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http://bmj.com/cgi/content/full/324/7336/497
BMJ 2002;324:497-498 ( 2 March )
Editorials
The discomfort of patient power
Medical authorities will have to learn to
live with "irrational" decisions by the public
Patients will often chose to ignore their
doctors' advice and do something that their doctors regard as odd, even crazy.
The BMJ described the case of a young man who lost blood
after a road crash, declined a blood transfusion, and died in front
of disbelieving and disturbed doctors. He was a Jehovah's Witness,
and nobody disputed his right to do as he did.1 This is
the reality of patient autonomy and power. But does it extend beyond
individuals? Does patient power mean that large groups of patients
should have the right to behave in a way that "the
authorities" think misguided? We see more and more examples
where groups of patients chose to ignore the advice of authorities,
and it seems likely that this will happen increasingly.
The most prominent example in Britain at the moment concerns MMR (measles,
mumps, and rubella) vaccine.2 The
authorities, including the BMJ,3 are
unanimous in seeing it as a highly effective vaccine with minor side
effects. Following a report in the Lancet,4 the public
and the media have, however, become increasingly worried that the
vaccine may cause bowel disease and autism. Increasing doubts about
the vaccine seem to stem from conflicting scientific evidence over
possible side effects, longstanding anxieties over vaccination,
declining folk memory of the potential horrors of the infections
being prevented, distrust of the authorities (fuelled by the
government's mishandling of bovine spongiform encephalopathy), and a
media campaign motivated partly by a correct instinct to side with
the governed rather than the government and partly by newspapers who
seize any opportunity to oppose the Labour party. The result is a
fall in the number of children being vaccinated and more outbreaks
of measles.
The government has responded by gathering together ever larger groups of
authorities to back its line that the vaccine is safe and that it
would be folly to offer parents the choice of having their children
vaccinated separately against each disease.2 The
authorities' case is strong and supported by the BMJ. But would
any doctor respond to the doubts of an individual patient by
assembling authorities to tell the patient of the foolishness of his
or her thinking? Perhaps initially, although any doctor should
recognise that excessive reassurance may be counterproductive.5 The
doctor would eventually do what the patient chose. Should the
government do the same for the population and offer a choice that it
thinks misguided?
The government's own rhetoric on patient partnership suggests that it
should.6
Patients come first and are free to make silly choices. The
government should also recognise, as the Royal Society has
concluded, that when it comes to assessing risk experts are no
better than the population at large.7 This is
mainly because assessing risk is not simply a matter of statistics:
it also involves factoring in the "horror" of the risk. A
very low or perhaps highly uncertain risk of a dreadful outcome may
feel to the public like a high risk
and
who is to say that it isn't? It may even be
as
the proponents of "lay epidemiology" argue 8 9
that
the public is good at combining confused and conflicting information
to reach a conclusion.
The first argument against the government giving way is the scientific case
that more choice is likely to lead to lower levels of protection and
more infections. Another argument is that giving way to the few may
cause harm to the many. The result of one set of parents deciding
not to get their children vaccinated may be that somebody else's
child suffers brain damage from measles. The doctors who watched the
young Jehovah's Witness die went along with undoubted harm to the
man's young children, but the scale is quite different with public
health problems.
MMR vaccine is not the only example of authorities and the public taking
different views. A dispassionate examination of the evidence
suggests that routine screening for prostate cancer with prostate
specific antigen may cause more harm than good.10 But
particularly
in the United States
those
who argue that case may find themselves howled down and abused.11 Many
men, particularly those who have had prostate cancer, resent greatly
any attempt to restrict the availability of the test. Arguments over
the effectiveness of mammography are more complicated because there
are experts and patients on both sides.12 Although
the big money is on one side, a united patient view might eventually
prevail. Views of patients are certainly beginning to prevail with
chronic fatigue syndrome. England's chief medical officer took the
bold step of setting up a working party on the condition that
included every shade of opinion.13 One
result was that half the members resigned before the working party
reported but another was that the patient view, based on what
experts see as anecdote, was given the same credibility as the
evidence based view. 14
15
This is the way that the world is going. It's called postmodernism. There is
no "truth" defined by experts. Rather there are many
opinions based on very different views and theories of the world.
Doctors, governments, and even the BMJ might hanker after a
world where their view is dominant. But that world is disappearing fast.
Richard Smith, editor.
BMJ
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1.
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Finfer S, Howell S, Miller J, Willett K, Wilson-MacDonald
J. Managing patients who refuse blood transfusions: an ethical dilemma: major
trauma in two patients refusing blood transfusion. BMJ 1994; 308:
1423-1426[Full
Text].
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2.
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Kmietowicz Z. Government launches intensive media campaign
on MMR. BMJ 2002; 324: 383[Full
Text].
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3.
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Elliman D, Bedford H. MMR vaccine: the continuing saga. BMJ
2001; 322: 183-184[Full
Text].
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4.
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Wakefield A, Dhillon AP, Thomson MA, Harvey P, Valentine
A, Davies SE, et al. Ileal-lymphoid-nodular hyperplasia, non-specific
colitis, and pervasive developmental disorder in children. Lancet
1998; 351: 637-641[Medline].
|
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5.
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McDonald IG, Daly J, Jelinek VM, Panetta F, Gutman JM.
Opening Pandora's box: the unpredictability of reassurance by a normal test
result. BMJ 1996; 313: 329-332[Abstract/Full
Text].
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6.
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Department of Health. Shifting the balance of power
within the NHS. London: DoH, 2002.
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7.
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Ashworth J. Science, policy and risk. London: Royal
Society, 1997.
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8.
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Frankel SJ, Davison C, Davey Smith G. Lay epidemiology and
the rationality of responses to health educators. Br J Gen Pract 1991;
41: 428-430[Medline].
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9.
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Ness AR, Frankel SJ, Gunnell DJ, Davey Smith G. Are we
really dying for a tan? BMJ 1999; 319: 114-116[Full
Text].
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10.
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Donovan JL, Frankel SJ, Neal DE, Hamdy FC. Screening for
prostate cancer in the UK. BMJ 2001; 323: 763-764[Full
Text].
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11.
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Yamey G, Wilkes M. The PSA storm. BMJ 2002; 324: 431[Full
Text].
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12.
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Charatan F. The great American mammography debate. BMJ
2002; 324: 432[Full
Text].
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13.
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CFS/ME Working Group. Report to the Chief Medical
Officer of an independent working group. London: Department of Health,
2001. www.doh.gov.uk/cmo/cfsmereport/index.htm
(accessed 25 February 2002).
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14.
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Eaton L. Chronic fatigue report delayed as row breaks out
over content. BMJ 2002; 324: 7.
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15.
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Straus S. Caring for patients with chronic fatigue
syndrome. BMJ 2002; 324: 124-125[Full
Text].
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© BMJ 2002
Rapid Response responses to
this article:
Read all Rapid Response
responses
Sometimes patients know best
Jeremy Gambrill
bmj.com, 1 Mar 2002 [Response]
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