are preventable with proper nursing care. It is
true that 50% of those affected are in a vulnerable age group of over
70. In the elderly bedsores carry a fourfold increase in the rate of
death. The mortality rate in hospitals for patients with bedsores is
between 23% and 37%. (8) Even
if we just take the 50% of people over 70 with bedsores and the lowest
mortality at 23%, that gives us a death rate due to bedsores of
115,000. Critics will say that it was the disease or advanced age that
killed the patient, not the bedsore, but our argument is that an early
death, by denying proper care, deserves to be counted. It is only
after counting these unnecessary deaths that we can then turn our
attention to fixing the problem.
MALNUTRITION IN NURSING HOMES
The General Accounting Office
(GAO), a special investigative branch of Congress, cited 20% of
the nation's 17,000 nursing homes for violations between July 2000 and
January 2002. Many violations involved serious physical injury and
death.(111)
A report from the Coalition for Nursing Home Reform states that at
least one-third of the nation's 1.6 million nursing home residents may
suffer from malnutrition and dehydration, which hastens their death.
The report calls for adequate nursing staff to help feed patients who
are not able to manage a food tray by themselves.(11)
It is difficult to place a mortality rate on malnutrition and
dehydration. The Coalition report states that malnourished residents,
compared with well-nourished hospitalized nursing home residents, have
a fivefold increase in mortality when they are admitted to a hospital.
Multiplying the one-third of 1.6 million nursing home residents who
are malnourished by a mortality rate of 20%(8,14)
results in 108,800 premature deaths due to malnutrition in nursing
homes.
Nosocomial Infections
The rate of nosocomial infections per 1,000 patient days rose from
7.2 in 1975 to 9.8 in 1995, a 36% jump in 20 years. Reports from more
than 270 US hospitals showed that the nosocomial infection rate itself
had remained stable over the previous 20 years, with approximately
five to six hospital-acquired infections occurring per 100 admissions,
a rate of 5-6%. Due to progressively shorter inpatient stays and the
increasing number of admissions, however, the number of infections
increased. It is estimated that in 1995, nosocomial infections cost
$4.5 billion and contributed to more than 88,000 deaths, or one death
every 6 minutes.(9) The 2003
incidence of nosocomial mortality is quite probably higher than in
1995 because of the tremendous increase in antibiotic-resistant
organisms. Morbidity and Mortality Report found that nosocomial
infections cost $5 billion annually in 1999,(10)
representing a $0.5 billion increase in just four years. At this rate
of increase, the current cost of nosocomial infections would be around
$5.5 billion.
Outpatient Iatrogenesis
In a 2000 JAMA article, Dr. Barbara Starfield presents
well-documented facts that are both shocking and unassailable.(12)
The U.S. ranks 12th of 13 industrialized countries when judged by 16
health status indicators. Japan, Sweden, and Canada were first,
second, and third, respectively. More than 40 million people in the US
have no health insurance, and 20-30% of patients receive
contraindicated care.
Starfield warns that one cause of medical mistakes is overuse of
technology, which may create a "cascade effect" leading to still more
treatment. She urges the use of ICD (International Classification of
Diseases) codes that have designations such as "Drugs, Medicinal, and
Biological Substances Causing Adverse Effects in Therapeutic Use" and
"Complications of Surgical and Medical Care" to help doctors quantify
and recognize the magnitude of the medical error problem. Starfield
notes that many deaths attributable to medical error today are likely
to be coded to indicate some other cause of death. She concludes that
against the backdrop of our poor health report card compared to other
Westernized countries, we should recognize that the harmful effects of
health care interventions account for a substantial proportion of our
excess deaths.
Starfield cites Weingart's 2000 article, “Epidemiology of Medical
Error,” as well as other authors to suggest that between 4% and 18% of
consecutive patients in outpatient settings suffer an iatrogenic event
leading to:
- 116 million extra physician visits
- 77 million extra prescriptions filled
- 17 million emergency department visits
- 8 million hospitalizations
- 3 million long-term admissions
- 199,000 additional deaths
- $77 billion in extra costs(112)
Unnecessary Surgeries
While some 12,000 deaths occur each year from unnecessary
surgeries, results from the few studies that have measured unnecessary
surgery directly indicate that for some highly controversial
operations, the proportion of unwarranted surgeries could be as high
as 30%.(74)
MEDICAL ERRORS: A GLOBAL ISSUE
A five-country survey published in the Journal of Health
Affairs found that 18-28% of people who were recently ill had
suffered from a medical or drug error in the previous two years. The
study surveyed 750 recently ill adults. The breakdown by country
showed the percentages of those suffering a medical or drug error were
18% in Britain, 23% in Australia and in New Zealand, 25% in Canada,
and 28% in the US.(113)
HEALTH INSURANCE
The Institute of Medicine recently found that the 41 million
Americans with no health insurance have consistently worse clinical
outcomes than those who are insured, and are at increased risk for
dying prematurely (114).
