disease model

Reframing Maternal Health: How Do We Know What We Think We Know?

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I had the great pleasure of speaking to the Washington Alliance for Responsible Midwifery (WARM) recently about re-framing the concepts around maternal health and understanding the biases in medical research. One of the great questions that has been occupying my time lately is understanding how the frameworks for understanding medical concepts emerge. Shorthand: how do we know what we think we know? Below is an annotated and somewhat edited (for publication) version of the talk I gave. Enjoy.

What is Health?

When we think about health and illness, we all think we know what they are. We can see, touch, and measure health and illness in some very discrete and obvious ways. For example, in Western culture thin is good, fat is not good. If one is skinny, one must be healthy whereas if one overweight, one must be unhealthy.

Weight is a key parameter by which we all shorthand our assessment of health and illness. Indeed, weight, along with other visible qualities, like pallor and disposition, and some less immediately visible but easily measurable qualities like blood pressure, glucose, and other standard labs are key indicators that define health versus illness.

More often than not, however, our definitions of health and disease have been guided by external forces and systems of thought that are inherently biased, even though they claim the objectivity of science and evidence. These biases not only impact our views on health and illness, but in many ways, define what questions are acceptable to ask about health and disease.

Perinatal Mental Illness: An Entrenched Framework for Maternal Health and Illness

In my own research on perinatal mental illness, the prevailing wisdom was and still remains focused on questions that frame the discussion incorrectly. What I mean by that is the original ideas that initiated our notions of what causes postpartum mental illness – the change in progesterone and the estrogens – have become entrenched. Indeed, the ideas that the symptoms are a standard clinical depression or somehow a more serious degree of baby blues and tearfulness are well established.

When you think about pregnancy and postpartum, there are huge hormone changes, progesterone and estriol and estradiol being the most obvious, so it was reasonable to begin looking there. The problem is that, more than not, these hormones were never measured and when they were measured in association with depressive symptoms there were only weak correlations, if any correlations at all. After a while, one would think researchers would begin looking elsewhere, other hormones, other symptoms, but they didn’t. They just dug in deeper. The framework for perinatal mental health issues had already be set and to deviate was difficult at best, impossible for many.

I came to this conversation as a lowly graduate student. I thought, let’s look at other hormones and other symptoms, not just depression, and see what happens.

Lo and behold, other hormones were involved, as were other symptoms. But again, the framework was established and so the idea of expanding definitions of perinatal mental health, especially by someone who wasn’t a named researcher, was not a positive one.

The research was rejected over and over again and the politics of the maintaining the framework and only incrementally changing it were made quite clear to me, repeatedly. So much so that those controlling the dialogue were willing to dismiss where the data pointed to in order to frame the conversation as conventionally accepted – that progesterone and estrogens caused varying degrees of depression postpartum. Even though this made no sense logically; if this were the case, all women would be suffering and they were not. There was no supporting data, but it didn’t matter because as one reviewer commented about my research – ‘that is not the direction the hormone research is going’. So much for unbiased science.

This experience, added to my already disquieted disposition, led me to always dig deeper and look at the frameworks through which the research or ideas were being proposed. These are more philosophical questions, and yes, I have a degree in philosophy so I am naturally inclined towards these – but I think it is important to question how you know what you know and how others know what they know; those rules of knowledge determine, in large part, what can be known in a public sense, and will lead to tremendous insight in your practice – especially when what is accepted as standard clinical practice – doesn’t quite mesh with the patients in front of you. Dig and figure out what the framework was that developed those particular guidelines. Was it valid, was it commiserate with modern patients and current health issues or was it something that was skewed to begin with and has become increasingly more skewed – but we’re holding on to the practice anyway because it has become just the way we do things.

It’s a big topic – one where women and childbirth should play central roles but historically, we have been left out of the conversation.

Historical Frameworks for Maternal Health

To give you some context about how the frameworks impact clinical practice, let us consider the evolution of modern medicine. Historically, medicine has asserted the primacy of the physician’s ability to ‘see’ and thus, identify illness, over the subjectivity of the patient’s perspective about his or her health. So much so, that patients need not even speak unless spoken too and may only aid the physician to the extent they can answer those questions that the physician is interested in.

To say this has been a paternalistic approach is an understatement. Within this model of the physician as ‘seer’ and interpreter of signs and symptoms there is no room for the patient and his or her interpretation of the illness – especially her interpretation.

Despite its flaws, however, in many ways, this was a net positive for medical science. It allowed medicine to progress, for diseases to be systematically recorded and discussed – amongst other physicians of course – but still a critical step forward in medicine. Most importantly, this framework allowed medical science to begin developing treatments to specific diseases.

On the most basic level, one cannot manage a condition unless one can measure it, and to measure it, we have to be able to identify it and distinguish it from other diseases. And herein, lays much of problem with general women’s health and maternal health: what to measure, how to measure and what those measurements meant were largely decided by men who had no lived experience of ‘women’s health’ save perhaps, an observed experience with mothers, wives, sisters – which for all intents and purposes because of the political and cultural norms – women were separate.

So, the framework for women’s health, and most especially, maternal health was fundamentally flawed and inherently biased – from the onset. No matter that midwives had been delivering babies for generations and had built a wealth of knowledge – their influence, and power was usurped by physicians and that knowledge was summarily rejected. In its place practices and technologies that, in many cases, did not benefit women. Indeed, from the early 20th century onward, obstetrics considered childbirth a pathogenic condition requiring medical intervention.

