X FERMER

NAVIGATION

ABOUT
Welcome - Vision - Missions Christelle Pedersen: Functional Nutritional Therapist Contact us Disclaimer of liability Navigating your health journey - a space for reflection Why are medical (mis)diagnoses more common than you think? Key concepts for making informed healthcare choices Thinking differently about health - But what is health? The Tyranny of Diagnosis The Willingness to Change? Learn the keys to unlock your health: a paradigm shift Human Medicine versus Techno-Medicine Health Needs a Paradigm Shift: From Repair to Health Navigation The principles of the Hippocratic Oath: renewed
NUTRITIONAL THERAPY
What does a nutritional therapist do - her approach in a nutshell? Who can benefit from functional nutritional therapy? Is nutritional therapy for me? How does functional nutritional medicine differ from conventional medicine?
PRACTICE AREAS
Digestive and gastro-intestinal health Brain health and cognitive health Metabolic health Hormones balance Liver Health Urinary Tract Infection (UTI) Program
SERVICES
Consultations - Functional Nutrition Therapy What is functional nutrition? What is functional medicine and how it can help you? Outlines of the functional medicine approach - How is functional medicine done ? Functional nutrition testing Why fonctional nutrition testing might be useful? Consultations GAPS entero-PSYchological/entero - PHYsiological syndromes Introducing the GAPS diet - How to get started? Consultations options - how we can help? Working with us - consultations options what to expect Guidance on navigating the health systems with success: how we can help
TESTING
An insight into functional Nutrition testing How Functional Medicine Lab Testing Differs From Traditional Medicine
CONVERSATIONS
Beyond the hype - The greatest suppressed stories of virology Bridging some gaps A farewell to virology Inventing the Nature of viruses The Germ Theory House of Cards Quick Start: Germs, Viruses, Contagion, Disease and Other Lies An introduction to the virus misconception, Inversion and Illusions Only Poisoned Monkey Kidney Cells 'Grew' the 'Virus' Phantom Virus: In search of Sars-CoV-2 Get a dose of truth: Dr Stefan Lanka Bursts the Virus Misconception The virus misconception by DR STEFAN LANKA Exploring issues and controversies in science Is too much medicine bad for our health? Overdiagnosis: what it is and what it isn't? Overdiagnosis: The silent pandemic of the West? Paradoxes of disease More on the tyranny of diagnosis of diseases Legal Drug-Pushing: How Disease Mongers Keep Us All Doped Up Does the pharmaceutical industry manufacture diseases as well as drugs? "If you go to an authority, you don't always get the right answer" Can our minds lie? The parasitic mind: how infectious ideas kill common sense) by Gad Saad - book review Politics, Morality and corruption Perpetuating Bad Governance ? An emerging contagious political trend. Power tends to corrupt; absolute power corrupts absolutely The Psychology of Political Power: Does Power Corrupt or is it Magnetic to the Most Corruptible? The Illusion of Medical Certainty The hidden problem of medical misdiagnosis ? and how to fix it Why Getting Medically Misdiagnosed Is More Common Than You May Think. Medical mimics: Differential diagnostic considerations for psychiatric symptoms The Debate over Vaccination The Truth About Vaccination and Immunization The brains of the inoculated Life as a (bio)political input The unfortunate truth about vaccines: exposing the vaccine orthodoxy Shots Fired: Vaccine Weapons, Medical Tyranny, and the War Against Humanity Ideological constructs of vaccination
RESOURCES
Patient Rights and Responsibilities Conscientious Objection to Vaccinations Reporting sides effects of medicine and vaccines Vaccine side effects and false-positive tests Exploring Big Pharma's Unproven Assertion that Gardasil Will Prevent Cervical Cancer Public health, pharmacovigilance and toxicology Promoting diseases to promote drugs: The role of the pharmaceutical industry in fostering good and bad medicalization The Fight against Disease Mongering: Generating Knowledge for Action Terrain vs. the illegitimate Germ Theory of disease causation The End of Germ Theory - 32 Key Questions for You and Your Doctor. A beginner's guide to Germ Theory, with Andrew Kaufman Viruses are embraced as basic seeds of medical reality. Viruses can't be isolated, but isolation is unnecessary?; another ridiculous claim from those who insist on saying SARS-CoV-2 exists Fearless commentary on finance, economics, politics and power White collar crimes & white coat criminals How Big Pharma is corrupting science, doctors and public health policy? Thinking critically about Medicine, health science, researches and media Are Psychiatric Medications Making Us Sicker? Computational chemistry, physics, biology, drug design, and materials science What in silico means in a nutshell? Selling sickness: Exposing the unhealthy relationship between society, medical science and the pharmaceutical industry. Selling Sickness: How Drug Companies Are Turning Us All Into Patients Selling sickness: the pharmaceutical industry and disease mongering The marketing of madness: are we all insane? Protect yourself Disease mongering: Selling sickness to the worry well Quick fact about psychiatry Real Disease vs. Mental Disorder? Audio & Video Terrain view the complete documentary War on Health: The FDA's Cult of Tyranny The Science of Climate Change explained and truths Who Are the Real Climate Change Deniers? Why Governments Have Replaced God with Global Warming A false notion that carbon dioxide and other gases cause global warming
ACTIVITIES
Learn more about GAPS entero-PSYchological/entero - PHYsiological syndromes Introducing the GAPS diet: How to get started? Learn more about functional nutritional therapy How nutritional therapy may benefit you What is functional nutrition therapy? Find out how functional medicine work and can help you
CONNECT!
Link to
WHAT'S ON
What you must know about GMOs and your health

COORDONNÉES

The hidden problem of medical misdiagnosis ? and how to fix it

THE HIDDEN PROBLEM OF MEDICAL MISDIAGNOSIS ? AND HOW TO FIX IT

Why does diagnostic error happen?

