Hope or hype : the obsession with medical advances and the high cost of false promises /
Annotation
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Otros Autores: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
New York :
AMACOM, American Management Association,
©2005.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Can there be too much of a good thing? the hazards of uncritically embracing medical advances
- What's the problem? don't we need lifesaving new treatments?
- Medical innovations and American culture: the call of the sirens
- Why more isn't always better: red herrings, side effects, and superbugs
- Why newer isn't always better: unpleasant surprises, recalls, and learning curves
- Social hazards: what we lose by uncritical use of new treatments
- How things really work: opinion makers and regulators of medical advances
- What will you swallow? how drug companies get you to buy more expensive drugs than you may need
- Making friends, playing monopoly, and dirty tricks: other industry strategies
- Stacking the deck? how to get the "right" answer in clinical research
- "Cancer cured
- film at 11:00": the media's role in disseminating medical advances
- Doctors and hospitals: fueling the drive for new and more
- Advocacy groups: Mother Teresa's waiting room
- Holes in the safety net: the FDA and the FTC
- Ineffective. inferior or needlessly costly new drugs
- Medical devices that disappoint
- Ineffective or needlessly extensive surgery
- Weight loss technology: shedding pounds from your waistline or your wallet?
- For doctors: evidence-based medicine
- For insurers and researchers: pay now or pay more later
- For all decision makers: getting value for money
- For government: regulatory approaches to improve the dissemination of medical innovations
- For consumers: shared decision making.
- Can there be too much of a good thing? the hazards of uncritically embracing medical advances
- What's the problem? don't we need lifesaving new treatments?
- Medical innovations and American culture: the call of the sirens
- Why more isn't always better: red herrings, side effects, and superbugs
- Why newer isn't always better: unpleasant surprises, recalls, and learning curves
- Social hazards: what we lose by uncritical use of new treatments
- How things really work: opinion makers and regulators of medical advances
- What will you swallow? how drug companies get you to buy more expensive drugs than you may need
- Making friends, playing monopoly, and dirty tricks: other industry strategies
- Stacking the deck? how to get the "right" answer in clinical research
- "Cancer cured
- film at 11:00": the media's role in disseminating medical advances
- Doctors and hospitals: fueling the drive for new and more
- Advocacy groups: Mother Teresa's waiting room
- Holes in the safety net: the FDA and the FTC
- Useless, harmful, or marginal: popular treatments that caused unnecessary disability, dollar costs, or death
- Ineffective or inferior new drugs
- Medical devices that disappoint
- Ineffective or needlessly extensive surgery
- Weight loss technology: shedding pounds from your waistline or your wallet?
- Crossing the threshold: improving the transition from "experimental" to "standard care"
- For doctors: evidence-based medicine
- For insurers and researchers: pay now or pay more later
- For all decision makers: getting value for money
- For government: regulatory approaches to improve the dissemination of medical innovations
- For consumers: shared decision making.