Since within this model the patient had no role in either diagnostics or treatment consideration, but lay simply in front of the physician for him to ‘see’ and interpret the signs and symptoms of disease, the definitions of women’s health and disease and most especially maternal health – were obviously skewed. How could they not be, looking from the outside in – framing the questions from a distance?

Consider that not only were the very questions asked about women’s health defined by men, but the research subsequently, if it included women at all, was guided by the false presumptions that women were simply men with uteri.

And I should note, that women were summarily excluded from research until the late 1990s – so everything we know about medications prior to the 90s was based upon research with men, generally, young, healthy men at that.

It was believed and still held by many, that except for reproductive processes, men and women were fundamentally the same. Once we isolate those specific functions, there is no need to address women’s health any differently than men’s health. Or is there?

Is a Woman Simply a Man with a Uterus?

As women, I think we would all argue in favor of assessing women’s health differently than men’s health.

From a physiological and biochemical standpoint, male and female bodies are quite distinct, far beyond differences in reproductive capacity. In fact, these differences are exactly because of reproductive capacity and more specifically, the hormones that mediate those abilities.

If men and women are different – and of course they are – how do we know that what we know about women’s health is in fact accurate when most of women’s health research was defined by men? Do we really know anything, beyond the most basic assessments about women’s health?

I would argue that what we know or rather what we think we know, pretend to know, especially in western medicine, may not be accurate. The questions were framed incorrectly – from the perspective that women’s reproductive capacities, organs and hormones had no impact on the rest of her health. We could probably make the same argument for men, as their reproductive organs and hormones were dissociated from the rest of their health too – but because men controlled the research, defined the research, and importantly, had personal insight regarding their own physiological functioning, health knowledge is likely more accurate than what has been conveyed about women.

Shifting Frameworks Means Changing Definitions of Maternal Health

This isn’t just about differences in human physiology. If we dig into the framework by which we understand health, if we dig into the systems at play, we can see trends in how, as that power structure, as the lens, the framework for understanding health and disease shifts, so to do the definitions of health and disease and so too does the range of acceptable and unacceptable questions to ask.

If we look at recent decades with advent of HMOs and other payer contracts, along with the growth of hospitals, we see ever changing health and disease models. The model with physician as the central and all powerful seer and knower has shifted quite significantly by financial interests producing a factory like approach to healthcare.

With any factory, efficiency and cost cutting are key indicators of success. Instituting those efficiencies, however, largely removes the physician’s authority by shifting the primacy of his views towards the more efficient and less authoritative matching of symptoms to medications and billing codes. Cookbook medicine.

If symptoms reported by a patient don’t fit the ascribed to criteria, for all intents and purposes, the illness does not exist.

The physician, in many ways and recent decades, has become no more than a well-educated, technician answering not to his or her patients, but to the factory bosses – the insurers, the hospitals, and the regulators – the bean counters.

The physician is no longer central to medical science and clinical care. He/she is in many ways an administrator of care – a provider, not a healer, not even a scientists or medical researcher, save except to proffer funding from pharma or device companies.

Physicians have no power, no say in patient care, except to the extent that they can dot the i’s and cross the t’s according to billing codes. If their gut, or more importantly, if the data tell them that a particular treatment is dangerous, or conversely, is needed, but it doesn’t fall within the ascribed treatment plan, the physician has little recourse but to comply or risk losing his/her livelihood and, in more extreme cases, his/her reputation.

We see the barrage of reputation ending slanders hurled at physicians and researchers who dare to speak up and say that perhaps pesticide laden foods are not as safe as chemical companies make them out to be or that perhaps vaccines or other medications are neither as safe nor as effective as pharma and governmental institutions funded by pharma suggest. When physicians speak up, they risk their careers and reputation.

And while, you might be thinking there might be some positives to this shift, it is no longer such a paternalistic system where the physician has total power, in reality, this shift in healthcare towards efficiency still leaves women’s health high and dry and pushes the patient’s experience of his/her illness even further from the ‘knowledge base’ of western medicine.

Who Determines What We Know about Health and Disease? The Folly of Evidence Based in Women’s Health

So, back to this idea of frameworks, if neither the physician nor the patient is central to our definitions of health and disease, who is?  Who determines what we know about health and disease?

In recent decades, clinical practice guidelines have emerged from what are called evidence-based claims. Evidence-based clinical guidelines sound like a perfectly acceptable and reasonable approach to medical science. Research should be done on clinical decisions and outcomes, the data paint a picture of the safety and efficacy of a particular treatment or approach.

Evidence-based is certainly far better than consensus based – which means the ‘experts’ agree that this approach or that approach is optimum – something that has been the norm in women’s health care for generations.

Indeed, most medications were (and are still) never tested on women, pregnant or otherwise, so clinical practice guidelines that involve medication use are developed by ‘consensus’ and what many doctors like to call ‘clinical intuition’.

But since the long-term effects of these intuitive decisions are rarely seen by the clinician whose intuition guided the initial decision, and rarely shared with others, the notion of consensus based medical decision-making becomes sketchy at best, dangerous at worst; unless, you are lucky enough to have a highly skilled and thoughtful practitioner who is able to discern and act upon the best interests of his patients, even if it means going outside the parameters of what the rest of the profession says is appropriate. Most of us are not that lucky and as women we are faced with a medical science that doesn’t quite fit our experience of health and disease.

