Lotus East-West Medical Center - Santa Monica CA

Brendan Armm, DAOM, LAc

2104 Wilshire Blvd Santa Monica, CA 90403 phone: (310) 828-8258
Friday, July 03, 2009
Here's an article Dr. Brendan Armm was mentioned in and photographed for while treating a patient on the Acute Rehabilitation Unit at Good Samaritan Hospital in downtown Los Angeles, for a publication called The American Acupuncturist -- AAOM’s Official Publication for Practitioners of Oriental medicine - News Editions, www.aaom.org, Winter 2006, Vol 38. The article is written by Dr. Armm’s then supervisor in the hospital, Dr. Jeannette Painovich, DAOM, LAc, MA, and it is titled “Acupuncture Program Sets Smooth Sail in Unchartered Territory”.

“As you can see, acupuncture finds a greater place in hospitals in the United States. I recall how well the eastern and western medicines integrated in Hospitals in Beijing, Shanghai and Nanjing, China in 2005. Hope you enjoy this important article”. - Dr. Brendan Armm

The American Acupuncturist

AAOM’s Official Publication for Practitioners of Oriental medicine - News Edition

Winter 2006, Vol 38

Acupuncture Program Sets Smooth Sail in Unchartered Territory

By Jeannette Painovich, DAOM, LAc, MA

September 1, 2006 marked the two–year anniversary of the acupuncture fellowship program at Good Samaritan Hospital, Los Angeles, CA. Through this program doctoral students from Emperor’s College of Traditional Oriental Medicine (ECTOM) have been treating patients on the acute rehabilitation unit and, at times, in the emergency department. This clinical externship was instituted in unchartered territory; there was mild trepidation intermixed with many high hopes that the initial objectives of the program would be met.

The first goal of the program was to assimilate acupuncturists into the treatment teams in the both the acute rehabilitation unit and emergency department. Achieving the first objective would then afford the next purpose, which was to provide the doctoral students an opportunity to treat a unique patient population from which they could truly grow as clinicians. The third and fourth goals were to educate the patients and Western medical staff on the benefits of Traditional Oriental Medicine (TOM) and, through this program, increase the awareness of TOM to the general population as a whole. The last goal, which should inherently be present whenever we employ TOM, was to enhance treatment outcomes and increase patient satisfaction as well as their overall quality of life.

Assimilating into the acute rehabilitation unit has been and continues to be a smooth process. The acupuncturists on the floor are seen as an important modality in the patients’ recoveries and have been successfully integrated within the unit’s treatment team approach. There have even been times when the acupuncturists and physical therapists have simultaneously treated patients. When asked to comment on her current experience at Good Samaritan Hospital, Asha Randall, a doctoral candidate stated that, “First of all, I believe the interaction between the Western medical personnel and DAOM candidates has been very encouraging and positive. They have welcomed us into their midst and are respectful of what we do. There is an ongoing dialogue between the hospital staff and ‘us’...as we spread the word and they see the results.”

The emergency department, while theoretically a perfect setting for acupuncture intervention, had some inherent procedural problems. Legally, an acupuncture treatment cannot commence until it is ordered by the ER physician. Unfortunately, patients who could readily have been helped with acupuncture—such as those presenting with musculoskeletal, migraine, or gastrointestinal complaints—would at times not be seen for hours because patients are attended to by the physician in order of their emergent nature. Due to this extended wait for treatment, it was felt that the students would be better served by treatment on the acute rehabilitation unit where the patients are in abundance and readily available. However, if the doctoral student population increases and issues of transition time can be remedied, treating in the ER will be reinstituted. The ER medical staff is seemingly anxious for our return after being readily impressed by the doctoral students’ abilities to reduce the pain of a dislocated ankle with acupuncture, as well as wake up in ten minutes a patient who had been in a drug induced stupor for the previous twelve hours.

Treating conditions rarely seen in the outpatient setting, as well as treating the acute onset of ill health, has provided the doctoral students with unique clinical training. They consistently have treated conditions such as stroke sequelae, post-operative total hip and knee replacements, and post-surgical back pain, as well as more unique conditions, such as West Nile virus, rhabdomyolysis, Guillien-Barre syndrome, amputation–related pain, normal pressure hydrocephaly, and paraplegia. Because patients on the acute rehabilitation unit are usually admitted for two to three weeks, the students have witnessed both the immediate and culmination effects of their treatment as well as the effect of the whole team approach to healthcare. As Todd Gibson, a current DAOM acupuncture fellow, stated, “It’s nice to work on more serious cases such as those found in the hospital setting. I enjoy watching the patient’s progress. I feel like I’m regaining a lot of the passion I had eight or nine years ago.” Don Buck, a recent graduate from the charter ECTOM doctoral cohort stated that, “The unique patient population I treated while at Good Samaritan Hospital definitely enhanced my skills as a clinician as well as allowed me to recognize the how effective acupuncture is in the acute care setting.”

Educating both the patients and medical staff alike to the benefits of acupuncture and Oriental medicine is strongly stressed in this program for two reasons. Having a presence in the Western medical setting provides an exceptional opportunity to educate the public about TOM, and as a profession we must take advantage of this captive audience. The other benefit of stressing education in this setting is that it forces the students to become proficient in understanding and translating Western medical terminology into a TOM language that laypeople and the biomedical world can understand. Continuous communication in this fashion infuses the students with a level of confidence that they will be able to employ throughout their career.

When instituting a program such as this, the long–term goal was to increase the visibility of acupuncture and TOM to both the hospital staff and the general population.

After slow but steady progress, this began to happen. Due to the success of the program, the hospital administration has dedicated resources to help obtain funding to increase acupuncture coverage in the hospital so that a two–year pilot study can be conducted. It is the hospital’s hope that between an increase in program marketing and the prestige of a funded research study, word of this leading–edge acupuncture program at Good Samaritan Hospital will be spread to the general population and the medical world alike.

Increased patient satisfaction attributed to their acupuncture experience was one of the main reasons the hospital administration and staff took notice of this program. Given today’s increase in medical expenditures, as well as a growing trend in patient dissatisfaction with the current state of healthcare services, our system is in need of interventions that can positively impact patient care. By in large, the patients treated with acupuncture reported positive experiences and truly felt that acupuncture enhanced their recovery. Don Buck also stated when reflecting on his Good Samaritan experience that, “one of the best parts of the program was seeing the patient’s eyes light up when they would get immediate pain relief or more function in a limb after a treatment.”

Jorge Minor MD, medical director of the acute rehabilitation unit, summed up the program’s success: “Patients are pleased with the addition of acupuncture as a treatment modality in the menu course of therapies for such conditions as stroke, trauma and pain management. More physicians are becoming aware of our services and are quite interested in the studies we hope to conduct in the near future. Our long term goals for the program include trying to secure an NIH [National Institutes of Health] grant with which to conduct research on acupuncture in the inpatient setting.”

