Dr. Marc Siegel has been appearing frequently on TV and in print
addressing Americans' fears about possible bioterrorist attacks. Our
government gives us advice, but as Dr. Marc says, "this business about
duct tape and plastic and gas masks is ridiculous; not only wouldn't
it work, not only is it unnecessary, not only is the wrong message
being sent, but it is also making plenty of money for hardware stores
and duct-tape companies." So do we have anything to fear from an
attack? Ask Dr. Marc
today. --The Editors
Dear Dr. Marc,
The number of people affected by food allergies--especially
peanut allergy, the leading cause of life-threatening food allergic
reactions--is growing. Many of those affected are children. In highly
allergic people, anaphylaxis can cause death within minutes. Even
minuscule exposure--oral, respiratory or tactile--can cause a
reaction. There is presently no cure. Strict avoidance is critical.
Given these factors, can you comment on the issue of keeping peanuts
and peanut butter out of schools and other public places--particularly
those that serve children--as a way of minimizing the hazard to their
lives? In doing so, can you address the issue of community
responsiblity versus individual rights in considering disabilities?
CHARLES GORING
Columbus, OH
Dear Charles,
This is a very important question. Let me begin by saying that
there is a treatment for anaphylaxis; rapid injection of epinephrine
followed by steroids can be lifesaving, and people with known
life-threatening food allergies should carry an epipen with them at
all times. In the case of a child this may be administered quickly by
the school nurse. Your question regarding human rights is a more
difficult one, since food allergies may be hidden, but only in a small
number of cases, even with allergies on the rise. Still, since the
outcome may be so drastic, I am compelled to believe that such a food
as peanut butter, which has a fair number of allergies attached to it,
should be kept off the school menu. In this case the risk to a few
outweighs the benefit to the many. There are other high-protein foods
to eat, after all, though kids may not favor the healthiest of foods.
I think community responsibility in this case requires preserving the
safety of the individual.
Dear Dr. Marc,
More states are about to cap damages for pain and suffering in
malpractice cases, and otherwise reduce the accountability of
insurers, bad doctors and profit-motivated hospitals for the harm they
do to people through slipshod medical care. Insurers want to increase
profits by cutting down on the amount of doctor time and hospital time
that patients use. They have been doing this in recent years through
capitation, restrictive formulas, bogus "customary rates" and by
routinely denying coverage for expensive treatments, among other
things.
One of the few things that gives them pause in their drive to
reduce the quality of care is the fact that if they go too far and
kill someone, they'll have to pay out of another pocket, through
malpractice judgments. But if their malpractice liability exposure can
be cut down to a predictable and manageable level, then the
consequences of bad medicine will be just a cost of doing business.
Insurers will be freer to refuse to include the better doctors and
hospitals in their networks, putting many out of business. Is there
any possibility that medical associations or doctors in general will
figure out that these legal "reforms" are bad for good doctors?
ANN K.
Los Angeles, California
Dear Ann,
Your equations give too much weight to doctors and not enough to
the insurance companies that you properly assail. Of course doctors
should be held accountable and are being held accountable for
practicing bad medicine. But doctors should not become the fall guys
for big business. Imagine if a doctor insists on a test but the
patient's HMO refuses to approve it, so the patient who can't afford
it won't pay out of pocket. The way the law stands now, the doctor can
be sued but not the insurance company. I think that's wrong. What's
required is a fundamental rethinking of the laws that regulate these
practices.
Dear Dr. Marc,
I've got a query about routine vaccinations for babies and
children. I have a healthy 9-week-old baby girl. I don't think that I
am sufficiently knowledgeable about the subject to give my "informed
consent" for beginning the vaccination procedure. I have numerous
concerns ranging from thimerasol, aluminum and possible unknown
pathogens in the vaccines to the potential long-term systemic
consequences of bypassing the body's "normal" immune response to
disease. I've basically been told that refusing her shots is
neglectful and equivalent to inviting raging pestilences upon her.
I am not remotely opposed to allopathic medicine--I've benefited
from it too many times for that. Yet I'm still unsure. I don't want to
act against my better judgment and risk her long-term health for the
sake of avoiding controversy. While I know you can't tell me what to
do, I hope you can provide me with a little more information about the
risks involved with immunizations.
ANITA SPLETTSTOESSER
Freeport, Maine
Dear Anita,
This is a difficult question to answer, because the long-term data
isn't there to show harm from the latest vaccines, which do not have
the aluminum or mercury content of their older counterparts. On the
other hand, much of the rationale behind mass vaccination is to
protect a society from a disease, which makes the argument for
vaccination difficult to apply on a child-by-child basis. Overall, I'm
in favor of taking the vaccines, after carefully considering what is
known and what the purpose of vaccination is. But vaccine
manufacturers must be held to a very high standard.
