The non-linear consultation

by Gary Wong

Non-linear Bangkok
by Gary Wong

Most doctors treat simple medical problems similarly. The presenting problem leads to a single diagnosis, which leads to a treatment; all in an uncomplicated, linear pattern.

But in primary care, things are often not so simple. For multiple problems with complex underlying issues, no two consultations are ever the same. And a surprising amount of the variation depends on the doctor.

A shorter, edited version of this article will be published at The Conversation and a longer version will be published as a book chapter in late 2014. 

The non-linear consultation

When we think of what defines a medical consultation, we quite reasonably think of the ‘presenting complaint’: the medical problem which the patient brings to the doctor. In movies, literature, common wisdom and jokes, the doctor’s role is simple and rather passive—make the diagnosis and treat it.

Sure, some doctors might be more skilled than others—think of TV’s Dr House, who brilliantly diagnoses an incredibly rare disease at the end of each episode—but even then it all boils down to the systematic application of technical knowledge. A clever computer algorithm could, in theory, work through the same deductive process of ruling out alternative possibilities to reveal the unique diagnosis. Continue reading

Posted in medical writing | Tagged , , , , | 8 Comments

Statins and sat fats: a sceptic’s look at ABC’s Catalyst programs

Saturated fats with yummy icing

by pkingDesign

My article below was published this week at both The Conversation and in Australian Doctor. I figured I’d get in third.

On the past two Thursdays, the ABC’s Catalyst program set off a chain reaction of protest from sections of the medical community, aghast that the non-medical media would question the accepted wisdom that dietary saturated fats kill people and statins save lives.

The issue dominated the medical media, and Professor Emily Banks, chair of the Advisory Committee on the Safety of Medicines, warned the ABC to pull the second program. Yet the show went on: as befits a catalyst, it remained unaffected by the reaction it had produced.

Continue reading

Posted in medical writing, Naked Doctor, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , | 8 Comments

Toes in the Byron Bay sand

Byron Bay beach

Ben Sanders, Medical Observer

This column is delivered to you from a Byron Bay beach, where I’m relaxing after attending the inaugural Boomerang Aboriginal music festival.

I point this out as a status symbol: I am hip enough to hang in Byron, cool enough to have almost met Archie Roach (I lined up for coffee with his roadie) and, in summary, have a more balanced and interesting life than you.

This is my ‘Year in Provence’ moment, where the writer chooses the best possible time and place to randomly reflect how extraordinary their life is, tempered only by hardships like lavender allergies or, in my case, long coffee lines. But did I tell you how even that almost resulted in me chilling with Archie?

In writing parlance this is a selective memoir, although medical readers are more familiar with the term ‘publication bias’. The negative findings never make it to print. Continue reading

Posted in medical writing | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

2013 cardiac news according to Shakespeare

Titanium meets soft tissue

“I’m your replacement.”
By Price, Medical Observer

In October, Medical Observer asked me to summarise 2013 research into cardiac risk factors. I discovered Shakespeare had got there first.

Hearts. Don’t you just love them?

Yet despite their adorable cardiac shape, they cop a whole lot of negative medical press. Red clots, black infarcts and yellow fatty deposits. Medical Observer’s colour photos serve us a weekly palette of coronary fragility.

We all know the big CV risks factors, but recent research has focused on numerous, minor associations. Even Shakespeare had an inkling we would eventually find plenty of quirky factors, when he wrote ‘This heart shall break into a hundred thousand flaws.’

In fact, none better than the English bard to lead us through 2013’s research into cardiac risk factors. Continue reading

Posted in medical writing | Tagged , , , , | 3 Comments

Blogging for the already-medically-educated

Blogging

Justin reading an ancient book on blogging

The first part of the RACGP GP13 workshop in Darwin looked at tweeting for doctors and other health professionals.

For those with attention spans longer than 140 characters, let’s have a look at blogging.

Or, in twitter lingo:

#blog4docs

The journalistic principals involve Five Ws and an H, so let’s divide up this wwwwwhorkshop thus:

Continue reading

Posted in medical writing, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Tweet your way to a medical education

This workshop aims to encourage health professionals such as GPs to begin using social media as an educational tool. It was originally run at GP13, the RACGP Annual Scientific Convention in Darwin, Oct 2013.

The workshop has been written by:

Justin Coleman twitter

Dr Justin Coleman and

Tim Senior twitter

Dr Tim Senior.
Screenshots captured using http://kwout.com/

We are happy for others to share it.      Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported License.

Ten-Step Program*

(* To reverse Twitter addiction, see next month’s 12-step program)

Continue reading

Posted in medical writing | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments

Factual facts vs Dad jokes

Dr Karl Kruszelnicki

Ben Sanders, Medical Observer

My exciting tale of seeing @DoctorKarl, a real, live science geek, in my home town’s writers festival was first published here in Medical Observer, Oct 2013.

This morning I took two of my sons to see Dr Karl Kruszelnicki at the Brisbane Writers Festival. He was even louder and more brilliant than his orange shirt, and my kids couldn’t get enough of him.

My younger one asked him whether, if you stand on accurate scales and breathe in, your weight changes. He asked me the same question last week, and Dr Karl’s answer exactly matched my own, although mine was done while yelling at him (my son, not Karl) to get ready for school, which doubles the degree of difficulty. Everyone clapped Karl’s answer, whereas mine just made me late for work. Continue reading

Posted in writing | Tagged , , , | 6 Comments

Over-testing and overdiagnosis: the podcast

BroomeYou have read my name. You have glanced at my photo. But now you have the chance to hear my voice, you lucky thing.

Dr Casey Parker is a doctor based in Broome, in Australia’s deserted remote north west corner, but he is brilliant at connecting, via internet, with places where people actually live. He runs the site Broome Docs.

Casey interviewed me this week about my thoughts on over-testing and overdiagnosis. The podcast is found here.

 

Posted in Naked Doctor | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Pharma payments to doctors should be transparent

Sate records, NSW

NSW Doctor in the good old days

Back in the good old days, your good doctor could pop any commission from anybody into his left  pantaloons pocket, and nobody would question it.

These days, the public quite reasonably expects higher standards of accountability. Some would argue that doctors should never accept money or payments-in-kind from pharmaceutical companies, because this would compromise their role in directing patient’s and taxpayer’s money towards one particular medicine over another.

I believe that some interaction is a matter of choice for the doctor, but I also believe that any payment should not be allowed to remain hidden. Hence, I joined the Medicines Australia Transparency Working Group, whose role was to produce a method for making such payments transparent.

Medicines Australia, which represents the pharmaceutical industry, was tasked by the ACCC to produce a workable system for publishing a register (pdf) of pharma payments to Australian doctors.

I was asked by the RACGP to write their official response to the proposed system. The RACGP endorsed my response and put it on their website, and you can also read some excerpts on this blog.

My stance has already earned me the ire in the medical media of some doctors, a few of whom are vitriolic in their opposition Continue reading

Posted in medical writing | Tagged , , | 3 Comments

Election mode

Ben Sanders

Ben Sanders, Medical Observer

For some reason, elections are on my mind.

I have a fascination with our 24-hour political fascination. The concept that a single campaign interview gaffe might actually change who we ask to rule our land for the next three years. What sort of voter would switch sides based on the writhings of a TV debate polling worm?

Not me. I’m a man of conviction. Indeed, a similar descriptor was used of my forebears when the judge at the Old Bailey first sent them here. Continue reading

Posted in writing | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment