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Triplix and the Real Problem with US Healthcare

August 5, 2009

Today I was watching TV when an ad for a drug named Triplix came on. You’ve probably seen it, or at least similar ads, too. Rugged-looking blue-collar Joes with serious faces gaze at the viewer and say something to the effect of “I thought I had my cholesterol under control…but diet, exercise, and a statin alone weren’t enough. That’s when my doctor told me about Triplix!”

I had seen this ad before, but for some reason it really bothered me this time, perhaps because I have been thinking about healthcare costs a lot lately. Triplix is a new drug recently approved for use in addition to statins to lower bad cholesterol and triglycerides. The catch, however, is that all research with the drug shows that while it fulfills its claim of lowering those blood markers, there is no decrease in heart attacks or heart disease compared to just taking a statin (Source 1, Source 2). It even tells you this nonchalantly in the ad, I’m assuming because of some FDA disclosure requirement. 

This one short ad encapsulates several deep-rooted problems with our health care system. First off, Triplix is hardly alone in being an FDA approved treatment that either works no better (or only marginally better) than existing, cheaper treatments. Take a look at cardiovascular stents, mesh implants that go in blood vessels to keep them open and maximize blood flow, which doctors in recent years have begun dispensing like candy. One inconvenient fact is that this expensive surgical procedure doesn’t have much long term benefit: many recent studies have shown no reduction in heart attacks or extended lifespan compared to those on drugs alone (Source). So basically, Triplix is a drug designed to be taken with another complementary drug (statins), but has no increased benefit over just the statin. Stents are very expensive surgical devices that are no more effective than routine drug intervention. 

Unfortunately in this country, we have gotten used to accepting that more is better, and more expensive is much better. Any talk of restricting insurance and/or Medicare reimbursement for drugs like Triplix or surgeries like stent implants is attacked as “rationing,” “socialized medicine,” or worse. Critics raise the specter of G-Men interfering with your personal doctor-patient relationship. I could not find a lot of specific information on Triplix online, but I assume as a new drug for a high-demand disease it is fairly expensive. If it is not preventing heart attacks, heart disease, or helping people live longer, it is sinking lots of money down the toilet. You might say, “But my insurance company pays for it, so who cares?” The increasing cost of our healthcare system is driven primarily by expensive new drugs, surgeries, and tests. When people waste money on non-effective drugs like Triplix, all of our premiums get raised, more people get declined, and the number of uninsured goes up.

Second, these treatments have risks. Stents require vascular surgery that carries anesthetic risk and the possibility of complications. Triplix can cause problems with muscle and kidneys. These are not insignificant, and if the benefit does not counter this risk, why are we using these treatments? They are not only expensive but possibly harmful.

Third, direct-to-consumer drug ads in general just piss me off. You are marketing complex drugs to lay people. They have no idea how the drug actually works, the impact of side effects and drug interactions, or how to assess indications and prognosis.  In my opinion, there is no reason for such ads besides profit for drug companies. Such ads have led to people storming into their doctors offices demanding drugs and treatments they may not need. How many times a day are we told to “Ask your doctors about the purple pill”? If you were a doctor and a patient was demanding a treatment he or she probably didn’t need, but might help and could make you some money, what would you do? It’s not that doctors are greedy assholes, they are human and if they can make money by a treatment that might be of some benefit, of course many relent and write the script.

Fourth, we need to ditch the idea that lawsuits and defensive medicine are the main reason for over-prescription of treatments. This revealing New Yorker article by a Harvard surgeon points out the fallacies in this argument by showing how health care spending in many areas of Texas that aggressively capped medical malpractice lawsuit rewards remained high with little benefit to patient health. The reasons for this are complex and beyond the scope of this article, but the take home point was that over-medicating and over-operating weren’t tied to medical lawsuits.

Finally, I wish the debate could change in such a way that people understand rationing is not only inevitable, but happeningright  now. Insurance companies routinely deny people coverage for experimental and non-beneficial treatments. But they still cover a lot of ineffective medicine and surgery. There are limited dollars in the economy, and we can’t afford to keep carting every person with a headache out for an MRI, or to put everyone with heart disease on 8+ drugs. Rationing can be done in different ways, but is necessary due to limited medical and financial resources. Just because we are a wealthy country does not change the limited resources principle–it only stretches the limits of what we can afford and what we can’t.

In fact, the Mayo Clinic, one of the world’s best hospitals, agrees. They think an independent panel of doctors need to frequently evaluate what we spend money on, and only reimburse the things that have value, and lead to improvements in patient length and quality of life. They disliked the initial health care reform bills coming out of Congress, but brightened up at the proposal of IMAC, a panel that would evaluate what Medicare and Medicaid reimbursed, which would also have the effect of influencing insurance companies. Unfortunately, this idea, one of the best parts of the proposed health care bills, is being attacked by both parties and will likely be killed. 

Until proponents of health-care reform are able to make the case for using available research to shape what gets funded and prescribed, and are also able to overcome the label of “rationing,” there will be no improvement in US healthcare. In a way it doesn’t even really matter who foots the bill, insurance companies or the government–if we keep spending on wasteful treatments our system will bankrupt itself without making us any healthier. Doctors also need to stop being afraid of research and “evidence-based medicine,” and use it as a way to inform their practice, not hinder. If a physician continues to use treatments shown to be of little benefit, he is harming his patient and costing all of us money.

Until then, I will continue to grimace every time I see that damn Triplix ad, which cheerfully informs us it doesn’t actually work.

The Newest Member of the Tinfoil Hat Club…

February 21, 2009

…Alan Keyes! Congratulations, come on down! 

(After watching the video make sure you rip out your fillings to keep the government radio waves from reading your mind.)

On average, I write like an imbecile

July 30, 2008

According to “The Blog Readability Test,” this blog’s reading difficulty is “Junior High School.” I was pretty embarassed. All of my friend’s blogs were College (Post-Grad). To see if it was thrown off by my many entertainment reviews, photography posts and short rants, I entered in some of my longer essays about veterinary economics and evolution-ID debates.

My essay ”Vets and Debt: The possibility of Poverty” was rated as College: Undergrad, “Firings and Evolution in Academia” was rated College: Postgrad, and my article on the ”National Veterinary Medical Services Act” was rated as Genius. So judge this test with a grain of salt.

On a side-note, I’ve always preferred the writing of minimalists like Hemingway and Carver over blowhards.

Lack of posts, I’m tired dammit

June 26, 2008

Sorry about the lack of posts to anyone checking my blog last few weeks. This summer I’m a herdsman at a dairy farm on Lake Ontario. I have to get up at 5 am and work 6 am-6:30 pm 6 days a week. I’m exhausted. If I don’t get to bed by 10 or 11 I’m wiped out in the morning.

I have a lot of ideas for posts stewing in my head and hopefully I can get them written down soon. 

Visitor 2000

May 12, 2008

Reached 2000 in less than half the time it took to get to 1000

April was a booming month for this ole site

Campaign finance reform puts MORE money into politics

April 5, 2008

I couldn’t sleep so I was watching Hannity & Colmes on Fox News. They were discussing the Clinton’s tax returns, and one of the talking heads claimed that “campaign finance reform is producing more millionaire and billionaire candidates running for political office because they can’t get as much donations. Campaign finance reform is putting MORE money into politics, not less!”

Woo woo! Welcome to the “way it’s always been” train, last stop, pundits on Hannity and Colmes! Unfortunate as it may be, the wealthy disproportionately run for political office because they have the time and monetary means. All of the Founding Fathers were wealthy aristocrats, along with pretty much every political family dynasty from the Kennedys to the Bushes.

Campaign finance reforms aims to keep large sums of money from swaying candidates running for office, not “weed out wealthy candidates.” The guy on H&C was making hay over Hillary’s tax returns: ~$110 million since 2000, including her husband’s earnings from his book and speeches. Yet in about a year and a half, Hillary has raised $169 million from donations, many from special interests.

On a final note, this probably isn’t the best year for Repubs to bitch about a candidate’s personal finances, you know, with Mitt Romney having a personal net worth estimated between $250-500 million dollars…

Conservative Free Speech

February 7, 2008

Over the last few days I developed an addictive habit–posting on the ultraconservative Hannity forums. After a few days of fake posts rallying Romney, a 32 page debate on assault weapon bans, discussing SiCKO, and rallying fools against “socialized education,” it has all come to an end. Today, after some posters decided to try and claim I was an idiot for believing Moore like a sheep, I posted 3 responses with over 20 links verifying the facts in Moore’s movie.

However, I made the mistake of trying to blend in: using a curse word on a forum. I told the poster “you could take your lazy, partisan ass to google and type “sicko fact check” to find out anything you needed to know,” and shortly after my screen was given the image above.

My computer is IP banned, I cannot even look at their forums anymore.

All of these same posters cherish free speech, but keep down Ron Paul posters and liberal posters. The conservative nuts can say whatever ridiculous nonsense they want and get away with it, but if a liberal calls someone an “ass” its game over.

Go First Amendment!

Vote Dennis Kucinich in the Democratic Primary in ‘08

January 15, 2008

http://www.dennis4president.com/

Here is my official endorsement for Democratic candidate in the 2008 election: Dennis Kucinich.

Kucinich is the one is I wrote down on my absentee ballot for NYS primary, and encourage others to do the same.

I realize that he will not get the nomination. I also know some of my friends will criticize me for “throwing my vote away” and/or taking votes away from Barack Obama.

Do I encourage this for voters only in “safe” states like New York? No.

I am idealistic (read: what most would call stupid and naive) and think people should vote for the candidate who represents them, not hedge bets on candidates they don’t like but are more electable.

Obscure, lesser known third party candidates bring issues to the table that otherwise would not be considered. For example, Dennis Kucinich actively opposes factory farming and the disintegration of independent family farms, an issue largely ignored by “top tier” politicians of both parties.

Candidates like Dennis Kucinich do not “sugar coat” words or vote “present” on sticky issues for political reasons. Dennis Kucinich was the architect behind an impeachment against Dick Cheney in Congress.

Often times, “non-viable” candidates like Dennis Kucinich, Bill Richardson, and Ron Paul have decades more experience with a firm position on issues than “top tier” candidates.

I have watched Dennis Kucinich on many talk shows and clips on YouTube, read his record, and scrutinized his quotes from the past and it all leads to one conclusion: Dennis Kucinich is a true progressive, and every position he has ever taken is in line with my beliefs 100%.

Previously I expressed support for John Edwards and Ron Paul. I still think they are candidates with integrity and determination to reform Washington. But Dennis Kucinich has a longer, stronger record of progressive votes and dedication to reform.

In the general election, there is a very large chance I will vote for whoever wins the Democratic nomination. I think another 4-8 years of GOP rule will be horrific for the US.

That said, I think the primaries are a time to raise awareness of issues beyond the one or two “hot button” topics of the moment. I think it is a time to attempt to revitalize support for candidates who don’t vote lock-step with their party (Kucinich voted down the PATRIOT Act, opposed all use of force in the Middle East, and consistently refused to fund the War in Iraq).

Vote for whoever you want in the primary. But don’t feel guilty if you choose a candidate like Dennis Kucinich.

I’m in Iowa

January 10, 2008

Here from tonight till Saturday for an interview at Iowa State.

Reflections to follow.