Ideally our entire profession, along with the students, educational institution, and biomedical world, will benefit from the learning experience that the first two years of this program have provided. This doctoral fellowship has successfully demonstrated that a collective presence in the hospital setting can provide a powerful avenue for increasing visibility of the profession as well as positively impacting patient care. It is my hope that this program will provoke similar externships to be instituted around the country. As we work together to integrate into more hospitals or similar healthcare settings, the value of our medicine will be exponentially realized, benefiting not only direct patient care but also the well-being of the healthcare system as a whole.

Any inquiries about this article can be directed to Dr. Jeannette Painovich at Painovich@aol.com. I am happy to announce that due to the success of the fellowship program, Good Samaritan Hospital has just been awarded a $220,000 grant to study the benefits of using acupuncture in the hospital setting. This two year study, which will be done in conjunction with Emperor’s College of Traditional Chinese Medicine, will examine how the use acupuncture can impact health outcomes and patient satisfaction as well as healthcare resource use and cost savings. This study will also begin the process of determining the feasibility and best use of acupuncture as an adjunctive therapy in the hospital setting. You can find more articles detailing this exciting new research in following issues of the American Acupuncturist.

Dr. Brendan Armm practices in Santa Monica, Calif., and teaches Oriental medicine and meditation at Emperor’s College of Traditional Oriental Medicine. He can be reached at www.lotusew.com or armm@lotusew.com.
Friday, July 03, 2009
Here's an article Dr. Brendan Armm wrote a few years ago for his Doctorate in Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine, titled “Opening the Door to Effective Pain Management for Millions of Americans: Acupuncture from a Neuro-Physiological Perspective”.

“Frequently, I have patients coming in with various pain conditions... back pain, neck pain, knee pain, shoulder pain, ankle pain, etc. Many of these people are interested to know how acupuncture works from a western perspective. In essence, inserting acupuncture pins into the body at particular locations sends nerve impulses up to brain to release certain chemicals into the body that have a desired analgesic effect. For example, releasing opiates in the brain can be effective for treating pain. You are welcome to read the essay below for more detail”. - Dr. Brendan Armm

Opening the Door to Effective Pain Management for Millions of Americans:
Acupuncture from a Neuro-Physiological Perspective

by Brendan Armm, DAOM, LAc

One in four U.S. adults has complained of suffering a day-long bout of pain in the past month, and one in ten declared the pain had lasted over a year, according to the U.S. government’s annual, comprehensive report on Americans’ health: Health, United States, 2006, released by the National Center for Health Statistics of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).1 Viewing acupuncture from a neuro-physiological standpoint allows Western scientists to determine how this holistic medicine works so well.

Various theories have been posited on the etiology of pain in both Western and Eastern medicine.

According to pain-gate control theory, the swift speed of A-fibers from insertion of cutaneous needles impacts the brain analgesically serving to block muscular pain originating from the slower C-fibers. Thus, the sensation of cutaneous acupuncture blocks muscular pain.

Puncturing the skin introduces foreign bodies subcutaneously. The stimulus causes an immune response in various locations which accounts for the lymphatic system’s role in pain management.

Hilton’s Law states that stimulating skin nerves at joints causes affects deeper in the joint itself. This theory applies to acupuncture points. Placing needles at or around pain points serves to transmit nerve impulses deep beneath the skin giving a therapeutic effect, including alleviating pain and disease.

According to Chinese medical theory, acupuncture points were discovered by comparing given pathology to referred “ashi” or sore points. Treating referred points (local and distal) served to alleviate disease.

The well-known opioid theory for pain has been thoroughly explored in acupuncture by Miltiades Karavis, MD in Athens, Greece. Dr. Karavis specializes in treating pain using conventional biomedical treatment in conjunction with acupuncture. He notes, “We can explain the action of acupuncture in acute and chronic pain syndromes, in addiction, and in psychiatric disease through the role of central neurotransmitters and the modulatory systems that are activated by acupoints:  opioid, non-opioid and central sympathetic inhibitory mechanisms.”2

Dr. Karavis states in The Neurophysiology of Acupuncture: a Viewpoint, “Acupuncture is a specialized sensory stimulation that is analyzed through sensory neural pathways. Therefore to understand its action we have to analyze the anatomy, physiology and pharmacology of the nervous system, aided with knowledge of neuroendocrinology and the chemoarchitecture of the brain.”2

According to Deke Kendall, OMD, PhD, LAc, in his book, Dao of Chinese Medicine, needling a therapeutic location creates a beneficial change via the nervous and vasculature systems with consistent and effective results. Dr. Kendall further notes, “The practitioner is in complete control of the treatment for desired effect.”3  He states that acupuncture is evidence-based medicine. These specific nodes (acupuncture points) are slightly warmer than non-nodal sites, are slightly depressed into the skin, and have a lower electrical conductivity. He refers to these points as neurovascular nodes because of the dependency on the nervous system and vasculature.

Research has provided evidence for acupuncture’s efficacy in pain relief in relation to the Central Nervous System (periaqueductal gray, thalamus, and pituitary gland) and the Cardiovascular System (nitrous oxide, vessel control, and blood pressure). Terry Oleson, PhD, researching acupuncture and neurology, explains that acupuncture alters the sense of touch thereby altering feeling by its effect on “somatosensory sympathetic, or somatovisceral reflexes, as well as improved circulation”4 -- yielding pain management. He comments, “if [acupuncture] is not real, then it should not affect the nervous system, excite NTS nucleus to inhibit sympathetic tone, release endorphins, or work with periaqueductal gray – all of which acupuncture does play a role.”4

In Dr. Oleson’s research with periaqueductal gray in the midbrain, it was observed that when a microcurrent excites this part of the brain, animals feel no pain. In the “Tail Flick Test,” rodents’ tails were exposed to a heat lamp. With excitation of their midbrains, the rats did not move their tails off the lamp. More latency is seen with an increase of morphine and with stimulus of periaqueductal gray. This analgesic effect is also seen when using acupuncture. If periaqueductal gray is destroyed, neither acupuncture nor morphine works, suggesting acupuncture uses an opiate system in the brain that needs to sense pain before the pain can be turned off.

Thus, needles inserted into the body activate neural pathways locally, and send impulses to the spinal cord which ascend to the contralateral side of the brain. The signal goes to the centromedian nucleus of the thalamus (for general pain), and into the preoptic area into the pituitary gland (where endorphins are secreted into the general bloodstream). The signal for analgesia travels back down the spinal cord to specific locations having prescribed somatovisceral therapeutic effects.