Of Weight and Health: The Obesity Paradox

If we go back to the shorthand measure of weight as a marker of health – how many of us tell ourselves if we just lose 10lbs we’ll be healthy. Every one of us, at some point or another has fallen into the weight = health trap. While it is true on extreme ends of the weight continuum that weight is related to disease, everywhere else and for everyone else, weight has little to do with ‘healthiness’.  Weight loss has been noted to reduce blood pressure and type 2 diabetes, but the relationship is not as straightforward as it seems. Being of normal weight does not necessarily equal low blood pressure or increase your longevity. Weight is not correlated positively with mortality – death by heart attack or stroke. In fact, the relationship between weight and surviving a life-threatening disease is almost always inverse – the heavier you are, the better the chance for survival. Those fat stores come in handy when we are deathly ill.

Wait, what did I just say that?  We should all go get fat and live longer – well, not really. Rather, I think we should look beyond weight as measure of health and to more appropriate measures like fitness, quality of life and the nutrient density of the diet. If you are eating well, active and feeling good, without any need for medication, then you are healthy.

Back to our evidence based approach – How can it be that the evidence behind what are gold standards of clinical practice be incorrect?

That is a big question that involves a little more background.

We all want our physicians to make healthcare decisions based upon the best available evidence and we can all think of ways that evidence is better than consensus, but each of these methods have their flaws.

Defining the Gold Standards in Clinical Care

When we look at the gold standards in clinical practice, those that align with evidence-based care, we have ask ourselves, from where did that evidence emerge, what were the variables, populations, and other factors studied and how were the outcomes determined.

How we define a good outcome versus a bad outcome determines how we design a particular study and what we results we will show.

Recall my example of the postpartum depression discussion – if we only ever measure progesterone and the estrogens (or don’t measure the hormones at all, simply assume those changes are at root of mood and psychiatric changes) and if we only measure depressive symptoms – then we have narrowed the framework such that we will only find associations or as the case may be – a lack of associations. And if there are no associations in the data – well then the disease must be made up and not real – all in the patient’s head.

The lack of questioning of one’s own biases, of the lens through which the research was designed or the parameters of what fits within that framework necessarily limits the understanding, making it easy to blame the patient. But if we step outside the framework, and listen to the patient’s experience, believe the patient experience and let it guide us, then we can break through the limitations of any particular framework and move science and healthcare forward. It sounds simple, and it is, but only if you recognize your biases and the biases of others and begin questioning, how you know what you know. And if that is not on solid ground, re-frame the questions.

Lies, Damned Lies and Statistics

You’ve all heard the phrase ‘lies, damned lies and statistics’   – it comes from the notion that research design, and particularly, the statistics can be swayed, intentionally or unintentionally, to prove or disprove anything. In medical science, this is especially true. Pick any medication for any disease and ask yourself how we determine whether it is effective or not?

First to mind, ‘it reduces symptoms’

Sounds reasonable – but dig deeper – which symptoms? All of the symptoms? Some of the symptoms?

And then if we dig even deeper…

Who decides which symptoms are important or even which symptoms are associated with a particular disease process? Over recent history, these decisions have been controlled by the pharmaceutical companies, insurance companies and hospital administrators – each with a specific bias and vested interest. The pharmaceutical companies want to sell products, the insurers and hospitals want to reduce costs and make more money. These should be counterbalancing agendas, but unfortunately they are not. The pharmaceutical companies have brilliantly controlled this conversation, defining not only the disease, but also, by controlling the research and defining the symptoms and prescribing guidelines. (I should note they also create new symptoms and disease processes to re-market old drugs to new populationsantidepressants for menopauseantidepressants for low sex drive in women, for example. The symptoms for both of these conditions are made worse by the very drugs being prescribed.)

If institutions or organizations with a vested interest are allowed to define the disease and the research by which a therapy is considered successful, how do we judge the validity of evidence-based guidelines?

Are the assumptions about the disease and the symptoms correct? Do these symptoms apply to all individuals with the disease or only those of certain age group? How about to women versus men?

Treatment Outcomes Determine Product Success or Failure

Take for example the case of statins, like Lipitor or Crestor, some of the most highly prescribed drugs on the market designed to lower cholesterol – because cholesterol was observed to be associated with heart disease in older men, particularly those who have had a heart attack previously.

Reducing cholesterol in this particular patient population might be beneficial to improved longevity (although, that has been questioned vigorously). However, does the rest of population benefit from cholesterol lowering drugs? It depends upon what outcomes are chosen in the research. If we, look at decreased mortality and morbidity as an outcome, then the answer to the question is no, statins are not good for the entire population with high cholesterol. A healthy diet and other lifestyle changes would be better.

Indeed, in women in particular, these drugs are dangerous because they increase Type 2 diabetes, increase vitamin B12 and CoQ10 deficiencies, among other nutrients (which initiates a host of devastating side effects), and most importantly, statins may increase the risk for heart attack and death in women.

So the drug promoted as one that prevents heart disease, may worsen it in women. Not really a tradeoff I would take.

This is problematic if one’s job is to maximize product sales. What do you do?

Let’s change the outcomes to the very simple, lowering of cholesterol. No need to worry about extraneous details like morbidity and mortality, keep it simple stupid.

Also, no need to compare the health of women versus men. Indeed, outcome differences between women men and women are rarely conducted, since statins decrease cholesterol in both women and men. Outcome achieved, evidence base defined, built and promoted.

A couple of points here…

He who defines the research design, controls the results. Across history, patients, especially women, have had no impact on these variables.

