Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Ian Tingen's avatar

First: it’s so nice to be able to take in your writing in a long form!

Regarding starting: I agree that medicine is probably the strongest place to plant the vanguards’s flag. Easiest and quickest way to show value, 💯

Regarding Funding: easiest money (?) is make this kind of work interesting to insurance companies, be they private (US) or public (anywhere else).

It would be relatively simple to look at the highest cost work being done, and then comb through the associated literature. Finding even a few points of margin could be a radical impact.

Maybe do it through Nosek’s group? Idk.

Expand full comment
Federico Soto del Alba's avatar

A collection of those findings later corrected that had measurable consequences, not individually, but collectively, hence difficult to lawsuit for individual patients, might be useful for the Public to have context of how bad Medical Practice is. I wanted to do it with cancer screening, I trained as a Radiologist. But, violence, disease and disability, and now probably lack of interest stand still in the way for me to do it.

You would be uniquely qualified to make such magna and needed compilation.

As such Medicine probably killed more people than it claims to have saved, given the benefits are in parts per hundreds for one more year of life.

And it has consequences at least against the claim Medicine has contributed to a larger life span beyond vaccines, antibioticis, sanitation, work safety/health and pregnant/delivery care.

Most advances in Medicine other than that probably are along the lines: leave it like that.

The OMS, OPS and Health Ministry in México recommendations I read in the 90s were along those lines: just choose which patients need something done in GP settings, leave the others alone, explain why, and educate on what could happen if there could be latter a need to then do something.

There are histories of medical horrors of the past, but no new ones, AFAIK, covering from, say the 70s with its changes in clinical research with formal trials for instance to a few years ago.

It might even provide you funding if it sold, for instance. But it´s not a given and selling books now is not the great opportunity it once was, unless you are a celebrity receiving millions in advance for your Bio. Cashing on Substack is no better alternative for most writers at a 5% charging rate per Subscribers.

As for the attempt to create an institute, I think it could be started focally targeting the Guidelines and Recommendations of Collegiate Bodies, the NICE (which I think generally is not that Bad), and the American equivalent, forgot its name.

Cochrane is too focused on meta-analysis I think, Guidelines do have more impact on Clinical Practice: one can get law suited for not following them up, providing an incentive to follow them, despite what can be inferred from your post: sometimes not following them can save lives.

From there one could look more closely for the supporting papers, spot the fraudsters and have mediatic impact, if the media shows interest.

Take the publicity of those multi expert bodies, show their ill-will or incompetence, and get more funding, etc.

Expand full comment
4 more comments...

No posts