Other medical practitioners are demystifying acupuncture to better comprehend its potent pain relief. Sheng-Xing Ma, MD, PhD, associate professor at UCLA, David Geffen School of Medicine, summarizes “acupuncture point, ‘St 36’, decreases heart blood pressure and heart rate.”5 He notes “L-arginine derived NO [nitric oxide] in the gracile nucleus and mNTS [medial portion nucleus tractus solitarius] mediates CV reflex responses to electro-stimulation at acupuncture point, ‘St 36’.”5 He describes the dorsal-medulla-thalamic tract to be the important pathway for acupuncture signals. Up-regulation of nNOS-NO [neuronal NO synthase] in the pathways mediates the non-opioid effects of electro-stimulation at acupuncture point, ‘St 36’.6

Dr. Ma’s research shows NO is generated from the skin surface with a high level existence at acupuncture points and possibly at meridians lines. Thus, Dr. Ma concludes NO modifies skin electricity which creates low resistance characteristics for acupuncture points, raises the conductance, increases signal flow and the therapeutic effect.

Peng Li, MD, LAc, staff member at Susan Samueli Center of Integrative Medicine, School of Medicine, UC Irvine, in researching pain control via obtaining “de qi” stated “the effects of acupuncture depend on acupoints, stimulation parameters, and the situation of patients. The effects of acupuncture and ’de qi’ (meaning the patient feels sensation upon needle insertion) working via the central nervous system and the release of neurotransmitters serve to alleviate pain.”7

Acupuncture Today published an article titled, CDC Report: Americans in Pain. The CDC reported remarkable findings in its 2006 National Health Interview release about pain in American patients that raised questions regarding quality of life versus quantity of life.

Investigating life quality, this author was particularly curious to learn what U.S. adults are doing for their pain. The report observed a yardstick through the use of prescription narcotics, with eye-opening findings. "Between 1988-1994 and 1999-2002, the age-adjusted percentage of women reporting narcotic drug use in the month prior to interview increased by almost one-half, from 3.6% to 5.3% . . . rose by almost 75% among women 45-65 years of age, to 5.7%; and by more than 50% among women 65 years and over, to 6.8%.”8

And what are people using pain medication mostly for?

The report tracked low back pain, migraine/severe headache, neck pain, and facial ache in the jaws. For adults 18 years and older, low back pain was the most frequently cited, the most common cause of job-related disability, and a leading contributor to reduced productivity. Also noted was that women across the board reported experiencing low back pain more often than men.

Severe headache/migraine was the second most chronic pain type. “In 2004, 15% of adults reported . . . severe headache and neck pain. Adults 18 to 44 years of age reported migraine/severe headache pain almost three times as frequently as adults 65 years and older.”9 Women in their reproductive years are particularly prone to experiencing severe headaches. Also revealed in the report was the predictable finding that severe joint pain increases with age, with knee joint pain most common, followed by pain in the shoulder, fingers and hips.

In the article titled, CDC Report:  Americans in Pain, it was stated:

The impact of pain, particularly chronic pain, is far-reaching. . . . In fact, pain is such a prominent health care issue that the 106th U.S. Congress recently passed Title VI, Sec. 1603, of H.R. 3244, declaring the period between Jan. 1, 2001 and Dec. 31, 2010 the ’Decade of Pain Control and Research.’9

As Americans are living longer, frustration with conventional approaches to pain management is evident. In fact, the CDC report speculates that pain among older adults often goes unreported due to many simply giving up, ’and skepticism about the beneficial effects of potential treatments.’ With so many Americans in pain and dissatisfied with conventional treatment options, acupuncture and other alternative health professions may have a real opportunity to take the lead in a new era of pain management.9

Acupuncture Today’s Associate Editor, Julie Engebretson, notes “While the overall health of the nation seems to be improving or holding steady in many areas, results from the National Health Interview survey highlights the need for appropriate management of one particular condition: pain.”9

It is the opinion of the author, as more research focuses on and documents acupuncture’s effectiveness, Western understanding and acceptance of this ancient art will become widespread. Eastern practitioners functioning alongside their Western medical counterparts will provide the general public with more access to Chinese medicine in conventional healthcare settings -- hospitals, community clinics, and medical offices.

In order for this step to happen, research needs to prove the cost effectiveness of this ancient medical system. One example might be studies designed to show how acupuncture reduces the length of hospital visits which would be well received by insurance companies responsible for paying for exorbitant inpatient care, and by patients, who would prefer to recuperate in the comfort of their own homes.

More research into the efficacy of acupuncture and Chinese medicine is critical for acceptance by U.S. mainstream insurance companies. With billions of dollars annually paid out-of-pocket by Americans for alternative healthcare, this creates a market to modify the current arrangement for insurance-covered modalities.

Two other worthy research subjects include exploring what medical discipline excels in treating specific types of pain, and when is it best to use one discipline over the other. When looking to build something strong and long-lasting, it is wise to begin by examining all of the parts to decide what goes where and in what order.

In conclusion, Eastern and Western medicines have their strengths and weaknesses. When medical practitioners are well educated in both systems, the result can only be positive. Acquiring a neuro-physiological understanding of the mechanics of acupuncture plus comprehension of the nature and etiology of pain through scientific studies and clinical trials in China and elsewhere, a greater perception and acceptance of acupuncture’s effectiveness could be fostered, thereby opening the door to providing millions of Americans with effective pain relief.

References:
1.CDC National Center for Health Statistics. “New Report Finds Pain Affects Millions of Americans.” CDC National Center for Health Statistics Press. 15 November 2006.  http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/pressroom/06facts/hus06.htm.
2.Karavis, MD, Miltiades. “The Neurophysiology of Acupuncture: a Viewpoint.” Acupuncture in Medicine, Vol 15, No 1., p. 33. May, 1997. www.acupunctureinmedicine.org.uk/servearticle.php?artid=300.
3.Kendall, LAc, Deke. Dao of Chinese Medicine: Understanding an Ancient Healing Art. New York: Oxford University Press, 2002.
4.Oleson, Terry. Auriculotherapy Manual: Chinese and Western Systems of Ear Acupuncture. Health Care Alternatives; 2nd ed. 1996.
5.Chen S, Ma SX: Nitric oxide on acupuncture (ST 36)-induced depressor response in the gracile nucleus.  J Neurophysiol. 2003; 90: 780-785.
6.Ma SX, Ma J, Moise G, Li XY: Responses of Neuronal Nitric Oxide Synthase Expression in the Brainstem to Electroacupuncture Zusanli (ST 36) in Rats.  Brain Res 2005; 10:70-77.
7.Li, MD, LAc, Peng. “Biological Basis of Acupuncture.” A transcription from lecture notes. Emperor’s College of Traditional Oriental Medicine, Doctorate of Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine, Santa Monica, California, 20 May  2006.
8.See note 1 above.
9.Engebretson, Julie. “CDC Report: Americans in Pain.” Acupuncture Today, Vol. 08, Issue 01. January 2007.

Brendan Armm, DAOM, LAc is a board-certified Acupuncturist and Chinese Medicinal Herbalist in the state of California and nationally. Dr. Armm completed his clinical Doctorate in Orthopedics, Pain Management and Integrative Medicine at Emperor’s College of Traditional Oriental Medicine in Santa Monica, California. Originally from Connecticut, Dr. Armm has been following in the medical footsteps of his elder family members. In addition to his private practice in Santa Monica, Dr. Armm completed an Advanced Acupuncture Fellowship at Good Samaritan Hospital in Los Angeles; treated at Emperor’s Doctorate level Pain Management Clinic; is a faculty member at Emperor’s, teaching Oriental Medicine and Meditation; and served as Doctorate Student Representative to Emperor’s Board of Directors. Dr. Armm is a member of The American Association of Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine (AAAOM), Acupuncture and Integrated Medicine Specialists (AIMS), and California State Oriental Medical Association (CSOMA). He writes for Acupuncture Today and is politically active in advancing Oriental medicine. Dr. Armm’s passion extends to healing modalities from around the world, including Meditation, Yoga, Nutrition, Ayurvedic and Tibetan Medicines, Tui-na Massage, Homeopathics, Aromatherapy, Flower Essences, and Sound Therapy. Dr. Armm lives in Santa Monica and frequently travels within the United States and to India, Nepal, China, and Tibet to participate in silent meditation retreats. Dr. Armm has recorded several guided meditation albums including a 5 CD set of meditation practices titled “Introduction to Meditation.” For more information, please visit www.lotusew.com or armm@lotusew.com.


Friday, July 03, 2009
Here's an article noting ‘evidence is mounting that diet and lifestyle are the best cures for our worst afflictions,’ published in The Wall Street Journal on January 9, 2009, written by Deepak Chopra, Dean Ornish, Rustum Roy and Andrew Weil.

For your educational purpose, take a look (full article listed below):
http://online.wsj.com/article_email/SB123146318996466585-lMyQjAxMDI5MzAxOTQwNjkzWj.html#printMode

“As we usher in a new year and a new president, it seems that we are also looking for a new approach to our health.  This article in the Wall Street Journal reflects the trend towards alternative healthcare in the 21st century”. - Won mi Kim, LAc

'Alternative' Medicine Is Mainstream
The evidence is mounting that diet and lifestyle are the best cures for our worst afflictions.

The Wall Street Journal, wsj.com
January 9, 2009

By DEEPAK CHOPRA, DEAN ORNISH, RUSTUM ROY and ANDREW WEIL

In mid-February, the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences and the Bravewell Collaborative are convening a "Summit on Integrative Medicine and the Health of the Public." This is a watershed in the evolution of integrative medicine, a holistic approach to health care that uses the best of conventional and alternative therapies such as meditation, yoga, acupuncture and herbal remedies. Many of these therapies are now scientifically documented to be not only medically effective but also cost effective.

President-elect Barack Obama and former Sen. Tom Daschle (the nominee for Secretary of Health and Human Services) understand that if we want to make affordable health care available to the 45 million Americans who do not have health insurance, then we need to address the fundamental causes of health and illness, and provide incentives for healthy ways of living rather than reimbursing only drugs and surgery.

Heart disease, diabetes, prostate cancer, breast cancer and obesity account for 75% of health-care costs, and yet these are largely preventable and even reversible by changing diet and lifestyle. As Mr. Obama states in his health plan, unveiled during his campaign: "This nation is facing a true epidemic of chronic disease. An increasing number of Americans are suffering and dying needlessly from diseases such as obesity, diabetes, heart disease, asthma and HIV/AIDS, all of which can be delayed in onset if not prevented entirely."

The latest scientific studies show that our bodies have a remarkable capacity to begin healing, and much more quickly than we had once realized, if we address the lifestyle factors that often cause these chronic diseases. These studies show that integrative medicine can make a powerful difference in our health and well-being, how quickly these changes may occur, and how dynamic these mechanisms can be.

Many people tend to think of breakthroughs in medicine as a new drug, laser or high-tech surgical procedure. They often have a hard time believing that the simple choices that we make in our lifestyle -- what we eat, how we respond to stress, whether or not we smoke cigarettes, how much exercise we get, and the quality of our relationships and social support -- can be as powerful as drugs and surgery. But they often are. And in many instances, they're even more powerful.

These studies often used high-tech, state-of-the-art measures to prove the power of simple, low-tech, and low-cost interventions. Integrative medicine approaches such as plant-based diets, yoga, meditation and psychosocial support may stop or even reverse the progression of coronary heart disease, diabetes, hypertension, prostate cancer, obesity, hypercholesterolemia and other chronic conditions.

A recent study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences found that these approaches may even change gene expression in hundreds of genes in only a few months. Genes associated with cancer, heart disease and inflammation were downregulated or "turned off" whereas protective genes were upregulated or "turned on." A study published in The Lancet Oncology reported that these changes increase telomerase, the enzyme that lengthens telomeres, the ends of our chromosomes that control how long we live. Even drugs have not been shown to do this.

Our "health-care system" is primarily a disease-care system. Last year, $2.1 trillion was spent in the U.S. on medical care, or 16.5% of the gross national product. Of these trillions, 95 cents of every dollar was spent to treat disease after it had already occurred. At least 75% of these costs were spent on treating chronic diseases, such as heart disease and diabetes, that are preventable or even reversible.

The choices are especially clear in cardiology. In 2006, for example, according to data provided by the American Heart Association, 1.3 million coronary angioplasty procedures were performed at an average cost of $48,399 each, or more than $60 billion; and 448,000 coronary bypass operations were performed at a cost of $99,743 each, or more than $44 billion. In other words, Americans spent more than $100 billion in 2006 for these two procedures alone.

Despite these costs, a randomized controlled trial published in April 2007 in The New England Journal of Medicine found that angioplasties and stents do not prolong life or even prevent heart attacks in stable patients (i.e., 95% of those who receive them). Coronary bypass surgery prolongs life in less than 3% of patients who receive it. So, Medicare and other insurers and individuals pay billions for surgical procedures like angioplasty and bypass surgery that are usually dangerous, invasive, expensive and largely ineffective. Yet they pay very little -- if any money at all -- for integrative medicine approaches that have been proven to reverse and prevent most chronic diseases that account for at least 75% of health-care costs. The INTERHEART study, published in September 2004 in The Lancet, followed 30,000 men and women on six continents and found that changing lifestyle could prevent at least 90% of all heart disease.

That bears repeating: The disease that accounts for more premature deaths and costs Americans more than any other illness is almost completely preventable simply by changing diet and lifestyle. And the same lifestyle changes that can prevent or even reverse heart disease also help prevent or reverse many other chronic diseases as well. Chronic pain is one of the major sources of worker's compensation claims costs, yet studies show that it is often susceptible to acupuncture and Qi Gong. Herbs usually have far fewer side effects than pharmaceuticals.

