I've heard this many times before and don't doubt thats the way doctors feel but it's a little like not monitoring production because you don't want developers chasing down minor production issues.
Except there's an entire literature of false positives and the costs associated with these detections [1]. Costs here include not only direct financial costs of potentially unnecessary surgical procedures, but include everything to additional complication due to treatment and patient emotional grief/loss of earnings due to aggressive care.
The lesson a lot of people who are not familiar with public health is that you need to sorta take the long view for these things since we don't make rational decisions.
To bring back your analogy, it's then sorta like requiring an all hands meeting every time your IDE catches a typo. It's still monitoring a something that MAY cause a problem in the future, but to a good enough degree the costs associated with monitering may not be relevant to your actual end goals.
skwb|6 years ago
The lesson a lot of people who are not familiar with public health is that you need to sorta take the long view for these things since we don't make rational decisions.
To bring back your analogy, it's then sorta like requiring an all hands meeting every time your IDE catches a typo. It's still monitoring a something that MAY cause a problem in the future, but to a good enough degree the costs associated with monitering may not be relevant to your actual end goals.
[1]. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3079487/