Home  Learn More  Take Action  Schools  Healthcare  Society
     


News and Commentary
MedWatch
CG In The News
Events
Recommended Reading
CG Publications
Op-Eds
Polls
Speeches
Resource Binders
Fact Sheets
Other Sources
Booklist
Links
Reports & Studies


Make a tax-deductible contribution. Common Good needs your support.

Let us know what you think (or update your information).

Overtreated: Why Too Much Medicine Is Making Us Sicker and Poorer

Shannon Brownlee
Bloomsbury USA, September 2007

From Publisher's Weekly:

Contrary to Americans' common belief that in health care more is more—that more spending, drugs and technology means better care—this lucid report posits that less is actually better. Medical journalist Brownlee acknowledges that state-of-the-art medicine can improve care and save lives. But technology and drugs are misused and overused, she argues, citing a 2003 study of one million Medicare recipients, published in the Annals of Internal Medicine, which showed that patients in hospitals that spent the most were 2% to 6% more likely to die than patients in hospitals that spent the least. Additionally, she says, billions per year are spent on unnecessary tests and drugs and on specialists who are rewarded more for some procedures than for more appropriate ones. The solution, Brownlee writes, already exists: the Veterans Health Administration outperforms the rest of the American health care system on multiple measures of quality. The main obstacle to replicating this model nationwide, according to the author, is a powerful cartel of organizations, from hospitals to drug companies, that stand to lose in such a system. Many of Brownlee's points have been much covered, but her incisiveness and proposed solution can add to the health care debate heated up by the release of Michael Moore's Sicko.

When you buy Overtreated using the above link from Amazon, a portion of the profits will go to support Common Good.