Joy, pleasure and freedom are sustainable, deprivation and austerity are not. When you eat a healthier diet, quit smoking, exercise, meditate and have more love in your life, then your brain receives more blood and oxygen, so you think more clearly, have more energy, need less sleep. Your brain may grow so many new neurons that it could get measurably bigger in only a few months. Your face gets more blood flow, so your skin glows more and wrinkles less. Your heart gets more blood flow, so you have more stamina and can even begin to reverse heart disease. Your sexual organs receive more blood flow, so you may become more potent -- similar to the way that circulation-increasing drugs like Viagra work. For many people, these are choices worth making -- not just to live longer, but also to live better.

It's time to move past the debate of alternative medicine versus traditional medicine, and to focus on what works, what doesn't, for whom, and under which circumstances. It will take serious government funding to find out, but these findings may help reduce costs and increase health.

Integrative medicine approaches bring together those in red states and blue states, liberals and conservatives, Democrats and Republicans, because these are human issues. They are both medically effective and, important in our current economic climate, cost effective. These approaches emphasize both personal responsibility and the opportunity to make affordable, quality health care available to those who most need it. Mr. Obama should make them an integral part of his health plan as soon as possible.

Dr. Chopra, the author of more than 50 books on the mind, body and spirit, is guest faculty at Beth Israel Hospital/Harvard Medical School. Dr. Ornish is clinical professor of medicine at the University of California, San Francisco. Mr. Roy is professor emeritus of materials science at Pennsylvania State University. Dr. Weil is director of the University of Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine.

Friday, July 03, 2009
“We see many patients coming in for help with fertility. I hope you find this article from the Los Angeles Times useful. In our clinical experience, Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine has been very helpful for many underlying conditions relating to issues with reproduction”. - Dr. Brendan Armm

Acupuncture for fertility: Doctors say, ‘Why not?’

Los Angeles Times  |  Health
July 4, 2005

By ELENA CONIS

Jackie Apuzzo is 16 weeks pregnant -- something she was beginning to think would never happen.

Following nine years of unsuccessful efforts to have a baby, including failed in vitro fertilization, a miscarriage and a diagnosis of endometriosis, the 37-year-old social worker finally visited an acupuncturist on the advice of a friend. After two months of acupuncture treatments and a regimen of Chinese herbs, she became pregnant.

"I was a little apprehensive about the needles at first," said Apuzzo. But in April, Apuzzo's acupuncturist in Santa Monica looked at her tongue, checked her pulse and declared the Long Beach resident pregnant. Apuzzo later confirmed the diagnosis with a blood test.

As more women than ever delay having children until their 30s and 40s, infertility is a growing challenge in the U.S. An estimated 3 million couples are unable to conceive after a year of trying, according to the American Society for Reproductive Medicine. Fertility clinics have done a brisk business in recent years, but now doctors say that a growing number of women who have been unable to get pregnant through conventional medical treatments are seeking out alternatives such as acupuncture. Demand for the traditional Chinese method is so great that an increasing number of fertility doctors now are collaborating with acupuncturists, with some physicians adding acupuncturists to their staff, according to doctors and experts in the field.

Although many acupuncturists and doctors of oriental medicine swear by the treatment -- and have relied on it as an infertility remedy for years -- the mainstream medical community remains divided on acupuncture's efficacy. Some doctors say more research is needed to demonstrate acupuncture's effectiveness, and others believe it's irresponsible to recommend the treatment based on the existing scientific evidence.

Most fertility specialists trace the current popularity of acupuncture treatment to a German study published in 2002 in the journal Fertility and Sterility. The study, led by Dr. Wolfgang Paulus at the University of Ulm, found that 42% of women receiving acupuncture just before and after an assisted-reproductive therapy, such as IVF, became pregnant; that compared with 26% of patients who got pregnant with assisted-reproductive treatments but who received no acupuncture therapy.

Later that year, Dr. Raymond Chang and colleagues at Cornell University's medical school in New York published a paper in the same journal, describing several ways acupuncture might actually improve a woman's chances of conceiving: relaxation, regulating reproductive hormones and improving the lining of the uterus, where the embryo needs to be implanted before it can develop.

Because of the reports, published in a prestigious journal, "some doctors started to say, let's try it out," said Dr. Paul C. Magarelli, a fertility specialist in Colorado Springs, Colo.

Deming Huang, an acupuncturist at Stanford University's Center for Integrative Medicine in Palo Alto, said patient interest began to rise about the same time. At the Stanford clinic, more women began asking their doctors for referrals to acupuncturists. And though it's not easy to measure the effect of popular culture on medical trends, more than a few women may have been swayed to try acupuncture when the "Sex and the City" character Charlotte visited an acupuncturist in an effort to get pregnant during the show's final season.

Alice Domar, director of the Mind/Body Center for Women's Health at the Boston IVF fertility clinic, describes efforts by physicians to recommend acupuncture for fertility treatments as a "mini-scandal." But even the clinic where she works is preparing to hire an acupuncturist to add to its current mix of relaxation and confidence-building techniques for fertility patients -- a decision Domar, a psychologist, says she struggles with as a scientist.

"With the data we have right now, one cannot say that acupuncture increases pregnancy rates," Domar said. Western studies on the topic have so far produced inconsistent results, making it impossible, she said, for experts to draw definitive conclusions.

Early studies on the subject suggested acupuncture might increase blood flow to the uterus -- which would improve the chances of a pregnancy taking hold -- but later research refuted this.

Studies led by Magarelli, the Colorado specialist, suggested acupuncture increased pregnancy rates in patients who doctors had determined had little hope of getting pregnant. He and colleague Diane Cridennda, a licensed Colorado Springs acupuncturist, also showed that women who received acupuncture had more "take-home babies." That is, they were less likely to lose pregnancies to miscarriage or embryos that failed to take hold in the uterus.

But like the German study results, Magarelli's findings have been faulted for failing to rule out psychological or psychosomatic effects of the treatment. Patients who received a fake treatment might have responded to the treatment as if it were truly effective simply because they believed it was -- a phenomenon known as the placebo effect.

Paulus addressed the problem in a 2003 study by comparing the effects of acupuncture with fake or sham acupuncture, placing needles against acupuncture points without penetrating the skin. The results showed no difference in pregnancy rates between patients who received true acupuncture and those who were given the sham.

Acupuncture needles, about the width of a hair, are just barely felt when inserted, making it difficult to come up with a good sham treatment to help rule out the placebo effect. As Domar put it, "If patients are getting pricked with a needle, they know it."

It's hard to study acupuncture for other reasons too. Treatment regimens have varied from one study to the next. A study performed by researchers at the Robert Wood Johnson Medical School in Camden, N.J., found no effects of acupuncture on pregnancy rates -- but their patients had just one acupuncture session, whereas other studies used two or more.

To rule out the effects of other aspects of the treatment, Western researchers often trim acupuncture down to its simplest element: needles. But acupuncturists don't simply insert needles; most take a whole-body approach, asking broad questions about patient history, making recommendations about nutrition and stress management and prescribing herbal remedies.

