Black Men More Likely To Have Certain Health Tests If Discussed With A Black Male Doctor: Study
A survey of 702 black men in Oakland, Calif., indicates that the lack of black physicians may be a factor in the health care disparity for black men. In other news: some docs have a hard time talking to patients about the downsides of cancer screenings; and the growing number of practicing osteopaths.
The New York Times:
The Secret To Keeping Black Men Healthy? Maybe Black Doctors
Black men have the lowest life expectancy of any ethnic group in the United States. Much of the gap is explained by greater rates of chronic illnesses such as diabetes and heart disease, which afflict poor and poorly educated black men in particular. But why is that? Lack of insurance? Lack of access to health care? Now, a group of researchers in California has demonstrated that another powerful force may be at work: a lack of black physicians. (Kolata, 8/20)
NPR:
Should You Get That Scan? Your Doctor Might Not Be Great At Helping You Decide
Your doctor probably nags you to schedule cancer screening tests like mammograms and colonoscopies. These tests, after all, can be life-saving, and most doctors want to make sure you get them done. But when it comes to explaining the ways that certain screenings can cause you harm, your doctor may not be doing such a good job. (Gordon, 8/18)
WBUR:
The Doctors Without MDs: What Makes Osteopathic Medicine Different?
[Doctors of osteopathic medicine] receive conventional medical training, but also learn osteopathic medicine, which focuses on holistic approaches to care that sometimes involve hands-on treatment. The philosophy was developed by a controversial 19th-century doctor who, at the time, was shunned by the medical establishment. Since 1973, though, DOs have been fully recognized as doctors in all 50 states. (Kaplan, 8/17)
And in other health care personnel news —
California Healthline:
The Man Who Sold America On Vitamin D — And Profited In The Process
The doctor most responsible for turning the sunshine supplement into a billion-dollar juggernaut has received hundreds of thousands of dollars from the vitamin D industry, according to government records and interviews. (Szabo, 8/20)
The Washington Post:
Nurses Helped Make Us Understand Domestic Violence As A Serious Health Issue
Even though intimate-partner violence has long been all too common, it hasn’t always been considered a serious health issue. Passionate nurses helped change that. “Confronting Violence: Improving Women’s Lives,” a traveling exhibition produced by the National Library of Medicine, brings their work to life. It’s a compact exhibit with a massive story to tell. (Blakemore, 8/18)
Retraction Watch:
Dr. Gilbert Welch, Prominent Researcher, Plagiarized Colleagues' Work
A Dartmouth College investigation has concluded that Dr. H. Gilbert Welch, one of the country’s most prominent health care policy scholars, committed research misconduct in connection with a paper published in a top medical journal. Welch plagiarized material from a Dartmouth colleague and another researcher at a different institution, according to a letter from the college’s interim provost obtained by Retraction Watch. The material was included in a 2016 paper published by the New England Journal of Medicine. The work found that breast cancer screening was more likely to overdiagnose tumors (leading to unnecessary treatments) than pick up early cases that are destined to become life-threatening. (McCook, 8/20)