Guest guest Posted May 3, 2010 Report Share Posted May 3, 2010 Another important conversation among experts . that won't be read by the American public http://bit.ly/agMklW THE BROOKINGS INSTITUTION IMPLEMENTING COMPARATIVE EFFECTIVENESS RESEARCH: PRIORITIES, METHODS, AND IMPACT " patients must be at the center of the questions about medical care that we want answered " SENATOR BAUCUS: Thank you, Mark, very much, and thank you very much for inviting me to your session today to talk about an issue I think of great transformative effect, and that is comparative effectiveness research. Nelms once said, " If men liked shopping, they'd call it research. " Think about it. From cars to television, when Americans go shopping, they're readily able to find and evaluate information about the quality and effectiveness of almost anything, but not so for health care. Why shouldn't Americans have information on what works and what doesn't when it comes to their health? That question is especially important when one considers that health care for Americans spend one in every six dollars that we spend in a year. Since the Finance Committee began to pray in for a comprehensive health reform last year, comparative effectiveness research has been mentioned very often. It's almost constantly mentioned, and it has raised almost as much controversy. It's a hot topic, so much so that senators on my committee on both sides of the aisles suggested that we stop using the name, stop calling it " comparative effectiveness research. " They suggested that we switch to something else that is a little less controversial in its branding. So we talked about this one day and I, just off the top of my head, said let's call it FRED. That might be more palatable and less ominous. Another name we could use is Patient Centered Outcomes Research, we could call it P-COR. At least it would reflect the intent of the research, or we could just call it " shopping. " Whatever we call it, one thing is certain: We need to address the very real concerns that this research might help, but very real concerns that this research might be used to, quote, " ration health care. " People talk about cost-effectiveness versus clinical effectiveness. People talk about whether the research can be used to make coverage decisions. These concerns boil down to one underlined issue: rationing. This is serious and needs to be addressed with integrity. There are several ways: The first is to make sure that the research is patient-focused. The research must consider patient preferences for how they want treatments to work. Patients must be actively involved in studying the research priorities and in designing the research study. The research findings need to be relevant for patients. We should assist patients so that they can participate in the process for developing priorities and designing studies. Patients' representatives should be given training on technical matters so they can interact with researchers and other stakeholders on these matters. In short, patients must be at the center of the questions about medical care that we want answered. Next, practicing physicians need to be at the table, not just researching physicians but those who use and prescribe medical care. They know what questions to ask, and they are key to making the research meaningful for the decisions that we make with patients. Third, we need safeguards: safeguards, when it comes to the use of research in federal health care programs. Medicare and Medicaid should not be allowed to create automatic links to any single study. These programs need to be open, transparent, and thorough in how they use patient standard research. Nothing should be done behind closed doors without public input. We should not build walls around the research. .. Many patient groups see the value, indeed the need, for more of this type of research. Let's take prostate cancer. Men with prostate cancer have a choice among three common treatments: surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy. Each approach yields different outcomes in terms of survival and quality of life. Some areas of the country tend to use one approach; some use other approaches, and some of these are more costly and less effective than the others. Comparative effectiveness research would compare the clinical outcomes of each approach in a systematic way. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.