First it was the physicians, mostly male, and more recently, the product manufacturers have controlled the very definitions of health and disease, which in turn, determine treatments. To say evidence-based medicine is skewed is an understatement.

Now what?

While I’d argue that we have to re-frame the entire conversation about women’s health and include more voices in that conversation, voices that may not have been heard previously. I would also argue that we are never going remove biases from research and decisions about health and disease, but we can understand them and maybe even use them more effectively.

Revisiting the Foundations of Maternal Health – Enter Obstetrics

In maternal health, consider the Friedman curve and the failure to progress, though certainly not a product based bias as discussed previously, the Friedman curve, created in the 50s by a male physician at the height of hospitalized birth, where hospitals had a vested interest in understanding the progression of labor and its relationship not only to physician efforts, but time and outcome. For generations, this one study has guided OBs in their decisions to expedite labor – and as much research has found – has led the unheralded increase in cesarean delivery. Why?

One could argue that the study was flawed – it was – but most research is flawed in some way or another. I think the important thing is to understand the biases, how the question, and therefore, the answer were framed, and as importantly, who made the decisions about what was important in the framing of question?

Begin with the study population, was it skewed? Yes, it was.

For the Friedman study, more than half of the women had forceps used on them during the delivery (55%) and Pitocin was used to induce or augment labor in 13.8% of women. “Twilight sleep” was common at the time, and so 23% of the women were lightly sedated, 42% were moderately sedated, and 31% were deeply sedated (sometimes “excessively” sedated) with Demerol and scopolamine. In total 96% of the women were sedated with drugs. What might these drugs do to the progression of labor – stall it perhaps?

Digging deeper, consider the framework within which this study was conducted. Hospital births in the 1950s were predominantly drugged, sterile (or presumed sterile). Efficiency and scientific prowess were on the rise. Time was of the essence and there was very strong impetus to gauge decisions based upon the most advanced medical science – drugs, interventions – and an equally strong pull not to allow women to progress more naturally – because then science would not have intervened.

How did this one study become the guiding factor in obstetrical care? Why did we think that this particular study group was representative of the entire population of birthing women? The obvious answer was that women had no voice in this conversation or in the birth itself. It was medical science and intervention from a place of ‘all-knowingness.’

There was never any question that these results could be skewed, until recently. It was accepted, and perhaps the only reason questions have arisen, I suspect, is because of the links between the medical management of birth and the increasing rates of cesareans and maternal and infant mortality in the US over recent decades. Would this study have become so entrenched if the patients – the women – had a voice in the conversations about childbirth or the outcome was not so closely tied to hospital efficiencies? We’ll never know, but one could postulate that under different circumstances the study might have been framed differently and netted different results entirely.

Maternal Hypertension

Another, more recent example of how the framing of the question determines the conclusions of the research, involves how we view high blood pressure in pregnant women. Hypertension during pregnancy is dangerous for the mom – but what do we do? Treat it with non-tested anti-hypertensives, for which we know nothing about the potential side effects to the fetus short or long term ? Do we change diet? Do we simply monitor and hope for the best? What do we do? We don’t know. There is limited research on the topic, including on commonly used interventions.

With such limited research, I had high hopes for recent study, Less-Tight versus Tight Control of Hypertension in Pregnancy.  It was a huge and well-funded study with a wonderful opportunity to determine the risks/benefits of anti-hypertensive therapy, but by all accounts, and in my opinion, it failed because the questions it asked were framed incorrectly. (Or were they? For pharmaceutical companies, the study was success. More on that in a moment).

That is, rather assessing the safety and efficacy of anti-hypertensive medications used during pregnancy (remember safety data for medication use during pregnancy is severely lacking), this study investigated a very narrowly defined and essentially meaningless question. The study asked whether controlling maternal blood pressure strictly within a pre-defined and arbitrary range of blood pressure parameters provided better or worse maternal or fetal outcomes compared to a more flexible approach that allowed broader range of accepted blood pressure metrics.

It did not analyze maternal or infant complications relative to particular medications to determine whether some medications were safer than others. It did not look at dose-response curves relative to those medications and outcomes or sufficiently address the role of pre-existing conditions relative to medications and outcomes. All it did, was ask whether or not managing maternal blood pressure more or less tightly with medications (that were not assessed in any meaningful way) was beneficial or harmful to maternal or infant outcomes. Since both groups of women were on various medications, varying doses and had a host of pre-existing conditions, the results showed that both groups had complications. It did not tell us which medications were safer, what doses of these medications were more dangerous or anything useful for clinical care. It just told us that anti-hypertensive medications during pregnancy, reduce blood pressure (we knew that) and cause complications (we knew that too). My review of the study.

Now, because of way the study was framed and especially how the conclusion was framed – that both tight control and loose control of maternal blood pressure show equal numbers of complications – the message will, and already has, become – blood pressure medications during pregnancy are safe.

The study found no such thing. In fact, the study found nothing really, but because of how it was framed it now becomes shorthand evidence of drug safety during pregnancy. Only those who read the full study with a questioning mind will know that this is not accurate. Most of the population, including physicians, will see only the shorthand PR surrounding the study and assume drug safety.

Conclusion

In conclusion – I want you to go back to practices and think about how you know what you know and if something doesn’t quite mesh – dig deeper – look at the framework from within which that guideline came to be. Look at the original research and decide for yourself.

I think it is time for women, midwives to have a much stronger voice in maternal health care, but to do that, we have to speak up and speak out and not accept the ‘gold standards of care’ just because they are the gold standards. While it is true, sometimes those standards will align well with maternal healthcare, other times, I think you’ll find that because of how the questions were framed, the solutions were skewed and do not match the reality of maternal health and disease.