"Our goal is not just to get the patient pregnant," said Dr. Daoshing Ni, co-founder of the Tao of Wellness center in Santa Monica, which sees hundreds of infertility patients each week. "Getting pregnant is just one step in our overall goal" of improving a patient's health, he explained.

Researchers here and in Europe hope to eventually shed light on whether acupuncture is truly beneficial for women trying to get pregnant. For now, however, doctors face a conundrum: Should they recommend an unproven treatment, discourage such treatment or take no stance at all, said Dr. James Dillard, of the Rosenthal Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine at Columbia University.

Because acupuncture is considered relatively safe, Dillard said, more fertility doctors are deciding that it's OK to add it to the mix. "It's a big black-and-white outcome; you're either pregnant or you're not," he said. "If it turns out it's just the placebo effect, who cares?"

Many also say evidence that acupuncture relaxes patients is sufficient to recommend it, given the stress of dealing with infertility. In fact, women undergoing infertility treatments face stress levels on par with those of women coping with chronic illnesses such as heart disease and cancer, according to the American Society for Reproductive Medicine.

But skeptics like Domar feel it may still be too soon to recommend the treatment. "Patients are not going for acupuncture to feel good; they're going for acupuncture to get pregnant. And they're spending thousands of dollars for it. It's a dilemma."

Now pregnant, Jackie Apuzzo is still undergoing acupuncture treatment, although her therapy has changed: no more herbs and fewer needles in different locations. Her baby is due in December.

Reflecting on the trials of the last several years, Apuzzo said the best thing about acupuncture was that it saved her from a second stressful IVF cycle, which she had planned for this month. "I'm glad we don't have to go through that again," Apuzzo said. "I just wish that I had considered the alternatives before jumping into the big guns."
Friday, July 03, 2009
For your educational purpose, take a look (full article listed below):
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2009/06/01/090601fa_fact_gawande?currentPage=all

“With healthcare in the limelight, here's another perspective to what is really pushing up the cost.” - Won mi Kim, LAc

“Indeed, a very important article on the current state of our healthcare industry. Two, of many, parts worth highlighting from the article read: ‘To make matters worse, Fisher found that patients in high-cost areas were actually less likely to receive low-cost preventive services’ and ‘Nearly thirty per cent of Medicare’s costs could be saved without negatively affecting health outcomes if spending in high- and medium-cost areas could be reduced to the level in low-cost areas,’ Peter Orszag, the President’s budget director, has stated. I am glad to read this article that takes into account so many perspectives.” - Dr. Brendan Armm

The New Yorker
ANNALS OF MEDICINE
THE COST CONUNDRUM
What a Texas town can teach us about health care.

by Atul Gawande

JUNE 1, 2009

It is spring in McAllen, Texas. The morning sun is warm. The streets are lined with palm trees and pickup trucks. McAllen is in Hidalgo County, which has the lowest household income in the country, but it’s a border town, and a thriving foreign-trade zone has kept the unemployment rate below ten per cent. McAllen calls itself the Square Dance Capital of the World. “Lonesome Dove” was set around here.

McAllen has another distinction, too: it is one of the most expensive health-care markets in the country. Only Miami—which has much higher labor and living costs—spends more per person on health care. In 2006, Medicare spent fifteen thousand dollars per enrollee here, almost twice the national average. The income per capita is twelve thousand dollars. In other words, Medicare spends three thousand dollars more per person here than the average person earns.

The explosive trend in American medical costs seems to have occurred here in an especially intense form. Our country’s health care is by far the most expensive in the world. In Washington, the aim of health-care reform is not just to extend medical coverage to everybody but also to bring costs under control. Spending on doctors, hospitals, drugs, and the like now consumes more than one of every six dollars we earn. The financial burden has damaged the global competitiveness of American businesses and bankrupted millions of families, even those with insurance. It’s also devouring our government. “The greatest threat to America’s fiscal health is not Social Security,” President Barack Obama said in a March speech at the White House. “It’s not the investments that we’ve made to rescue our economy during this crisis. By a wide margin, the biggest threat to our nation’s balance sheet is the skyrocketing cost of health care. It’s not even close.”

The question we’re now frantically grappling with is how this came to be, and what can be done about it. McAllen, Texas, the most expensive town in the most expensive country for health care in the world, seemed a good place to look for some answers.

From the moment I arrived, I asked almost everyone I encountered about McAllen’s health costs—a businessman I met at the five-gate McAllen-Miller International Airport, the desk clerks at the Embassy Suites Hotel, a police-academy cadet at McDonald’s. Most weren’t surprised to hear that McAllen was an outlier. “Just look around,” the cadet said. “People are not healthy here.” McAllen, with its high poverty rate, has an incidence of heavy drinking sixty per cent higher than the national average. And the Tex-Mex diet has contributed to a thirty-eight-per-cent obesity rate.

One day, I went on rounds with Lester Dyke, a weather-beaten, ranch-owning fifty-three-year-old cardiac surgeon who grew up in Austin, did his surgical training with the Army all over the country, and settled into practice in Hidalgo County. He has not lacked for business: in the past twenty years, he has done some eight thousand heart operations, which exhausts me just thinking about it. I walked around with him as he checked in on ten or so of his patients who were recuperating at the three hospitals where he operates. It was easy to see what had landed them under his knife. They were nearly all obese or diabetic or both. Many had a family history of heart disease. Few were taking preventive measures, such as cholesterol-lowering drugs, which, studies indicate, would have obviated surgery for up to half of them.

Yet public-health statistics show that cardiovascular-disease rates in the county are actually lower than average, probably because its smoking rates are quite low. Rates of asthma, H.I.V., infant mortality, cancer, and injury are lower, too. El Paso County, eight hundred miles up the border, has essentially the same demographics. Both counties have a population of roughly seven hundred thousand, similar public-health statistics, and similar percentages of non-English speakers, illegal immigrants, and the unemployed. Yet in 2006 Medicare expenditures (our best approximation of over-all spending patterns) in El Paso were $7,504 per enrollee—half as much as in McAllen. An unhealthy population couldn’t possibly be the reason that McAllen’s health-care costs are so high. (Or the reason that America’s are. We may be more obese than any other industrialized nation, but we have among the lowest rates of smoking and alcoholism, and we are in the middle of the range for cardiovascular disease and diabetes.)

