Bloomberg Opinion Profile picture
Sep 19, 2020 13 tweets 8 min read Read on X
In yet another massive public health failure in the U.S., we still have no clear messaging about the relative risks and benefits of going to the doctor trib.al/gUmlqzX
Medical professionals have taken great care to keep patients safe — giving everyone a mask, for example, and using temperature checks at the door.

But for some patients, telemedicine is still a better option trib.al/gUmlqzX
That’s not because the office visit is particularly dangerous, but because telemedicine was a good option even before the pandemic started.

For many kinds of visits, it saves everyone time trib.al/gUmlqzX
Still, there are screenings and surgeries and other kinds of exams that have to be done in person. Is it worth the risk to go?

It depends. Some medical procedures are lifesaving or alleviate suffering, and others are unnecessary — or even harmful trib.al/gUmlqzX
In a way the pandemic has been a natural experiment, since almost all routine health care in New York City was put on hold for several months in the spring.

After the hiatus, cardiologist @sjauhar said patients looked far healthier than he expected trib.al/gUmlqzX
Not all medical care is unnecessary, and @sjauhar emphasized that fear of the pandemic may have indirectly caused deaths because people didn’t seek medical care.

But doctors need to get serious about overtreatment trib.al/gUmlqzX
Treatment varies by geography in a way that can’t possibly reflect differences in disease incidence.

In Minnesota, there’s a 7-10-fold difference in the number prostatectomies by region — with no reason to suspect prostate cancer rates vary that much trib.al/gUmlqzX
Many diagnostics are ambiguous.

Patients may prefer to be treated even if there’s only a small chance they have a dangerous condition. Even when compelling evidence shows a treatment isn’t saving people, it can be hard to give it up trib.al/gUmlqzX
According to Paul Offit, an infectious disease doctor, these treatments are overused to the point of causing harm:

♥️Heart stents
💊Antibiotics
🏥Some cancer screenings trib.al/gUmlqzX
Thousands of people have undergone unnecessary surgery, radiation or chemotherapy for suspected breast or thyroid cancers that never would have killed them.

Not all slow-growing tumors should be considered cancerous trib.al/gUmlqzX
The good news is that for things like a routine check-up, many people may be served just fine by getting blood work done and then having a teleconference with the doctor trib.al/gUmlqzX
The decision to get in-person care is complicated. It may depend on:

1. Your risk factors for getting severe Covid-19
2. The risk factors of people you live with
3. The risks of skipping a test or treatment
4. The infection rate in your region trib.al/gUmlqzX
The risk of getting Covid-19 from your doctor looks to be low.

Nobody with a serious medical condition should suffer or die from staying home too long trib.al/gUmlqzX

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More from @opinion

Apr 2
Could Trump’s tariffs raise $700 billion a year?

We did the math 🧵 Image
$700 billion is about nine times current US customs revenue, and 2.4% of the most recent estimate of US GDP.

Tariff revenue hasn’t surpassed 2% of GDP since the early 1870s, and hasn’t surpassed it on a sustained basis since the 1820s and 1830s Image
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Look at the data 🧵
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But even with these improvements, notes typically appear after a post’s most viral stage of diffusion (after the damage is already done) Image
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But from X’s data, you can see that most misleading posts go unaddressed: Image
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📉 VCs causing the downfall of SVB
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If venture capitalists had stayed calm, would #SVB be OK today?

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Mar 15, 2023
Credit Suisse is in crisis.

What went wrong? So, so much.

🧵 Let’s take a look
We *just* learned that #SVB’s downfall was announcing it was raising equity without having buyers lined up, says @matt_levine.

So why would Credit Suisse’s biggest shareholder announce they would “absolutely not” put more money into the embattled bank? trib.al/aS9oy3I Image
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If health is wealth, America is dirt-poor.

The health-care crisis in the US isn’t just a tragedy for individuals. It makes it harder for the country to be productive and secure.

🧵 Let’s look at the data
The most vivid sign of the health crisis is falling life expectancy, says @adwooldridge bloomberg.com/opinion/articl…
There’s perhaps no greater metaphor for this crisis than the unhealthy discourse around Ozempic, writes @JKarl26.

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Feb 28, 2023
📊 3 charts you need to see 📊

💰 Elon Musk is back on top
🇨🇳 Don’t panic over China’s “farm invasion”
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Subscribe to Bloomberg Opinion Today for more trib.al/BNqIxPf
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China doesn’t own nearly enough land to cause a food crisis bloomberg.com/opinion/articl…
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