Thank you.

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Tony Webster tonywebster, CC0, via Wikimedia Commons

Originally published March 31, 2015.

The Wrong Fork: Understanding the Current Medical Model

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The Western Medical Model

Looking at the history of the development of medical thinking, there are many different models. A model represents an idea, a structural format that fits for the cause and treatment of disease, a word defined in Webster as “any departure from normal health, an illness”. For example, the model that is used today in the West is completely different from that used by the ancient Chinese and it would seem to be pertinent to look at how our Western model was developed in the first place.

Until the internal structures of the body and their functions were defined it was totally impossible to understand any principles of why we get sick. Throughout medieval history there was in fact no model. Very early concepts blamed demons and evil spirits and for several centuries, bleeding the patient seems to have been the only treatment offered. These ideas were developed out of ignorance. Our present model was derived from the discovery of organisms that were so small that they could not be seen without a microscope. This idea, however, was born even before the development of the microscope.

Germ Theory

Semmelweis was a 19th century Hungarian physician. He had observed that physicians would enter the delivery room directly from the morgue to deliver mothers of their infants. Since the puerperal “childbed” fever had a mortality rate of 10 to 35%, but germs had not yet been discovered, Semmelweis concluded that the physicians were “bringing something in on their hands”. He made them wash their hands before delivering any of their patients. Childbed fever virtually disappeared, as we would now expect. Even with this practical evidence that the current medical model was wrong, Semmelweis was persecuted and derided by the medical profession because his concept was “out-of-the-box”. It infringed on the philosophy that governed medical thinking at that time, an unforgivable sin in the eyes of his medical compatriots who were ultimately shown to be themselves wrong.

Well, as we all know, the germ theory was finally accepted and it provided the very first idea for the cause of disease. The foundation of this model is that an attacking agent is “the enemy”. The direction that took place was to kill “the enemy”. The philosophy was “kill the bacterium, kill the virus, kill the cancer cell” and medical science has spent years and is still trying to develop compounds and treatments that would kill the “enemy” without killing the patient. You can be sure that they killed a lot of patients (and still do) in their attempts, until the dramatic discovery of penicillin that opened the so-called antibiotic era. Antibiotic resistance is now a new threat conjured up by the “enemy”.

Facing the Fork in the Road: Kill the Enemy or Bolster Defenses

I like to think imaginatively that medicine was “walking down a long rough road”. It came to a fork with the road leading to the right that carried a signpost. The signpost said “Kill the enemy”. The road leading to the left had no signpost so the right fork was the obvious one to travel. Kill the bacteria; kill the virus; kill the cancer cell. Be aggressive; don’t let the disease take over the show.

The rest of this article deals with what the left fork may have yielded. I suggest that the signpost would have said “Help the defense”. Copy Hippocrates; don’t do any harm; above all, avoid a noisy mechanical hospital so that the patient can assist himself by proper rest while listening to gentle music. Make sure that his nutrition is appropriate so that “food becomes his medicine”.

The Body Is a Fortress

I now call into effect the reader’s imagination. Think of the body as like an old-fashioned fortress. An attack would demand a defense orchestrated by a commander. To watch for an attack there would always have to be guards or sentries posted on the battlements. Sighting a would-be attack by a guard would involve sending a messenger to the commander so that he could organize the defense. The body works like that. White cells are just like the imagined soldiers as they “go into battle”. All the other phenomena that we call “an infection” are really generated as part of a complex defensive system. I write more about the body as a fortress in Ostrich Medicine: Shouldn’t we Recognize Host Defenses.

The Brain and Body Work in Unison To Sustain Health

The human brain, complex as it is, consists of two basic parts which I am going to call the “upper” and “lower” brains. The upper brain is responsible for our thoughts and voluntary actions, the “ego” described by Freud. It conducts messages to the body through a nervous system that is called voluntary, giving us what we call willpower. The lower brain, the “id” described by Freud and where the central command is located, is automatic and controls an involuntary nervous system known as autonomic. It initiates a number of reflexes, the best known of which is called the fight-or-flight, a survival reflex activated by any form of danger that threatens life. It acts with “advice and consent” provided by the upper brain, that is then able to modify the reflex action. There are many other reflexes controlled from id, all of them being protective of either personal survival or survival of our species. The fight-or-flight is personal protection whereas the primitive part of our sex drive is species protection. So let us see how an infection (the enemy) is handled.

Imagine someone who has picked up a splinter in his finger. Unknown to him the splinter carries Staphylococci. The first defensive reaction is the development of what we call a pustule. This represents what I like to call a “beachhead”. The pus that forms is created from the dead white cells that have sacrificed themselves to killing the Staphylococci. This is a local mechanism and if handled successfully will resolve the problem.

If this defense is unsuccessful, the “beachhead” is breached and the Staphylococci begin to flow into the body through the lymphatic system. The “battlements” have been breached. The lower brain is informed and begins to activate a general defense. The body temperature goes up (yes, it is the brain that causes your fever) because germs are programmed to have their most noxious effect at 37°C, normal body temperature. By increasing the temperature of the body, the efficiency of the germ is compromised. A message goes out to the body organs to release white blood cells as the defensive “soldiers” (they go to the “breached battlements”) and explains why the white cell count increases in concert with the fever. Lymph glands increase in size because they are being prepared for destruction of the germs that they encounter. The patient feels ill, forcing him to take a rest. This conserves the energy required for carrying out the defensive system. Now the battle is in full effect and the outcome is resolution, death or sometimes stalemate where the battle is neither won nor lost.