Was the explanation, then, that McAllen was providing unusually good health care? I took a walk through Doctors Hospital at Renaissance, in Edinburg, one of the towns in the McAllen metropolitan area, with Robert Alleyn, a Houston-trained general surgeon who had grown up here and returned home to practice. The hospital campus sprawled across two city blocks, with a series of three- and four-story stucco buildings separated by golfing-green lawns and black asphalt parking lots. He pointed out the sights—the cancer center is over here, the heart center is over there, now we’re coming to the imaging center. We went inside the surgery building. It was sleek and modern, with recessed lighting, classical music piped into the waiting areas, and nurses moving from patient to patient behind rolling black computer pods. We changed into scrubs and Alleyn took me through the sixteen operating rooms to show me the laparoscopy suite, with its flat-screen video monitors, the hybrid operating room with built-in imaging equipment, the surgical robot for minimally invasive robotic surgery.

I was impressed. The place had virtually all the technology that you’d find at Harvard and Stanford and the Mayo Clinic, and, as I walked through that hospital on a dusty road in South Texas, this struck me as a remarkable thing. Rich towns get the new school buildings, fire trucks, and roads, not to mention the better teachers and police officers and civil engineers. Poor towns don’t. But that rule doesn’t hold for health care.

At McAllen Medical Center, I saw an orthopedic surgeon work under an operating microscope to remove a tumor that had wrapped around the spinal cord of a fourteen-year-old. At a home-health agency, I spoke to a nurse who could provide intravenous-drug therapy for patients with congestive heart failure. At McAllen Heart Hospital, I watched Dyke and a team of six do a coronary-artery bypass using technologies that didn’t exist a few years ago. At Renaissance, I talked with a neonatologist who trained at my hospital, in Boston, and brought McAllen new skills and technologies for premature babies. “I’ve had nurses come up to me and say, ‘I never knew these babies could survive,’ ” he said.

And yet there’s no evidence that the treatments and technologies available at McAllen are better than those found elsewhere in the country. The annual reports that hospitals file with Medicare show that those in McAllen and El Paso offer comparable technologies—neonatal intensive-care units, advanced cardiac services, PET scans, and so on. Public statistics show no difference in the supply of doctors. Hidalgo County actually has fewer specialists than the national average.

Nor does the care given in McAllen stand out for its quality. Medicare ranks hospitals on twenty-five metrics of care. On all but two of these, McAllen’s five largest hospitals performed worse, on average, than El Paso’s. McAllen costs Medicare seven thousand dollars more per person each year than does the average city in America. But not, so far as one can tell, because it’s delivering better health care.

One night, I went to dinner with six McAllen doctors. All were what you would call bread-and-butter physicians: busy, full-time, private-practice doctors who work from seven in the morning to seven at night and sometimes later, their waiting rooms teeming and their desks stacked with medical charts to review.

Some were dubious when I told them that McAllen was the country’s most expensive place for health care. I gave them the spending data from Medicare. In 1992, in the McAllen market, the average cost per Medicare enrollee was $4,891, almost exactly the national average. But since then, year after year, McAllen’s health costs have grown faster than any other market in the country, ultimately soaring by more than ten thousand dollars per person.

“Maybe the service is better here,” the cardiologist suggested. People can be seen faster and get their tests more readily, he said.

Others were skeptical. “I don’t think that explains the costs he’s talking about,” the general surgeon said.

“It’s malpractice,” a family physician who had practiced here for thirty-three years said.

“McAllen is legal hell,” the cardiologist agreed. Doctors order unnecessary tests just to protect themselves, he said. Everyone thought the lawyers here were worse than elsewhere.

That explanation puzzled me. Several years ago, Texas passed a tough malpractice law that capped pain-and-suffering awards at two hundred and fifty thousand dollars. Didn’t lawsuits go down?

“Practically to zero,” the cardiologist admitted.

“Come on,” the general surgeon finally said. “We all know these arguments are bullshit. There is overutilization here, pure and simple.” Doctors, he said, were racking up charges with extra tests, services, and procedures.

The surgeon came to McAllen in the mid-nineties, and since then, he said, “the way to practice medicine has changed completely. Before, it was about how to do a good job. Now it is about ‘How much will you benefit?’ ”

Everyone agreed that something fundamental had changed since the days when health-care costs in McAllen were the same as those in El Paso and elsewhere. Yes, they had more technology. “But young doctors don’t think anymore,” the family physician said.

The surgeon gave me an example. General surgeons are often asked to see patients with pain from gallstones. If there aren’t any complications—and there usually aren’t—the pain goes away on its own or with pain medication. With instruction on eating a lower-fat diet, most patients experience no further difficulties. But some have recurrent episodes, and need surgery to remove their gallbladder.

Seeing a patient who has had uncomplicated, first-time gallstone pain requires some judgment. A surgeon has to provide reassurance (people are often scared and want to go straight to surgery), some education about gallstone disease and diet, perhaps a prescription for pain; in a few weeks, the surgeon might follow up. But increasingly, I was told, McAllen surgeons simply operate. The patient wasn’t going to moderate her diet, they tell themselves. The pain was just going to come back. And by operating they happen to make an extra seven hundred dollars.

I gave the doctors around the table a scenario. A forty-year-old woman comes in with chest pain after a fight with her husband. An EKG is normal. The chest pain goes away. She has no family history of heart disease. What did McAllen doctors do fifteen years ago?

Send her home, they said. Maybe get a stress test to confirm that there’s no issue, but even that might be overkill.

And today? Today, the cardiologist said, she would get a stress test, an echocardiogram, a mobile Holter monitor, and maybe even a cardiac catheterization.

“Oh, she’s definitely getting a cath,” the internist said, laughing grimly.

To determine whether overuse of medical care was really the problem in McAllen, I turned to Jonathan Skinner, an economist at Dartmouth’s Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, which has three decades of expertise in examining regional patterns in Medicare payment data. I also turned to two private firms—D2Hawkeye, an independent company, and Ingenix, UnitedHealthcare’s data-analysis company—to analyze commercial insurance data for McAllen. The answer was yes. Compared with patients in El Paso and nationwide, patients in McAllen got more of pretty much everything—more diagnostic testing, more hospital treatment, more surgery, more home care.

The Medicare payment data provided the most detail. Between 2001 and 2005, critically ill Medicare patients received almost fifty per cent more specialist visits in McAllen than in El Paso, and were two-thirds more likely to see ten or more specialists in a six-month period. In 2005 and 2006, patients in McAllen received twenty per cent more abdominal ultrasounds, thirty per cent more bone-density studies, sixty per cent more stress tests with echocardiography, two hundred per cent more nerve-conduction studies to diagnose carpal-tunnel syndrome, and five hundred and fifty per cent more urine-flow studies to diagnose prostate troubles. They received one-fifth to two-thirds more gallbladder operations, knee replacements, breast biopsies, and bladder scopes. They also received two to three times as many pacemakers, implantable defibrillators, cardiac-bypass operations, carotid endarterectomies, and coronary-artery stents. And Medicare paid for five times as many home-nurse visits. The primary cause of McAllen’s extreme costs was, very simply, the across-the-board overuse of medicine.