Most people would agree that correctly diagnosing a patient’s medical problem is critically important. I’m a doctor – I think it’s important. Patients certainly think it’s important. And I’m fairly certain the community at large considers it pretty important as well.

But not one health-care organisation in the world is measuring the scale of diagnostic error in its patients.

Best estimates put the incidence of diagnostic error in the range of 10% to 15% but if we want to confirm exactly what’s happening in practice, we still have a very large amount of work to do. In particular, we need to figure out exactly what fraction of these errors result in harm.

Australia faces similar issues to other Western counties. Estimates put the number of diagnostic errors here at 140,000 cases a year, with 21,000 cases of serious harm and between 2000 and 4000 deaths.

Malpractice claims

These figures alone should be enough reason to take a more in-depth look at the problem. Some surveys have shown that diagnostic error is the greatest fear of patients entering the health-care system.

But if that’s not convincing enough, consider the impact this has on medical malpractice claims and, ultimately, doctors’ fees. In the United States, diagnosis-related claims account for the largest proportion of malpractice claims by far.

The situation may be more balanced in Australia but the fact remains that these errors cause appreciable suffering and harm everywhere.

In a recent address to the Hospital Alliance for Research Collaboration in Sydney, I pointed out that part of the problem is that there’s no consensus definition on what diagnostic error actually is.

There are two other major impediments. The tools we now use to monitor patient safety don’t detect diagnostic errors, and there’s a serious ownership issue in that no one seems willing to take responsibility for the problem. It seems that diagnostic errors fall into our collective blind spot.

Hospitals and health-care organisations think this is a doctor issue, doctors think it’s a problem for other doctors and educators don’t see it as their responsibility at all.

Why does diagnostic error happen?

It’s worth taking a moment to consider why these errors happen in the first place. First, we should acknowledge that diagnosis is difficult.

There are patient variables such as how a disease might manifest and there’s the complexity of the health system, with communication barriers and disjointed care.

And then there are doctor variables such as expertise, access to patient data, stress and distractions.

There are also more than 12,000 diseases according to the World Health Organization. Never heard of yellow nail syndrome or alien hand syndrome? Many doctors wouldn’t have either – they’re just two of the many new diseases that are constantly emerging.

We know that errors occur either as a result of problems with the system or from errors in cognitive reasoning. And we know that by far the main factor behind more than 80% of cognitive errors is faulty synthesis of information.

One example of faulty synthesis might be the hospital doctor who treats a patient referred from a private specialist. The specialist includes the doctor’s diagnosis in the referral notes.
Does the hospital doctor accept that diagnosis as the most likely possibility? Or does she assume nothing and look at the problem with a fresh pair of eyes?

Sadly, we hear of the former scenario too often. The recent US tragedy of 12-year-old Rory Staunton being sent home from hospital with a diagnosis of gastroenteritis only to die three days later of septic shock is a case in point. You would have read similar stories.

What we know and what we need to know

So we know that diagnosis is challenging, our health-care systems are complex and imperfect and, as human thinkers, we are fallible.

We need to know how to assess competency in clinical reasoning. And we need to understand how to measure the incidence of diagnostic error in specific settings, such as emergency departments. You can’t improve what you can’t measure.

There are possible ways of measuring diagnostic error that are worthy of being trialled.

“Trigger tools” that prompt further investigation are one such approach. An example of a trigger is an unplanned hospital admission within two weeks of a primary care visit, developed by Dr Hardeep Singh from the US Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center.

We can also explore innovative ways to encourage doctors to report error. We will need to consider cultural factors here, but one study of facilitated physician reporting run by Dr Robert Trowbridge at Maine Medical Center established a successful desktop icon that helps doctors report diagnostic error.

We can also devote more energy to following up patients after health-care visits, and encouraging them to speak up and keep track of their health records.

What else can we do?

It is within policy makers’ grasp to solve the issue of ownership and they can make a real difference.

People who run health-care systems also have a role: to create the “space” to talk about error, address the common system flaws that contribute, provide decision support for doctors and help develop pathways for feedback.

Doctors can bring system errors to the attention of those in management and insist on feedback from both patients and peers. They can also be open to using decision support resources and seek help through collaborating with colleagues.

And patients? I repeat: Speak up! I know that can be difficult, particularly when there are perceived power imbalances in the doctor-patient relationship. This is where patient advocates may have a role.

But knowing what questions to ask and being a good historian is important. So is giving feedback about errors to your doctor, and knowing when and how to get back to him if your symptoms persist, change, or worsen. Your life may just depend on it.

Survolez ce nouveau sous-titre pour l'éditer