суббота, 29 октября 2011 г.

American Legion Magazine Features


I decided to go straight to the source for some answers to the Legion stand on smoking. The Legion publishes a monthly magazine full of information vital to the members with a motto of "For God and Country Since 1919." I just wanted to see what may be relevant to the discussion of smoking in the publication. Here are excerpts from the August, 2009 American Legion Magazine:

1. In the article, "Attention, Couch Potatoes," physiologist Richard Cotton urges sedentary men ages 45 and older and women ages 55 and older or "anyone with two or more heart-disease risk factors (obesity, smoking, high blood pressure, diabetes, or family history of heart disease) should see a doctor.

2. In a health article, "Top Tips For Healthy Eyes," one of the tips is "Quit smoking. Smoking is harmful to the eyes and, even if you don't smoke, it is advisable to stay away from smoky environments."

3. The issue contained numerous advertisements in the for legal help with mesothelioma and lung cancer damages.

4. The issue contained an advertisement for a battery-powered, continuous flow oxygen concentrator. Of course, people with oxygen devices must not be close to flame, to fire, or to smoking.

5. The issue featured an advertisement tor Daduet, medication for elevated blood pressure and cholesterol. The American Diabetes Association reports that smoking increases cholesterol levels and the levels of some other fats in your blood as well as increasing blood pressure.

6. The issue had numerous advertisements for erectile dysfunction such as Vacurect, Viagra, Levitra, and online pharmacy. The American Diabetes Association reports that smoking can cause impotence.

7. The issue displayed a deluxe, full page advertisement for TheraSeed, a minimally invasive outpatient treatment for those with a prostate cancer diagnosis. Men with heavy smoking exposure also face a 60 percent increased risk of prostate cancer overall relative to nonsmokers. Compared to nonsmokers, current smokers experienced a 40 percent increase in the risk of prostate cancer. (Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers and Prevention. July, 2003)

8. The article in the Living Well section of the issue was entitled, "How To Thrive In Spite of Diabetes." The article warns about taking care of high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and eye health in very specific terms.
Needless to say, smoking for those with diabetes is very dangerous. According to The Diabetes Monitor, smoking and diabetes together make a person 11 times more likely to die of a heart attack or stroke. Smoking one cigarette cuts the body's ability to use insulin by 15%. People are twice as likely to have circulation and wound healing problem leading to leg and foot enfections, sometimes requiring amputation. And, smokerss with diabetes are more likely to develop nerve damage.

9. And, in the Commander's Message from National Commander David K. Rehbein, a quote stated: "As a new school year begins, I implore my fellow Legionnaires to make themselves available to schools, church groups and extracuricular programs for young children." I'm sure all of these activities are placing Legionnaires in smoke-free environments with American children.



I have the issue of the magazine on hand for those who wish to verify its contents. I wonder when we are going to listen to our own instructions about the warnings of smoking. More troubling to me, when are smokers going to put the health and welfare of others above their own personal preferences? I think greed and personal inconsideration are vital avenues to explore for the answer.

вторник, 3 мая 2011 г.

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That Which We Call a Rose


What’s in a name? Sometimes nothing much. Sometimes a shift in paradigm.

The Medical Record in its current format was created over a century ago by Dr. Henry Stanley Plummer at the Mayo Clinic. When in the course of human events the Medical Record began migrating from paper folders to computer files, the Institute Of Medicine naturally named the new invention Computer-based Patient Record System (CPRS). The Medical Records Institute chose the term Electronic Patient Record (EPR). Somewhere along the line the “patient” got dropped from the concept and the software used to compose and store medical records became known as Electronic Medical Record and the name EMR stuck.

As the EMR software evolved and started exhibiting rudimentary information exchange abilities and some semblance of “intelligence”, it was felt that a name change was in order. To differentiate the newer and smarter software from the original EMR, the term Electronic Health Record (EHR) was introduced and is now enthusiastically supported by the Federal Government. The term EHR is used in acts of Congress, rule makings from CMS and ONC and Presidential speeches. Since EMR has been around for quite some time, most industry veterans, as well as most doctors, are a bit confused about the new terminology. Is it EMR or is it EHR? Is it just semantics? Would an EMR by any other name smell as sweet (bitter)?