The Left Fork in the Road

The point that I am trying to make here is that the defensive mechanism is as important to the resolution as killing the enemy in a safe way. It demands a colossal amount of energy to be effective and this is generated from the results of good nutrition. So let us see how we can assist the process. The paradox is that two thirds of the world population is suffering from starvation while one third is dying from over eating the wrong foods.

The clinical effects of starvation are completely different from those incurred by eating too much of the wrong foods. Behavior of people in the state of starvation is governed by the catastrophic hunger and search for food. The people eating the wrong food have an entirely different course, the effects of what I call high calorie malnutrition. These are “the walking sick”. They are not hospital cases and their symptoms are often referred to as being psychosomatic because all their conventional tests are negative.

A Case Study: When Short and Long Term Defenses Are Ignored

By way of example, let us follow the case of John Doe. He sees his physician complaining of palpitations of the heart. The focus is on the heart and no thought is given to the action of the autonomic system. He gets a prescription which governs the symptom. A month later he sees the same physician because of alternating diarrhea and constipation. He receives a diagnosis of irritable bowel syndrome and gets a prescription. No thought is given to the action of the autonomic system or the possibility that the former prescription has made things worse. No questions are asked concerning the nature of his diet. If and when he has emotional disease such as anxiety, outbursts of anger or depression, no thought is given to the abnormal chemistry occurring in the brain. Imagine the kind of diet that this American citizen, John Doe is ingesting.

Let us suggest that he has a doughnut and two cups of coffee for breakfast, a coffee break midmorning and enjoys a two Martini lunch. Let us suggest that he has a macaroni dinner with several more Martinis before. Exhausted from the day’s work, he sits in an armchair watching television and goes to bed, only to repeat the same performance the next day. His health is good and remains good for many years on this, or a similar, regimen. Let us say that 10 years later he is the John Doe that gets a prescription for heart palpitations. Because his symptoms are constantly relieved, he has a very high respect for his physician and continues to attend periodically for various symptoms such as “an allergy”. The years roll by and one day he develops mysterious symptoms related to his nervous system. He sees the same physician and is referred to a neurologist who diagnoses Parkinson’s disease. In the present medical concept there is absolutely no connection between his years of dietary indiscretion and the appearance of a chronic neurological disease. John Doe may even ask the physician whether his diet has any bearing on the development of this disease and he is told that it has absolutely no connection at all. I submit to you, the reader, “that this is “food for thought”.

Energy Metabolism: A Foundation for Health or Disease

The combination of between 70 and 100 trillion cells make up the human body. Our functions are dependent upon the cooperation of every single one of these cells, each of which depends on energy. Brain cells, and particularly those of the lower brain (the command center) are highly sensitive to energy deficiency. Oddly enough, the reflexes that I have described above become much more active. Panic attacks, so common today, are fragmented fight-or -flight reflexes. They indicate DANGER. The symptoms generated like this are nothing more than warnings. They are merely indicating that the cells in that part of the brain are either starved of oxygen, the vitamin/mineral combination that enables oxidation to occur efficiently, or that empty calories are overwhelming the ability of the vitamin/mineral combination to perform that function. As I have said in other posts before, it is exactly what would happen in a car if the engine was “choked” by too rich a mixture of gasoline.

When you are young, your cells can cope with the situation and for many years you may have either no symptoms or the kind of symptoms that get classified and can be treated with medications, mostly. When they cannot, these symptoms are often deemed psychosomatic. Ultimately, as we saw with the case of John Doe, permanent damage develops. It is not surprising, then, that the brain becomes the focal point of the disease. This strongly suggests that as we “take the left fork in the road”, prevention is far better than cure.

Are Vitamin and Mineral Supplements Necessary?

One might wonder, given the cautionary tale of John Doe, if vitamin and mineral supplements are necessary to maintain health. I would argue that they are, especially when dietary choices mirror those of our example. Additionally, however, because farming practices have changed, even when one’s diet is rich in fruits and vegetables, those fruits and vegetables may not have as much nutrient density as they once did. When coupled with highly processed foods, even those with vitamin enrichment, I suspect our nutrient needs yet outweigh our current intake capabilities. I am, therefore, inclined to believe that vitamin and mineral supplements are becoming a preventive necessity. It does not, however, take us off the hook. Restricting ourselves to real food is still necessary.

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Listening to Patients – A New Opportunity for Medical Science

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Over the last several weeks I have been struck by the growing chasms in modern medicine. I see battles between physicians and patients, physicians and technology, physicians and bureaucracy and between the entire healthcare industry and health itself. The chasms are particularly deep in women’s health where so often serious health issues are written off as psychosomatic or with medication safety and efficacy where obvious side-effects are routinely discounted as not possible despite clinical and biochemical evidence to the contrary. Why is the physician not listening to patients? Why is he so quick to discount their suffering and attribute it elsewhere?

And then it occurred to me, within the doctor-patient relationship there has never been an impetus for the physician to listen to patients. The structure of modern medicine was built upon a presumption of physician authority and expertise that involved not listening but seeing. So what began as a post about listening to patients versus patient engagement (what the heck does patient engagement mean anyway), has evolved into a commentary on the eroding power of the physician and medical science in modern healthcare. Interestingly enough, I think the changes in modern medicine may finally permit, if not demand, listening to patients. Let me explain.

