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Immaculate misconceptions




Public Health practitioners are irritating people, or so I am led to believe, mostly by my wife. The BBC News makes a seemingly harmless comment about the perils or failings of society and we immediately cast doubt upon its veracity, asking for evidence.

The nice thing about evidence is that it so often manages to throw out people’s long-cherished beliefs. One that is quoted an awful lot in relation to our latest medical fashion, childhood obesity, is that children are being made into couch potatoes because the wicked government have forced bankrupt schools to sell off all of their playing fields for Toytown housing and therefore the kids lie about all day. Or that hyper-neurotic parents, frightened by the media into believing that every second passer-by is a child rapist insists on driving the 4x4 200 yards to school, depriving the child of that much-needed cycle/sprint/saunter, and incidentally, killing quite a lot of pedestrians. Or maybe poor terrified teachers, battered by the needs to keep up the SATS figures, have dumped games from the curriculum in favour of riting.

But the kids will have none of it. A survey of children at primary schools in England, published in the BMJ, found a marked decline in timetabled physical education between 1994 and 1999.  But another study using accelerometers to measure the impact of timetabled physical education at school on overall physical activity in children showed that the myth may be wrong.

This study compared three schools; one a private preparatory school that had extensive facilities and nine hours a week of physical education in the curriculum.  The second, a village school awarded Activemark gold status for its physical activity, offered over two hours of timetabled physical education a week; the third, an inner city school, offered less than two hours.

The first school recorded the most activity in school time but this was barely twice that of pupils in the second or third schools despite more than four times the amount of physical education on the timetable.  The total physical activity between the schools was similar because children in the second and third school did correspondingly more activity out of school.

Another nice example of undoing a myth was a series of interesting studies by Ferrari. This work contributes to the debate about whiplash—whether it is an injury or a disease, partly, at least, promoted by the possibility of obtaining financial rewards against the person to blame for the vehicle accident.

He compared the frequency and nature of expected 'whiplash' symptoms in Lithuania and Greece with that in Canada. He carried out symptom checklists in which people were asked to imagine having suffered a neck sprain with no loss of consciousness in a motor vehicle accident, and to check which, of a variety of symptoms, they would expect might arise from the injury. They were also asked to say the period of time the symptoms would be likely to persist.

In all three groups, the pattern of symptoms anticipated closely resembled the acute symptoms commonly reported by accident victims with acute neck sprain, but while up to 50% of Canadians anticipated symptoms to last months or years, very few Lithuanian or Greek subjects selected any symptoms as likely to persist.

The authors concluded that in Lithuania and Greece, despite the documented occurrence of neck sprain symptoms in about half of the subjects following motor vehicle accidents, there is a very low rate of expectation of any long term effect from the injury. It seems possible that the cultural tendency to sue for whiplash injury in Canada, not known in the other countries, may be perpetrating the myth of the disease.

My own attempt to contribute to these debates over the years has been around the mythology relating to old age. This is a particularly perverse mythology, contributed to by old people as much as younger people and their doctors, and riddled with victim-blaming, notably by successive governments when older people are assumed to be defiling the sanctity of the ‘acute bed’.  

It is assumed that the prevalence of elderly people, a measure of our success as health advocates, must be to blame for the lack of beds in hospital. It is curious that this should be seen as the main cause when one looks at the number of beds available and the number of admissions to those beds over the past 50 years.

I like to extrapolate the lines another 25 years and try to work out how 25 million patients are going to get into the remaining bed, elderly or not. Though the way the government is attacking the planning of the NHS, I would not be surprised.

 

But the subject of myth cannot really be left without the ultimate reality-check for ourselves in public health; is our work as objective as we suppose?  In a study looking into this question three assessors rated 160 Cochrane systematic reviews. Disagreements were resolved by discussion to arrive at a score for each review. The reviews' authors were given the same categories.

Agreement between two assessors was 0.68 and 0.72, and between readers and assessors, 0.32. The authors state ‘These disagreements suggested a degree of subjective interpretation involved in systematic reviews. Where patterns of disagreement emerged between authors and readers, authors tended to be more optimistic in their conclusions than the readers’.  The good news is that we are worried by the study and determined to do something about it.

A nice spurious association between mortality as a result of treatment for myeloid leukaemia and star sign has recently been published here, showing the problems of looking at the stats with a desire to find something, not with an open mind. Poor statistics, they are not to blame, they are just very innocent and easily led astray by wicked journalists, politicians and, even occasionally, statisticians. 

 

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The Government have passed a bill making General Practitioners the lead professionals in purchasing the services run by the NHS. The government believe that GPs know what patients want.... But do they know what they need? Interestingly the government have now retracted from their original plans to some extent, so that hospital doctors and other professionals will be involved in purchasing care. Read
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Norman Vetter
Cardiff

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Last edited:  04/04/2012          Copyright 2011 -- Norman Vetter