When doctors bill for services they do not render, advise
unnecessary tests, or screen everyone for a rare condition, they are
committing insurance fraud. The US GAO estimated that $12 billion
dollars was lost to fraudulent or unnecessary claims in 1998, and
reclaimed $480 million in judgments in that year. In 2001, the federal
government won or negotiated more than $1.7 billion in judgments,
settlements, and administrative impositions in health care fraud cases
and proceedings.(115)
WAREHOUSING OUR ELDERS
One way to measure the moral and ethical fiber of a society is by
how it treats its weakest and most vulnerable members. In some
cultures, elderly people lives out their lives in extended family
settings that enable them to continue participating in family and
community affairs. American nursing homes, where millions of our
elders go to live out their final days, represent the pinnacle of
social isolation and medical abuse.
- In America, approximately 1.6 million elderly are confined to
nursing homes. By 2050, that number could be 6.6 million.(11,116)
- Twenty percent of all deaths from all causes occur in nursing
homes.(117)
- Hip fractures are the single greatest reason for nursing home
admissions.(118)
- Nursing homes represent a reservoir for drug-resistant organisms
due to overuse of antibiotics.(119)
Presenting a report he sponsored entitled "Abuse of Residents is a
Major Problem in U.S. Nursing Homes" on July 30, 2001, Rep. Henry
Waxman (D-CA) noted that “as
a society we will be judged by how we treat the elderly." The report
found one-third of the nation's approximately 17,000 nursing homes
were cited for an abuse violation in a two-year period from January
1999 to January 2001.(116)
According to Waxman, “the people who cared for us deserve better." The
report suggests that this known abuse represents only the “tip of the
iceberg” and that much more abuse occurs that we aware of or ignore.(116a)
The report found:
- Over 30% of US nursing homes were cited for abuses, totaling
more than 9,000 violations.
- 10% of nursing homes had violations that caused actual physical
harm to residents or worse.
- Over 40% (3,800) of the
abuse violations followed the filing of a formal complaint, usually
by concerned family members.
- Many verbal abuse violations were found.
- Occasions of sexual abuse.
- Incidents of physical abuse causing numerous injuries such as
fractured femur, hip, elbow, wrist, and other injuries.
Dangerously understaffed nursing homes lead to neglect, abuse,
overuse of medications, and physical restraints. In 1990, Congress
mandated an exhaustive study of nurse-to-patient ratios in nursing
homes. The study was finally begun in 1998 and took four years to
complete.(120) A spokesperson
for The National Citizens' Coalition for Nursing Home Reform commented
on the study: “They compiled two reports of three volumes each
thoroughly documenting the number of hours of care residents must
receive from nurses and nursing assistants to avoid painful, even
dangerous, conditions such as bedsores and infections. Yet it took the
Department of Health and Human Services and Secretary Tommy Thompson
only four months to dismiss the report as ‘insufficient.'”(121)
Although preventable with proper nursing care, bedsores occur three
times more commonly in nursing homes than in acute care or veterans
hospitals.(122).
Because many nursing home patients suffer from chronic debilitating
conditions, their assumed cause of death often is unquestioned by
physicians. Some studies show that as many as 50% of deaths due to
restraints, falls, suicide, homicide, and choking in nursing homes may
be covered up.(123,124) It is
possible that many nursing home deaths are instead attributed to heart
disease. In fact, researchers have found that heart disease may be
over-represented in the general population as a cause of death on
death certificates by 8-24%. In the elderly, the overreporting of
heart disease as a cause of death is as much as twofold.(125)
That very few statistics exist concerning malnutrition in
acute-care hospitals and nursing homes demonstrates the lack of
concern in this area. While a survey of the literature turns up few US
studies, one revealing US study evaluated the nutritional status of
837 patients in a 100-bed subacute-care hospital over a 14-month
period. The study found only 8% of the patients were well nourished,
while 29% were malnourished and 63% were at risk of malnutrition. As a
result, 25% of the malnourished patients required readmission to an
acute-care hospital, compared to 11% of the well-nourished patients.
The authors concluded that malnutrition reached epidemic proportions
in patients admitted to this subacute-care facility.(126)
Many studies conclude that physical restraints are an underreported
and preventable cause of death. Studies show that compared to no
restraints, the use of restraints carries a higher mortality rate and
economic burden.(127-129)
Studies have found that physical restraints, including bedrails, are
the cause of at least 1 in every 1,000 nursing-home deaths.(130-132)
Deaths caused by malnutrition, dehydration, and physical
restraints, however, are rarely recorded on death certificates.
Several studies reveal that nearly half of the listed causes of death
on death certificates for elderly people with chronic or multi-system
disease are inaccurate.(133)
Even though 1 in 5 people die in nursing homes, an autopsy is
performed in less than 1% of these deaths.(134).
Overmedicating Seniors
Dr. Robert Epstein, chief medical officer of Medco Health Solutions
Inc. (a unit of Merck & Co.), conducted a study in 2003 of drug trends
among the elderly.(135) He
found that seniors are going to multiple physicians, getting multiple
prescriptions, and using multiple pharmacies. Medco oversees
drug-benefit plans for more than 60 million Americans, including 6.3
million seniors who received more than 160 million prescriptions.