Listening to Patients: A Lost Art that Never Was

Historically, listening to patients has had, at best, a tenuous position in medicine. Some would argue that it was supplanted long ago by the physician’s all-knowing clinical gaze. The clinical gaze, a term used by French philosopher, Michel Foucault, is the ability to see correctly what is unseen, to bring to light and then describe the hidden truth of disease. It was what allowed the physician to penetrate the illusions of the non-scientific engendered by previous generations (16th – 18th century medicine) and to see the truth of the disease by correctly perceiving the signs and symptoms. The physician’s power of observation, his clinical gaze, aided by technology, gave him a vantage point inaccessible by mere mortals, and thus, incontrovertible.

The clinical gaze anchored modern medicine in a way that no other concept could. It brought with it the power to see truth, but also, to define it. No matter how potentially relevant to disease diagnosis, the patient’s truth or story could never replace the physician’s truth – the truth that was accessible only by him and through the all-knowing clinical gaze.

And so it was for most of the last century and a half, the physician was the arbiter of what was valid, of what could be seen and of what could be known about health and disease.  The patient was no more than a body; living or dead, it did not matter. It was the job of the physician to perceive correctly what the body (not necessarily the patient) was showing him and then classify, communicate, and finally, treat appropriately.

From Medicine to Healthcare and the Physician’s Diminishing Autonomy

Despite the inherent tension between the patient’s experience of his or her disease and the physician’s discovery and classification of that disease, the interaction was private, between the physician and the patient. The degree to which the physician listened or did not listen to the patient, the correctness of the physician’s diagnosis and subsequent treatment decisions occurred within the confines of his practice. So long as the interaction was private, the physician remained the arbiter of disease; the clinical gaze his power and the patient his subject.

When the private became public, gradually at first (third party payer systems, pharmaceutical marketing) and then explosively, (the Internet), the clinical gaze, the lens through which disease was defined, refocused away from the patient and the disease itself and toward the economics.

The Interlopers

Managed care and third party payer systems unlocked the sacred space between the physician and the patient. The economics of his treatment decisions increasingly bore more weight than the accuracy or the clinical outcomes. The economic principles of the new managed care systems were skewed divergently. On the one hand, managed care demanded efficiencies of scale in the allotment of care – more patients, less time – but on the other hand, and simultaneously, rewarded physicians and other healthcare providers with fees for services instead of positive outcomes efficiently managed. The macroeconomic principles guiding healthcare decision-making, skewed and untenable as they were, gave the physician a modicum of authority. Even though managed care infiltrated every aspect of the doctor-patient relationship, it was still the physician who defined the disease. The clinical gaze remained somewhat intact.

That was until the pharmaceutical industry caught on and the definition of disease not only miraculously began to fit the latest, greatest drug, but also fit managed care payer guidelines. Some would argue that late 20th century diseases and discovery emerged, not from the plight of human suffering, and certainly not from the powers of observation that once guided the physician’s clinical gaze, but by profit.

The physician, who at once held the power to see and define medical science, is now buried beneath a heap of competing and conflicting interests that are only cursorily related to the practice of medicine. There is no clinical gaze; no medical decision-making that rests solely upon his shoulders or within the space of the doctor-patient encounter.

And Then Came the Internet

The same technological advancements of the latter half of the 20th century that allowed the physician to see more, also allowed others to see what he was seeing and to communicate those insights broadly. Once that private and controlled perception became public, the physician and the all-knowing clinical gaze, no longer wielded the same power it once did.

The primacy and indeed the privacy of what was once a sacred relationship between the doctor and the patient, was overrun by a ‘system’ of disease economics; one that no longer can be considered medicine, healthcare or even what those in those in anti-modern medicine movement call disease care. Instead, we have a ‘health’ economics built on a false precipice of industrialized, factory, efficiency and underlain with a bastardized model of free market capitalism – moral hazard. Indeed, the creative billing seen in the healthcare industry makes the financial derivatives scandals of recent history look downright tame by comparison.

Business Innovation Disguised as Medical Innovation

Nowhere in the current model is there room for listening to patients, for relationship, for health, for ethics or even for medicine itself. Arguably, the possibility for medical discovery, the kind that breaks paradigms and catapults the science forward, is also stifled in favor high profit blockbusters that are no more effective than the last one, gadgets that often fail to deliver measurable improvements in care but sure are fun to play with, and ever intrusive services that make healthcare more cost-effective – well, not really.

Business innovations designed to enhance spread sheets and enhance patient engagement do neither. Indeed, patient engagement is no more than a meaningless euphemism for medication compliance. If we can only engage the patient more effectively through this application or that, then we will ________ (insert promise), save healthcare, reduce costs, reduce hospital visits, save time. What patient engagement applications are really promising is to save the world from the pitifully unengaged or disengaged, burdensome, non-compliant patient. There is no doctor-patient relationship and can be no relationship within this model. Both the doctor and the patient are cogs.

From this perspective, it is no wonder that physicians lash out against patient empowerment, against electronic health records and other healthcare innovation.  Each is a very real threat to an already diminished autonomy.

From Healthcare Back to Medicine: Listening to Patients Revisited

In spite of all the negatives of the entrenched medical-industrial complex (I hate that phrase, but it seems appropriate), there is hope. It rests not with ‘healthcare innovation’ that inevitably promises high returns, nor does it rest with the next great blockbuster drug. Rather, the survival of medical science rests within the space of the doctor-patient relationship. It is there, that when disengaged from the multitudes of competing interests, within that private moment, that the physician can unlock the next phase of medicine, the next great discoveries. It is there that he can listen to his patients.

