Waubonsee Community College

Hope or hype, the obsession with medical advances and the high cost of false promises, Richard A. Deyo, Donald L. Patrick

Label
Hope or hype, the obsession with medical advances and the high cost of false promises, Richard A. Deyo, Donald L. Patrick
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [291]-326) and index
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Hope or hype
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
56591961
Responsibility statement
Richard A. Deyo, Donald L. Patrick
Sub title
the obsession with medical advances and the high cost of false promises
Table Of Contents
Can there be too much of a good thing? the hazards of uncritically embracing medical advances -- What's the problem? don't we need lifesaving new treatments? -- Medical innovations and American culture: the call of the sirens -- Why more isn't always better: red herrings, side effects, and superbugs -- Why newer isn't always better: unpleasant surprises, recalls, and learning curves -- Social hazards: what we lose by uncritical use of new treatments -- How things really work: opinion makers and regulators of medical advances -- What will you swallow? how drug companies get you to buy more expensive drugs than you may need -- Making friends, playing monopoly, and dirty tricks: other industry strategies -- Stacking the deck? how to get the "right" answer in clinical research -- "Cancer cured--film at 11:00": the media's role in disseminating medical advances -- Doctors and hospitals: fueling the drive for new and more -- Advocacy groups: Mother Teresa's waiting room -- Holes in the safety net: the FDA and the FTC -- Ineffective. inferior or needlessly costly new drugs -- Medical devices that disappoint -- Ineffective or needlessly extensive surgery -- Weight loss technology: shedding pounds from your waistline or your wallet? -- For doctors: evidence-based medicine -- For insurers and researchers: pay now or pay more later -- For all decision makers: getting value for money -- For government: regulatory approaches to improve the dissemination of medical innovations -- For consumers: shared decision making
Classification
Mapped to