The
following column appears today on THCB, in the op-ed pages of the Los Angeles
Times and at ProPublica.
Your
doctor hands you a prescription for a blood pressure drug. But is it the right
one for you?
You’re
searching for a new primary care physician or a specialist. Is there a way you
can know whether the doctor is more partial to expensive, brand-name drugs than
his peers?
Or
say you’ve got to find a nursing home for a loved one. Wouldn’t you want to
know if the staff doctor regularly prescribes drugs known to be risky for
seniors or overuses psychiatric drugs to sedate residents?
For
most of us, evaluating a doctor’s prescribing habits is just about impossible.
Even doctors themselves have little way of knowing whether their drug choices
fall in line with those of their peers.
Once
they graduate from medical schools, physicians often have a tough time keeping
up with the latest clinical trials and sorting through the hype on new drugs.
Seldom are they monitored to see if they are prescribing appropriately — and
there isn’t even universal agreement on what good prescribing is.
This
dearth of knowledge and insight matters for both patients and doctors. Drugs
are complicated. Most come with side effects and risk-benefit calculations.
What may work for one person may be absolutely inappropriate, or even harmful,
for someone else.
Antipsychotics,
for example, are invaluable to treat severe psychiatric conditions. But they
are too often used to sedate older patients suffering from dementia — despite a
“black-box” warning accompanying the drugs that they increase the risk of death
in such patients.
The
American Geriatrics Society has labeled dozens of other drugs risky for elderly
patients, too, because they increase the risk of dizziness, fainting and
falling among other things. In most cases, safer alternatives exist. Yet the
more dangerous drugs continue to be prescribed to millions of older patients.
And,
as has been well-documented by the Los Angeles Times and others, powerful
painkillers are often misused and overprescribed – with sometimes deadly
consequences.
As
reporters who have long investigated health care and exposed frightening
variations in quality, we wondered why so much secrecy shrouds the prescribing
habits of doctors.
The
information certainly isn’t secret to drug companies. They spend millions of
dollars buying prescription records from companies that purchase them from
pharmacies. The drug makers then use the data to target their pitches and
measure success.
But
when we tried to purchase the records from the companies that supply them to
drug manufacturers, we were told we couldn’t have them — at any price.
We
next turned to Medicare, a public program that provides drug coverage to 32
million seniors and the disabled and accounts for one out of every four
prescriptions written annually.
We
filed a Freedom of Information Act request for prescribing data. After months
of negotiation with officials, we were given a list of the drugs prescribed by
every health professional to enrollees in Medicare’s prescription drug program,
known as Part D.
What
we found was disturbing. Although we didn’t have access to patient names or
medical records, it was clear that hundreds of physicians across the country
were prescribing large numbers of dangerous, inappropriate or unnecessary
drugs. And Medicare had done little, if anything, about it.
One
Miami psychiatrist, for example, wrote 8,900 prescriptions in 2010 for powerful
antipsychotics to patients older than 65, including many with dementia. The
doctor said in an interview that he’d never been contacted by Medicare.
A
rural Oklahoma doctor regularly prescribed the Alzheimer’s drug Namenda for
patients under 65 who did not have the disease. He told us it was because the
drug helped calm the symptoms of autism and other developmental disabilities,
but there is scant scientific support for this practice.
Among
the top prescribers of the most-abused painkillers, we found many who had been
charged with crimes, convicted, disciplined by their state medical boards or
terminated from state Medicaid programs for the poor. But nearly all remained
eligible to prescribe to Medicare patients.
If
you or a loved one were a patient of one of these doctors, wouldn’t you want to
know this?
We
have now taken the data and put it into an online database that allows anyone
to look up a doctor’s prescribing patterns and see how they compare with those
of other doctors.
This
information is just a start. It can’t tell you if your doctor is doing
something wrong, but it can give information that allows you to ask important
questions.
For
instance, why is your doctor choosing a drug that his peers seldom do? Does
your doctor favor expensive brand-name drugs when cheaper generics are
available? Has your doctor been paid to give promotional talks for drug makers?
And
we’d like to see the day when all prescribing by all health professionals – not
just in Medicare – is a matter of public record.
It’s
not only patients who benefit when medicine is more transparent. Doctors too
can gain by comparing themselves to their peers and to those they admire.
Clinics can see how their staffs stack up. And researchers can track patterns
and examine why doctors prescribe the way they do.
One
doctor told us that after studying our online database, he cornered his
colleagues and peppered them with questions about their prescribing. Most, he
said, were surprised when he told them their drug tallies.
Many
aspects of doctors’ practices remain private. The number of tests they order
and procedures they perform. The number of times they make mistakes. These data
could help inform the public, too.
In
the meantime, arming yourself with prescribing information allows you to be
more active in your health care or that of an aging or disabled loved one.
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Aqeel A. Zaman