Dear Dr. Marc,
What scares me as a pharmacist is the Bush double talk on drugs.
I think he sincerely believes that African AIDS patients can be
successfully medicated for $300 a year. If he thinks these prices
apply to patients in the US, he is being deceived. If he extends this
misconception to a national prescription plan for seniors we are all
in trouble. NPR reported last week that Mozambique had contracted with
a pharmaceutical company in India to buy generic AIDS drugs for about
$300 per year per patient. Unfortunately big business, which controls
the Republican Congress, will never let US tax dollars be spent on
cheap generic drugs from India.
JIM MYRES
Phoenix, AZ
Dear Jim,
I would add that I do believe these drug companies charge what the
market will bear. (See my article "Drug Ad Wars," The Nation, June 6,
2002). In addition, with HIV they have a captive audience, in that
these drugs are clearly lifesaving. I agree with you that $300 per
year is unrealistic. On the other hand, I also believe the prices
charged are inflated by the drug companies. They talk of research and
development costs, but the prices charged largely reflect the
mega-advertising that, of course, helps create the demand to back the
prices. What a cycle!
Dear Dr. Marc,
My best friend has been dating a woman on and off for the past
two years. Unfortunately, he appears to be the only person who knows
this woman that isn't convinced that she suffers from acute Munchausen
syndrome. She has claimed to have everything from cervical cancer
(although she swears she hasn't had a hysterectomy) to von
Hippel-Lindau syndrome. The woman also regularly complains about any
number of aches, diseases, "surgeries," etc. I'm not exaggerating when
I say that her complaining is nearly constant. My friend (and only my
friend) believes every word and considers her the world's most
extraordinary woman for persevering through her afflictions.
My question is twofold. First, do you have any suggestions on
literature to present to my friend to ease him into the idea that this
woman's illness is mental and not physical? I'm convinced that he is
doing nothing but making her condition worse with his continued
acceptance. And second, how does one approach a person one believes to
have Munchausen's? Or is it even worth bringing it up with them?
ANONYMOUS
Chicago, IL
Dear Anonymous,
Try to make sure that your friend knows that she should be seeing a
good internist, who can help sort through this situation. Beyond that,
my advice is to stay out of it, as painful as that proves, unless he
comes to you for advice. You should know that Munchausens is a
difficult diagnosis for an internist to make, because we are in the
business of trying to solve medical problems by taking a history, and
giving a patient the benefit of the doubt that he or she is telling
the truth. But after awhile, and after several blind alleys, I admit I
can get a sense that someone is either psychosomatic, or simulating
the illness for the purpose of bringing out some deeper rooted
problem, as in Munchausens. I would not encourage you to delve further
into this, it is hard enough for any doctor, internist or
psychiatrist, to treat this condition. If you explore the web to find
out more info on the matter, you could catch the internet disease
which occurs when a barrage of symptoms and examples confuses the web
surfer. Better I'm afraid, in this case, to stay out of it, and simply
wish your friend luck.
Dear Dr. Marc,
I read your recent response to a question about HMOs, and I
think there are some things you can learn. I think the essential thing
is to differentiate for-profit HMOs from nonprofit HMOs. As I work for
one of the two nonprofit HMOs (Kaiser-Permanente) I am aware of, I
have some insight into how care is delivered and about denial of care.
How we care for people is much different from any for-profit group.
Look into it.
The second point I would make is physician motivation. I am a
surgeon. Outside of Kaiser-Permanente, a surgeon is paid by the
operation. Inside KP I am paid to take care of people, not to operate
on them. I have a hammer, but my patients look like people to me, not
nails.
DR. LOREN
Dear Dr. Loren,
I understand the distinction you're trying to make between Kaiser
and the more conventional for-profit HMOs. But the basic structure of
approvals and denials is the same, which is at the heart of the
insurance-run model that I'm criticizing. Furthermore, even though you
work for Kaiser, I'm afraid you may not know it from the patient's
point of view. It's difficult to know what frustrations they're
experiencing, especially from the inside of an operating room, when
the patient is asleep. You boast that you work for a salary, not for a
fee, but there is no guarantee that not being paid by the case
automatically causes a change in attitude toward altruism--many
salaried people just want to get home when their assigned hours are
up. Finally, I am concerned by your use of the hammer metaphor; in
fact, a surgeon's tool is a scalpel, a deft, artistic instrument in
the right hands. A hammer, on the other hand, conveys something else.
Just a metaphor, but as you probably know, a metaphor is never only a
metaphor.