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throwaway8877 | 1 year ago

Perhaps. But they have advantage of 30-40 years of experience.

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prmph|1 year ago

But here's the things I'm not clear about: Surgeon get immediate feedback if they make mistakes because their patient might die or get severely disabled, but is there any feedback to GPs about the effectiveness of their work?

Let's say someone is not treated that well by his doctor for a chronic condition. He gets to the emergency in a different hospital and probably dies. Does his GP get to know about it?

For example, many doctors in my country believe that Left Ventricular Hypertrophy (LVH) on an ECG is nothing much to worry about, as long as there is no anatomical LVH showing up on an Echocardiogram. Yet, study after study online concludes that ECG LVH is a serious marker of cardiac pathology distinct from (but related to) from anatomical LVH.

How do doctors who operate on this assumption going to learn from experience, if they mostly don't know that their patients have cardiac events as a result?

Calavar|1 year ago

> Surgeon get immediate feedback if they make mistakes because their patient might die or get severely disabled, but is there any feedback to GPs about the effectiveness of their work?

I disagree with this. If a patient dies from a surgical complication, it is often weeks or months later, on a nonsurgical service because there are no surgical options left for the patient.

> Let's say someone is not treated that well by his doctor for a chronic condition. He gets to the emergency in a different hospital and probably dies. Does his GP get to know about it?

Yes, they get to know about it. But ascribing cause and effect in a chronic disease is difficult.

Eventually everyone will die, even if they get perfect treatment. I'm not saying there's no such thing as medical error - in some cases there is clear and obvious error - but what's much more common is a situation of "Did I do the wrong thing, or did I do the right thing but they were so sick that they died anyway?" And there are often many years separating cause and effect, which muddies the picture even further. That's why learning from specific patient outcomes is tricky and why doctors lean so heavily on evidence based medicine, which means learning from large medical trials with rigorous statistical controls.

> For example, many doctors in my country believe that Left Ventricular Hypertrophy (LVH) on an ECG is nothing much to worry about, as long as there is no anatomical LVH showing up on an Echocardiogram. Yet, study after study online concludes that ECG LVH is a serious marker of cardiac pathology distinct from (but related to) from anatomical LVH.

There's a difference between serious pathology and serious pathology you can do something about. I agree that LVH on EKG is a bad sign, even if the ultrasound is normal. But what is your GP going to do about it? There are many test results that are abnormal and/or correlated with bad outcomes, but only a subset of those can be labeled with a concrete diagnosis that is well understood medically, and only a subset of those can be treated.

All your GP can do for an ECG finding of LVH is advise blood pressure control, cholesterol control, exercising frequently, and other things that are generally good for heart health.

On the other hand, if there is anatomical LVH, then the next question is whether there's hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy. That's a concrete diagnosis where we know a lot about the underlying mechanism, which leads to specific advice like avoiding strenuous activity. And some patients with HOCM can benefit from a septal ablation. That's why anatomic LVH gets more attention from doctors.

xyzzy123|1 year ago

Surgeons don't get immediate feedback because the advisability of procedure X ends up being a statistical matter that might not be decided in the surgeon's lifetime. It depends what it is. They will have opinions of course, but will work with the system and follow process.

dimatura|1 year ago

I don't know about GPs, but for surgeons I believe it's not so clear cut (pun not intended). From what I understand bad outcomes in surgery often take a while to manifest - but more importantly, it seems that even when they do, and get tracked in the medical record, not much is done about it either way. I recall reading an article a while back about investigations showing there's a wide disparity in outcomes among surgeons, but not much is done about it, and there's no way for patients to get access to this data. This was several years ago, though, so maybe things have changed since then.

specialist|1 year ago

The importance of "feedback loops" was my key takeaway from my time larping as a QA/Test manager.

> ...but is there any feedback to GPs about the effectiveness of their work?

Specialties too. esp for any misdiagnosis or hard to diagnosis conditions.

flakeoil|1 year ago

30-40 years of experience using the old knowledge and techniques.

SoftTalker|1 year ago

Human biology doesn't change in 30-40 years.

90% of what doctors do is completely routine and they all know and keep up with what the "standard of care" is for common conditions and in many cases it's the same today as was the standard of care in 1984.

Sure, if you have something unusual you might want to go to a younger specialist or a specialty clinic where they focus on leading-edge care for that condition.

A 60-year old GP will do fine for your annual physical.