In a recent ONC blog, Peter Garrett and Joshua Seidman argue that there is a significant difference between EMR and EHR. The former is just “a digital version of the paper charts” and “not much better than a paper record”, while the latter is “designed to be accessed by all people involved in the patients care”, including patients, and generally “represents the ability to easily share medical information among stakeholders and to have a patient’s information follow him or her through the various modalities of care engaged by that individual”. This dramatic difference stems from replacing the word “Medical”, which implies disease, with the word “Health” which is “the general condition of the body”. Note that the word “Patient” is still absent. However, Health is supposedly from cradle to grave, while Medical is episodic in nature. Since, no matter what you call it, clinicians are the primary users of this software, would we say that doctors provide Medical Care or Health Care?

When we say that cost of Health Care is sky-rocketing, we don’t usually include costs for clean air, clean water, car seatbelts and gym memberships, and although we all know that an apple a day keeps the order cialis away, the cost of apples is not included in our Health Care expenditures. To be sure, Medicine, “the science and art dealing with the maintenance of health and the prevention, alleviation, or cure of disease”, does include costs for direct prevention of specific diseases (immunizations) and efforts for early diagnosis of others (screenings). Historically, doctors, nurses and their less formally educated predecessors have been tending to the very sick. It is with this goal in mind that Dr. Plummer’s collaborative Medical record was created, and it is for this purpose that the American Academy of Pediatrics advocated for a Medical home for sick children, and it is Medical care for the sick which the EMR attempted to facilitate, one patient at a time. The EHR represents quite a different philosophy and places new and expanded responsibilities on the Medical profession.

The EHR is intended to serve the healthy as well as the sick, and the President’s vision is that every American should have one, whether that particular American is healthy or not. The ONC vision, shared by many innovators in the field, is that “EHRs focus on the total health of the patient—going beyond standard clinical data collected in the provider’s office and inclusive of a broader view on a patient’s care”. That broader view will presumably include lifestyle habits, diet and exercise and everything one may wish to record which pertains to one’s general health status. If and when a person becomes ill and is transformed into a patient, the various clinicians and care providers will contribute their documentation to the EHR, and since EHRs are easily shareable, all Medical care will be coordinated through the EHR and collaboration will flourish, as it should. This sounds almost exactly the same as what a Personal Health Record (PHR) is supposed to be. Is an EHR really a PHR?

No. EHRs include one feature that is not possible in a PHR: the ability to aggregate individual patients into populations. When physicians write introspectively about their work, you usually find stories about this or that particular patient, pondering whether they did too much for the 90-year-old Alzheimer’s victim, or too little for the misdiagnosed 40-year-old ovarian cancer patient. They talk about emotions, or lack thereof, about small victories and exasperatingly “non-compliant” middle aged executives who should know better. Each story has a patient with a name, physical details and most often character description. For those inclined to self-assessment, the day-in and day-out tally of these personal episodes is the decisive yardstick. When people recommend a cheap cialis to a friend, they usually talk about “nobody could figure out what was wrong with Katie; he took one look at her and knew right away” or “you can get in today or tomorrow and she is so nice and patient ; always takes my phone calls and you know I can be a pain (giggle)” or “when Adam had that knee problem, he fixed it like magic and he did surgery on cousin Joe’s shoulder; as good as new, and I think he takes care of the Cardinals too; he is definitely the best in town”.

This unscientific, anecdotal method of both performing and assessing one’s work will be replaced by the broader view of EHR enabled population indicators and considerations. Instead of dealing with Mr. Wilson’s gout and Mrs. Wilson’s incontinence, you are now the keeper of the Health of Populations. The EHR can tell you that half of your under 40 patients are obese and doing absolutely nothing about it. You, or your team, will need to intervene because an ounce of prevention today will lead to healthier lives for this population, and lower costs for society. While managing Mrs. Wilson’s neuropathy is important (especially to Mrs. Wilson), having your population of 300 diabetics controlled within acceptable cost effective parameters will become the main focus of your practice. EHRs will provide you with the intelligence (information) to manage your numbers and with ongoing measurements to assess your performance against goals, and EHRs will continuously collect data for ground-breaking research and more effective recommendations.

EHRs, as imperfect, ineffective and downright primitive, as they are today may be our first glimpse of a future where curing or treating disease is largely a thing of the past. If populations are proactively managed and everybody gets their shots and recommended genetic therapy, or whatever they will come up with next, Medical care will be limited to trauma and exotic ailments that have not been researched just yet. While our generation will not be crossing the River into the Promised Land of perpetual Health, it is up to us to manage this transition so human dignity is preserved and collateral damage is minimized in the process of industrializing medicine, a process which starts with changing the M in EMR to the H in EHR.