How the Legal System
Stacks Up Against Mammography
By
Rene
Jackson Lawyers all over the country are
stalking physicians alleging medical malpractice, whether those
physicians are negligent or not. Is anyone going to stop them?
Sickness and disease are in the cards for many of us, and
death is inevitable. At times, though, any one of those can be
promulgated by the negligent actions of a physician, say leaving
a surgical instrument inside a patient, or cutting off the wrong
limb. Then, there is no doubt in anyone's mind that the
physician must be held accountable - a legitimate medical
malpractice case.
However, the norm in this country is for lawyers to bait
unsuspecting potential clients into becoming plaintiffs against
any in the medical establishment who could have possibly caused
harm to that client, or a loved one. What lawyers don't say,
though, is that medicine is not an exact science. But lawyers
and the media have brought the public's expectation of medicine
up so high that physicians and healthcare practitioners are held
to a perfect standard of care they cannot possibly attain, but
are expected to.
Along with ob/gyns and surgeons, radiologists are fast
becoming an integral part of this lawsuit trend, with failure to
diagnose breast cancer on mammography being the most frequent
modality in lawsuits claiming malpractice against them. How can
that be, especially when mammography can have up to a thirty
percent miss rate? Because it is an extremely lucrative
undertaking, and breast cancer is a very emotional issue. Add
together a young woman in her prime diagnosed with a fast
growing breast cancer, a lawyer who convinces her that the
cancer should have been caught on a mammogram, a smooth-talking
expert witness for the plaintiff, a sympathetic jury, and you
have a million-dollar verdict. There is a medical liability
crisis in this country, one that is fast getting away from us,
and mammography is headed toward being one of its casualties.
Because of the threat of malpractice litigation, high liability
insurance costs, and low reimbursement, radiologists are
refusing to read mammograms, and radiology residents show no
interest in specializing in breast imaging.
Though breast cancer has been around for thousands of years,
mammography is fairly young. Through the years, breast imaging
has matured into an all-inclusive evaluation from a simple
clinical assessment. But mammography is still fallible - miss
rates are documented up to thirty percent. In court cases, the
jury is not always told this fact. Or if it is, it is downplayed
by the plaintiff attorney. Breast cancer is not an easy disease
to explain or diagnose, and reading a mammogram comes with its
own innate difficulties. Breast cancer is not just one disease,
but many; and the reasons for contracting it are varied. For
example, in a court case, a lay jury does not know that younger
women have denser breasts and cancer grows faster, though the
risk of getting it is less. As a woman ages, her risk increases,
her breasts are less dense, and the cancer tends to be slower
growing. As with anything else in medicine though, this is not
set in concrete. There are exceptions to rules. For instance, an
older woman can have dense breasts and her breast cancer can be
fast growing.
What else is a jury expected to understand?
Microcalcifications, asymmetry, Axillary Tail of Spence,
hindsight bias, lead-time bias, interval cancers, dot-size.
Besides that, listening to opposing expert witnesses telling
them what the standard of care should be for that particular
case. In essence, we have a lay jury deciding whether or not a
physician is guilty of medical malpractice, if his actions have
fallen below the standard of care, all the while being expected
to understand what it took the physician years to learn. In
addition, you can have the same case tried in two different
localities and have opposite verdicts. Lawyers thrive on this
type of lawsuit. But are these lawsuits deterring legitimate
negligence? Not nearly. After the case is tried, even if the
verdict is for the plaintiff, there is no remediation for the
"negligent" physician. Just an exchange of money. There is no
understanding of why something happened.
Mammography does not cure or prevent breast cancer. Though it
is the only tool we currently have available for the detection
of breast cancer at its earliest and most treatable stages, it
has limitations. Why? Because of not only the woman's history,
and the characteristics of her breast cancer, but the
radiologist's experience and perception, image interpretation,
etc. Radiologists themselves will disagree on the interpretation
of the same screening or diagnostic mammogram. Dr. Mark Klein of
Washington, DC, says that it is documented up to 67 percent of
mammographically detected breast cancers are visible in
retrospect (the concept of hindsight). However, this does not
point to incompetence; it is a limitation of the technology.
So where do we go from here? There are several tests for
diagnosing breast cancer that look promising. For example, MRI
is currently being studied. However, it is not considered a
screening test, but used in conjunction with computer-aided
diagnosis (CAD). It also does not always distinguish correctly
the difference between benign and cancerous conditions. PET scan
can identify invasive ductal carcinoma, but can miss invasive
lobular carcinoma. It also does not identify non-invasive tumors
well.
It's a money thing. And, as in many arenas, education is the
key. The public has to be informed, as well as educated. But
unless we are personally involved as a plaintiff or a physician
defendant, being human we don't usually care. It won't be an
easy task. Plaintiff trial lawyers vigorously defend this system
in the guise of protecting those who are "victims" of medical
malpractice. It's pervasive. Go to www.classaction.com. You will
see lawsuits involving the drugs Accutane, Bextra, Paxil, Vioxx,
and Zyprexa, as well as the Guidant and Medtronic
defibrillators, the Logitech mouse, nursing homes, air, soil,
and ground water contamination, body parts and defective
products. Nothing is sacred to plaintiff trial lawyers. Surveys
have resulted in half the doctors responding that they have been
named as a defendant in a medical malpractice lawsuit. Are they
all negligent?
Tort reform is part of the answer. But it also encompasses
various elements like the loss of chance doctrine, and the laws
governing them are different in every state. And trial attorneys
have a powerful lobby against tort reform, because the rewards
are great. In his recent State of the Union Address, President
Bush said doctors and nurses must be put back in charge of
American medicine, instead of those in charge now – bureaucrats,
HMOs, and lawyers. He urged Congress to pass medical liability
reform because one of the major causes of the high cost of
health care is the threat to physicians of medical malpractice
litigation. He's right, no matter what trial lawyers try to
bamboozle the public into believing. It's not just up to
Congress, though. It is every citizen's duty to be a part of
constructive political change. That is not always the case
though, because Americans tend to overlook serious matters
unless an issue emerges up close and personal.
Change is inevitable, and technology is such that someday
there will be a substitute for mammography. Radiologists may
disagree when, where, or how this will happen, but most agree
that right now mammography is still the only tool available to
diagnose breast cancer early enough to be treated, and we need
to save it from extinction.
Rene' Jackson RN BSN MS
Freelance Health Writer
Port Charlotte, FL
AHCJ Member
"The Death of Mammography"
Rene' Jackson RN BSN MS
Alberto Righi, MD
Caveat Press 2006
View the WFLA TV 8 News Interview Aired March 1, 2006:
http://multimedia.tbo.com/multimedia/MGBLK9K3AKE.html
Read the press release, reviews,
and excerpts from the book at:
www.rjacksonrn.com
Contact me at:
rene@rjacksonrn.com
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