According to the study, the average senior receives 25 prescriptions
each year. Among those 6.3 million seniors, a total of 7.9 million
medication alerts were triggered: less than one-half that number, 3.4
million, were detected in 1999. About 2.2 million of those alerts
indicated excessive dosages unsuitable for seniors, and about 2.4
million alerts indicated clinically inappropriate drugs for the
elderly. Reuters interviewed Kasey Thompson, director of the Center on
Patient Safety at the American Society of Health System Pharmacists,
who noted: “There are serious and systemic problems with poor
continuity of care in the United States .” He says this study
represents only “the tip of the iceberg” of a national problem.
According to Drug Benefit Trends , the average number of
prescriptions dispensed per non-Medicare HMO member per year rose 5.6%
from 1999 to 2000, - from 7.1 to 7.5 prescriptions. The average number
dispensed for Medicare members increased 5.5%, from 18.1 to 19.1
prescriptions.(136) The total
number of prescriptions written in the US in 2000 was 2.98 billion, or
10.4 prescriptions for every man, woman, and child.(137)
In a study of 818 residents of residential care facilities for the
elderly, 94% were receiving at least one medication at the time of the
interview. The average intake of medications was five per resident;
the authors noted that many of these drugs were given without a
documented diagnosis justifying their use.(138)
Seniors and groups like the American Association for Retired
Persons (AARP) are demanding
that prescription drug coverage be a basic right.(139)
They have accepted allopathic medicine's overriding assumption that
aging and dying in America must be accompanied by drugs in nursing
homes and eventual hospitalization. Seniors are given the choice of
either high-cost patented drugs or low-cost generic drugs. Drug
companies attempt to keep the most expensive drugs on the shelves and
suppress access to generic drugs, despite facing stiff fines of
hundreds of millions of dollars levied by the federal government.(140,141)
In 2001, some of the world's largest drug companies were fined a
record $871 million for conspiring to increase the price of vitamins.(142)
Current AARP recommendations for diet and nutrition assume that
seniors are getting all the nutrition they need in an average diet. At
most, AARP suggests adding extra calcium and a multivitamin and
mineral supplement.(143)
Ironically, studies also indicate underuse of proper pain
medication for patients who need it. One study evaluated pain
management in a group of 13,625 cancer patients, aged 65 and over,
living in nursing homes. While almost 30% of the patients reported
pain, more than 25% received no pain relief medication, 16% received a
mild analgesic drug, 32% received a moderate analgesic drug, and 26%
received adequate pain-relieving morphine. The authors concluded that
older patients and minority patients were more likely to have their
pain untreated.(144)
WHAT REMAINS TO BE UNCOVERED
Our ongoing research will continue to quantify the morbidity,
mortality, and financial loss due to:
- X-ray exposures (mammography, fluoroscopy, CT scans).
- Overuse of antibiotics for all conditions.
- Carcinogenic drugs (hormone replacement therapy,*
immunosuppressive and prescription drugs).
- Cancer chemotherapy(70)
- Surgery and unnecessary surgery (cesarean section, radical
mastectomy, preventive mastectomy, radical hysterectomy,
prostatectomy, cholecystectomies, cosmetic surgery, arthroscopy,
etc.).
- Discredited medical procedures and therapies.
- Unproven medical therapies.
- Outpatient surgery.
- Doctors themselves.
* Part of our ongoing research will be to quantify the mortality
and morbidity caused by hormone replacement therapy (HRT) since the
1940s. In December 2000, a government scientific advisory panel
recommended that synthetic estrogen be added to the nation's list of
cancer-causing agents. HRT, either synthetic estrogen alone or
combined with synthetic progesterone, is used by an estimated 13.5 to
16 million women in the US.(145)
The aborted Women's Health Initiative Study (WHI) of 2002 showed that
women taking synthetic estrogen combined with synthetic progesterone
have a higher incidence of ovarian cancer, breast cancer, stroke, and
heart disease, with little evidence of osteoporosis reduction or
dementia prevention. WHI researchers, who usually never make
recommendations except to suggest more studies, advised doctors to be
very cautious about prescribing HRT to their patients.(100,146-150)
Results of the “Million Women Study” on HRT and breast cancer in
the UK were published in medical journal The Lancet in August
2003. According to lead author Prof. Valerie Beral, director of the
Cancer Research UK Epidemiology Unit: "We estimate that over the past
decade, use of HRT by UK women aged 50-64 has resulted in an extra
20,000 breast cancers, estrogen-progestagen (combination) therapy
accounting for 15,000 of these.”(151)
We were unable to find statistics on breast cancer, stroke, uterine
cancer, or heart disease caused by HRT used by American women. Because
the US population is roughly six times that of the UK, it is possible
that 120,000 cases of breast cancer have been caused by HRT in the
past decade.