The Necessary End of the Clinical Gaze

The clinical gaze as a power structure served its purpose in catapulting medicine from mystery and myth, but it was one-sided. It considered disease from an idiosyncratic lens solely within the physician’s control. This was both its strength and its downfall. Without feedback or resistance, it was easy for managed care and the pharmaceutical industry to invade this space and usurp the physician’s authority. All that was necessary was to learn the taxonomies and then redefine them to fit the economic needs of the vendors. New diseases, new drugs were viewed as medical advancements. Technology that standardized diagnostic criteria (or arguably loosened it so that most conditions would fit easily within many payer accepted categories), all but eliminated the need for the physician’s skills.

Had the internet not come along and opened the communication channels among patients, no one would be the wiser. With the internet, patients have become empowered and are rather loudly proclaiming their stake in this conversation. Patients search Dr. Google for diagnostic and treatment options, some sound, some not. They have formed groups and societies geared toward furthering education, research and strengthening their voices. Physicians have hereto ignored or chastised patients, lashing out against their new found empowerment, as if it were the patients and not the industry vendors, who displaced his vaulted position and redefined his diagnostic capabilities. No, it was not the patients who did this, but it is the patients who offer the physician a way back towards medical science – not the all-knowing, indisputable medical science of yesteryear, but the dynamic relational medical science of the next generation.

Listening to Patients as a Way Forward

Listening to patients provides the context and connections that can move medicine beyond an outdated and thoroughly usurped taxonomy of signs and symptoms that serves only to name and to limit or contain disease within an appropriately defined diagnostic category, to a space that can connect the larger patterns and the associations among diseases, health and environment. Physicians can lead this charge but only if and when they begin listening to their patients. It is the patients, not the industry, that hold the keys to the myriad of intractable diseases that plague modernity. Listening to patients, not patient engagement, but listening and trusting the truth of the patient’s experience of his or her disease, is the missing piece of the next great medical revolution.

This article was published previously in May 2013.

Science versus Sciencism

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For weeks I have attempted to write a grand and eloquent article about the nature of science and scientific discovery. To say that every attempt has failed would be an understatement. It is not that I haven’t written about the structure of science, especially medical science, I have, and generally, rather well. This time, however, I have been at a loss to put to paper how deeply dangerous current corporate attempts to proffer the myth of scientific certainty really are.

So instead of delaying this post any longer, I give you two remarkable and seemingly unrelated videos that crossed my desk contemporaneously and an example of corporate trollism that risks destroying the very foundation of science.

The first video, a Ted Talk by neuroscientist Stuart Firestein that questions the certainty of the scientific endeavor. More so than ever he suggests we ought to be embracing the uncertainty, the unsolved, the puzzles that science presents rather than resting our laurels on some misbegotten perception of scientific eminence.

Stuart Firestein: The Pursuit of Ignorance

The second video shows the awe-inspiring complexity of something so simple that few give any thought to it – how butterfly wings get their colors. It reminds us, or at least it reminded me, of how little we really know about nature’s physiology. The depth of complexity in the butterfly wing colors will blow your mind.

Of Nanoparticles and Pixie Dust

Corporate Certainty and Sciencism

And then there is this, the juxtaposition of scientific uncertainty and the vast complexity of natural physiology with corporate trollism and astroturfing. These are paid propagandists and digital social bots, whose only task is to dismantle all doubt about their products under the auspices of ‘scientific certainty’. The human trolls spend hours upon hours on social media, responding to each and every critique of their product or their issue. The digital social bots respond by algorithm. Each does its damage by attacking anyone, personally and professionally, who dares question the certainty of their science.

Take a gander at this particular message board where the risks of the HPV vaccine of were discussed in advance of a talk show. Whether you are pro or anti-vaccine is of no import. Indeed, not even the topic or the host of the board is important. The same pattern of corporate trollism can be viewed with any potentially dangerous, but hugely profitable, product or issue. It is the method of corporate trollism that is important to observe. See if you can identify the trolls paid by industry. There are at least five. They attack the veracity of the patient experience. They attack parents whose children died. They proclaim scientific certainty. No evidence to the contrary will shake their stance. No comment will be left un-argued.

On Sciencism and Being Galileo’d

If you have watched the videos and perused the message board, I bet you’re thinking what the heck do all three examples have to do with each other?  Perhaps nothing, perhaps everything.

On the one hand, I was in awe of the brilliant complexity that is nature – the nano architecture of the butterfly wings is mind blowing. I was humbled. Listening to Dr. Firestein I was reminded of how wonderful it is have such immensely complicated puzzles to investigate. Science is, at its most fundamental, a quest for understanding. If all is certain, science is dead.

On the other hand, I was and continue to be, angered by what I see happening in corporate science or as I like to call it, sciencism. This strict adherence to, and indeed enforcement of, a consensus based understanding of reality, one that happens to correspond perfectly with product profit potential, is everything science is not. There is no humility there; only hubris and the certainty necessary to cudgel perceived detractors. And though there have always been forces that seek to derail discovery, especially when core ideologies are at stake, the Church versus Galileo, for example, the added impetus of billions of dollars in profits combined with the public slaying of patients, scientists and other contrarians, seems new.

Then again, maybe it’s not. Maybe we’re being Galileo’d by the high priests of industry-sponsored, media-supported, politically-ordained sciencism. Maybe only the players have changed.