1 / 62

Risk

Risk. Or, Hippocrates was wrong P. Mukherji. Primum non nocerum. -HIPPOCRATES. First do no harm. FIRST: implies that this is a cardinal and overarching tenet of medicine The statement also implies that this is possible. Better motto:.

pcressey
Download Presentation

Risk

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Risk Or, Hippocrates was wrong P. Mukherji

  2. Primum non nocerum -HIPPOCRATES

  3. First do no harm • FIRST: implies that this is a cardinal and overarching tenet of medicine • The statement also implies that this is possible.

  4. Better motto: Please try and kill as few patients as possible, while hopefully healing and helping as many as possible.

  5. Please stop me • Please interrupt • Please look it up

  6. 91 yo WM s/p trip and fall • +head injury: abrasion • NT head/spine, full ROM • No concerning sx, no ASA/Coumadin • CT?

  7. RULES to help us? Canadian Head CT NEXUS II New Orleans Criteria

  8. To scan or not to scan? • Spin em all and let God sort em out • Nope, he might get a brain tumor

  9. CT shows small SAH • SDH is more common in trauma • Epidural is more common in trauma • He has an aneurysm • He needs ICU time • He needs a monitor

  10. Pt. admitted for observation • Falls off the bed(!) • When transferred back to stretcher stops breathing • Regains VS, is transported to CT • Stops breathing again!

  11. CT shows? • C-spine is crumply at C2 • CT head is clean • Attending read later finds initial CT finding to be motion artifact

  12. Did we do wrong? • Pt. was admitted for his own safety • Harm came to patient • Admission led to harm • Should we change practice? • CO- vs. O-MISSION

  13. Would you do it differently next time? • Head CT please • How about just good instructions

  14. Doctors are biased* • Routinely overestimate benefits of intervention • Routinely minimize risks of intervention *Surgeons!

  15. House of God? • FAT MAN’s RULE #13 • “The delivery of good medical care is to do as much nothing as possible”

  16. But it’s not just about doctors • We all routinely underestimate everday risks • High frequency, unlikely events • We tend to demonize and overestimate rare events • Low frequency, very unlikely events

  17. Did you ever fall? • Over your lifetime, falling is a significant risk • Falls in the elderly are a problem, should you be attentive to it already?

  18. What’s most likely to kill ya? • Shark attack • MRSA • Flu • Fall

  19. Actual lifetime odds of dying • Sharks: 1 in 60,453 • Falls: 1 in 218 • MRSA: 1 in 197 • Flu: 1 in 63!

  20. Risk vs. Benefit • We accept the risk of anaphylaxis when prescribing antibiotics, • AS LONG AS • We think there is some benefit to the antibiotics for the pt.

  21. Overutilization? • Overuse is defined by multiple federal overseers and review boards as: • Testing for which no (or minimal) benefit to the patient exists

  22. Who has prescribed Abx? • …for sinus pressure? • …for cough/bronchitis? • …for sore throat?

  23. 31M with fever and sore throat, has exudates, tender ant. nodes, and no cough • Bicillin shot! • Z-pack • Rapid strep, Cx if neg • Rapid strep, do what is says • Suck it up, wuss

  24. It’s cool, you haven’t killed • (Probably) • But you haven’t helped • …and you might have killed

  25. Sore throats • 14 million visits in U.S./yr. • Steroids/NSAIDS >> Abx • NO evidence that it helps abscess • ONLY evidence on rheumatic heart from worst military outbreak ever • NNT? 40,000 • NNH? 5 minor rxn, 6 to recur, 2500 major Smartem.org, David Newman, AEM 2010

  26. Let’s talk about • Our cognitive errors • Assessing and communicating risk • Balancing risk and intervention

  27. Unintended Consequences** • Interventions ALWAYS have the potential to create unanticipated and unforeseen events • Perverse

  28. Every intervention/test carries RISK and UNCERTAINTY • RULE #1 • LAW of UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES • We are expected to detail these risks to our patients • Informed consent: risk/benefit- uncertaintyon both ends

  29. Risk assessment • We suck at this • Probability of Occurrence x Impact of Risk Event

  30. We suck at probability, too. • Statistics, anyone? • You test a bunch of people for HIV • 1 is positive • Likelihood of true positive?

  31. Math! • Test is 99.99% sensitive AND specific • Out of 10,001 men, 1 has HIV • So what do you do with your positive guy?

  32. Sir, your rapid test was positive, you need a repeat test but… • It’s very likely correct • It’s very unlikely to be correct • Probable, but could be wrong • Probably wrong

  33. Great for negatives (screen) • One pt. with HIV will be positive. • One other pt. will have a positive test. • 50% chance that this is a true positive** • PPV = 50% (RULE #2)

  34. Testing? • On low prevalence groups leads to higher rates of false positives** • RULE #2

  35. Screening • Hgb A1C • Mammography • PSA

  36. PSA • Screening PSA will result in an absolute mortality reduction of 33%

  37. PSA • 17 of 100 men will get a dx of CA • 3 will die if untreated • Treatment will save the life of 1 of 3* • Treatment will kill 1 of the 17 • 10 of the 17 will be incontinent and/or impotent

  38. How you present the data matters • “98.5% safety from a particular disease” • That is exactly 1 in 63, the odds that you’ll be killed by flu in your lifetime.

  39. How likely are you to pass the inservice? • 50% • 90% • 95% • 98% • 99%

  40. You did not grow a brain that likes small or huge numbers • All your brain sees is either a really high (98%, 99%) likelihood and rounds up • or a really low (1%, 2%) and rounds down

  41. Probabilities are percentages • But real numbers work MUCH better • RULE #3: USE REAL NUMBERS • Want someone to go home? • “98% you’re ok!” • Want someone admitted? • “1 out of 50 you’re dead!”

  42. How do some docs manage risk? • TESTS • We’re even told that pts. WANT tests. • Testing does not reduce legal action • and might increase it

  43. Every test is an additional intervention** RULE #1 • Failure to follow up • Failure to interpret correctly • Failure to pursue to the correct test • Alteration of the presenting frame • Incidentaloma • Radiation

  44. Prevalence of incidental findings in trauma patients detected by computed tomography imaging • >3000 pts. • 990 (32%) had Type I findings • 1274 (41%) had Type II findings • 631 incidentalomas concerning for nodules, masses

More Related