“There is,” in a phrase rightly or wrongly attributed to P.T.
Barnum, “a sucker born every minute.” To Barnum, and to countless others before
and since, this was a business opportunity. They can get rich off us because we
want stuff to be true even when every input from our senses should show us that
it isn’t; we want magical, easy cures and money-making schemes, even when we
know that they only work for the scheme’s designers, not the suckers who take
the bait. Betsy DeVos, the recently approved Secretary of Education, who knows nothing
about education and devalues public education (I could go on, but that’s
another story…) is the beneficiary of such desires. She is in the position that
she is in because of her great wealth which has bought her great influence, and
that great wealth, at least the portion from her husband’s side, derives from
the Ponzi scheme known as Amway. It is clear that Amway was in fact the path to
wealth that it was claimed to be, for the DeVoses anyway.
The persistent and widespread greed of people despite
evidence that the odds are stacked way against them is testimony to either
optimism or stupidity, or some of both. It is one of the oldest memes in
literature, from the alchemists who would turn lead into gold (or
Rumpelstiltskin who would weave it) to Faust who would sell his soul to the
devil (and maybe so did guitarist
Robert Johnson) to Ralph
Kramden (and his cartoon successor Fred Flintstone) and George “Kingfish”
Stevens, doubly oppressed and vulnerable, being poor and black. And the outcome is always the same, the little guy gets
screwed.
We could go on and on with this theme. The temptation to tie
it to the election and reign of Donald Trump is enormous; people want something to be true (that they’ll
get good jobs back, that their streets will be safe, that they can have all the
health care they want and need without paying for it when they don’t need it,
whatever) and Trump promised it all, and of course he is not and will not
deliver, but many still love him. If you want a good article about this, try
Matt Taibbi in Rolling Stone, “The
end of facts in the Trump era”. But, after all, this blog is about public health
and medicine, and there is no shortage of examples in those fields. After all,
con men and grifters, whether low level hucksters, Amway merchants, or Wall
Street bankers are all regularly called “snake oil salesmen”, and
what was snake oil but a promise of better health? And the liniment sold by
these folks might have worked a bit since it had red pepper, a bit like current
capsaicin. When they were convicted it was because their oil did not come from
snakes, not because it was a fraudulent cure.
You’d think that people would wonder why, if there is a
miracle easy (and sometimes even relatively cheap) cure for all their ills that
everyone else hasn’t benefited from it. Ah, but that is part of the attraction –
being in the know about something everyone else isn’t. Is that not the way that
inside traders work? Isn’t that how they fix sporting events, how your
brother-in-law knows that this 100-1 shot will come in at Santa Anita? Is that
not how Arnold
Rothstein got rich? So, sure, it’s done in health. Watch daytime television
sometime. It is mostly about medicine, from Dr. Oz (a font of misinformation),
to an electric scooter you can get FREE (or at no cost to you, other than as a
taxpayer paying into Medicare), or a miracle drug that will allow you to have
even better relief from your arthritis or asthma or will keep your blood from
clotting even better than warfarin, at only 1000 times the price, and at great
potential risk to your immune system.
The hucksters present not only misinformation about individual
medical care, but also public health. The most obvious, and likely most
serious, current issue is that of vaccines. Despite there being no evidence
linking vaccines to autism, and strong evidence showing there is no link, the
myth persists. The price will likely be serious outbreaks of vaccine-preventable
diseases, especially measles, as discussed by Peter J. Hoetz in his NY Times Op-Ed “How
the anti-vaxxers are winning”, February 7, 2017. Water fluoridation suffers
from similar myths. Public health may be even more susceptible to such hype
than medical care, since so many of its benefits are things (like measles, or
tooth decay) that don’t happen,
rather than those that do. We rarely wake up saying “Gee, I’m glad I don’t have
cholera today because we have clean water”; indeed, we mostly worry about water
quality when something specifically bad is happening, like lead poisoning in
Flint. People are susceptible to liars and charlatans who tell them things that
they want to believe, as well as things that seem to make sense, but as I tell
students, something that seems to make sense is called a research question; only when the study is done
will we know if it is true.
But it is not only the more obvious (to the discerning,
anyway) scams. Mainstream medicine does it often. Every new discovery, every
potential ameliorant (if not cure) is trumpeted by both the companies that
manufacture it and, at an earlier stage, the university for which they work. Of
course, most of these discoveries are scarcely the magic breakthroughs that
they are initially claimed to be. That is the nature of science; things are
learned and knowledge grows incrementally. But a new discovery by a scientist at your
university is worth a lot of publicity! Maybe it is a cure for Alzheimers!
Or at least a step in that direction! Certainly worth millions of dollars more
in NIH funding! There is nothing wrong in incremental discoveries; the problem
is when they are hyped as the Holy Grail. Indeed, on July 16, 2010, I wrote
about Rosiglitazone
and the "Holy Grail", and how disappointed diabetes advocates
were that Avandia® was being taken off the market just because it caused heart
disease, because it did lower blood
sugar! (A diabetes advocate noted that lowering blood sugar was the “Holy Grail”.)
This story is a terrific example of the peskiness caused by the human body
being an integral organism; something that is very good for one condition may
still cause big problems. And so, maybe we should wait before we hype it too
much. On the other hand, what an opportunity
we have to get big publicity before that happens…
A recent example involves using low-dose CT screening for
lung cancer. The
US Preventive Services Task Force recommends it (as a “B” recommendation) for
men 55-80 years old with a history of smoking. This “B” recommendation is
worth a lot to the CT manufacturers and radiologists who read them, since the
ACA requires insurers to cover USPSTF “A” and “B” recommendations. But a big
Veterans Administration study just published in JAMA shows that it is not quite as good as previously thought. “Of the 2106 patients screened, 1257 (59.7%)
had nodules; 1184 of these patients (56.2%) required tracking, 42 (2.0%)
required further evaluation but the findings were not cancer, and 31 (1.5%) had
lung cancer.” Does this mean that it is a bad idea to get screened? Not
necessarily; if I had a patient with a significant smoking history, I would
discuss the risks inherent in getting this procedure but prepare them for the
probability that even a positive test would likely not mean they had cancer,
and that they might have to undergo more procedures with some risk to find out.
The point is not that this is a bad idea, but it is not some amazing
breakthrough, as touted.
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