This is a disturbing and perhaps surprising diagnosis. Americans like to believe that, with most things, more is better. But research suggests that where medicine is concerned it may actually be worse. For example, Rochester, Minnesota, where the Mayo Clinic dominates the scene, has fantastically high levels of technological capability and quality, but its Medicare spending is in the lowest fifteen per cent of the country—$6,688 per enrollee in 2006, which is eight thousand dollars less than the figure for McAllen. Two economists working at Dartmouth, Katherine Baicker and Amitabh Chandra, found that the more money Medicare spent per person in a given state the lower that state’s quality ranking tended to be. In fact, the four states with the highest levels of spending—Louisiana, Texas, California, and Florida—were near the bottom of the national rankings on the quality of patient care.

In a 2003 study, another Dartmouth team, led by the internist Elliott Fisher, examined the treatment received by a million elderly Americans diagnosed with colon or rectal cancer, a hip fracture, or a heart attack. They found that patients in higher-spending regions received sixty per cent more care than elsewhere. They got more frequent tests and procedures, more visits with specialists, and more frequent admission to hospitals. Yet they did no better than other patients, whether this was measured in terms of survival, their ability to function, or satisfaction with the care they received. If anything, they seemed to do worse.

That’s because nothing in medicine is without risks. Complications can arise from hospital stays, medications, procedures, and tests, and when these things are of marginal value the harm can be greater than the benefits. In recent years, we doctors have markedly increased the number of operations we do, for instance. In 2006, doctors performed at least sixty million surgical procedures, one for every five Americans. No other country does anything like as many operations on its citizens. Are we better off for it? No one knows for sure, but it seems highly unlikely. After all, some hundred thousand people die each year from complications of surgery—far more than die in car crashes.

To make matters worse, Fisher found that patients in high-cost areas were actually less likely to receive low-cost preventive services, such as flu and pneumonia vaccines, faced longer waits at doctor and emergency-room visits, and were less likely to have a primary-care physician. They got more of the stuff that cost more, but not more of what they needed.

In an odd way, this news is reassuring. Universal coverage won’t be feasible unless we can control costs. Policymakers have worried that doing so would require rationing, which the public would never go along with. So the idea that there’s plenty of fat in the system is proving deeply attractive. “Nearly thirty per cent of Medicare’s costs could be saved without negatively affecting health outcomes if spending in high- and medium-cost areas could be reduced to the level in low-cost areas,” Peter Orszag, the President’s budget director, has stated.

Most Americans would be delighted to have the quality of care found in places like Rochester, Minnesota, or Seattle, Washington, or Durham, North Carolina—all of which have world-class hospitals and costs that fall below the national average. If we brought the cost curve in the expensive places down to their level, Medicare’s problems (indeed, almost all the federal government’s budget problems for the next fifty years) would be solved. The difficulty is how to go about it. Physicians in places like McAllen behave differently from others. The $2.4-trillion question is why. Unless we figure it out, health reform will fail.

I had what I considered to be a reasonable plan for finding out what was going on in McAllen. I would call on the heads of its hospitals, in their swanky, decorator-designed, churrigueresco offices, and I’d ask them.

The first hospital I visited, McAllen Heart Hospital, is owned by Universal Health Services, a for-profit hospital chain with headquarters in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania, and revenues of five billion dollars last year. I went to see the hospital’s chief operating officer, Gilda Romero. Truth be told, her office seemed less churrigueresco than Office Depot. She had straight brown hair, sympathetic eyes, and looked more like a young school teacher than like a corporate officer with nineteen years of experience. And when I inquired, “What is going on in this place?” she looked surprised.

Is McAllen really that expensive? she asked.

I described the data, including the numbers indicating that heart operations and catheter procedures and pacemakers were being performed in McAllen at double the usual rate.

“That is interesting,” she said, by which she did not mean, “Uh-oh, you’ve caught us” but, rather, “That is actually interesting.” The problem of McAllen’s outlandish costs was new to her. She puzzled over the numbers. She was certain that her doctors performed surgery only when it was necessary. It had to be one of the other hospitals. And she had one in mind—Doctors Hospital at Renaissance, the hospital in Edinburg that I had toured.

She wasn’t the only person to mention Renaissance. It is the newest hospital in the area. It is physician-owned. And it has a reputation (which it disclaims) for aggressively recruiting high-volume physicians to become investors and send patients there. Physicians who do so receive not only their fee for whatever service they provide but also a percentage of the hospital’s profits from the tests, surgery, or other care patients are given. (In 2007, its profits totalled thirty-four million dollars.) Romero and others argued that this gives physicians an unholy temptation to overorder.

Such an arrangement can make physician investors rich. But it can’t be the whole explanation. The hospital gets barely a sixth of the patients in the region; its margins are no bigger than the other hospitals’—whether for profit or not for profit—and it didn’t have much of a presence until 2004 at the earliest, a full decade after the cost explosion in McAllen began.

“Those are good points,” Romero said. She couldn’t explain what was going on.

The following afternoon, I visited the top managers of Doctors Hospital at Renaissance. We sat in their boardroom around one end of a yacht-length table. The chairman of the board offered me a soda. The chief of staff smiled at me. The chief financial officer shook my hand as if I were an old friend. The C.E.O., however, was having a hard time pretending that he was happy to see me. Lawrence Gelman was a fifty-seven-year-old anesthesiologist with a Bill Clinton shock of white hair and a weekly local radio show tag-lined “Opinions from an Unrelenting Conservative Spirit.” He had helped found the hospital. He barely greeted me, and while the others were trying for a how-can-I-help-you-today attitude, his body language was more let’s-get-this-over-with.

So I asked him why McAllen’s health-care costs were so high. What he gave me was a disquisition on the theory and history of American health-care financing going back to Lyndon Johnson and the creation of Medicare, the upshot of which was: (1) Government is the problem in health care. “The people in charge of the purse strings don’t know what they’re doing.” (2) If anything, government insurance programs like Medicare don’t pay enough. “I, as an anesthesiologist, know that they pay me ten per cent of what a private insurer pays.” (3) Government programs are full of waste. “Every person in this room could easily go through the expenditures of Medicare and Medicaid and see all kinds of waste.” (4) But not in McAllen. The clinicians here, at least at Doctors Hospital at Renaissance, “are providing necessary, essential health care,” Gelman said. “We don’t invent patients.”

Then why do hospitals in McAllen order so much more surgery and scans and tests than hospitals in El Paso and elsewhere?

In the end, the only explanation he and his colleagues could offer was this: The other doctors and hospitals in McAllen may be overspending, but, to the extent that his hospital provides costlier treatment than other places in the country, it is making people better in ways that data on quality and outcomes do not measure.

“Do we provide better health care than El Paso?” Gelman asked. “I would bet you two to one that we do.”

It was a depressing conversation—not because I thought the executives were being evasive but because they weren’t being evasive. The data on McAllen’s costs were clearly new to them. They were defending McAllen reflexively. But they really didn’t know the big picture of what was happening.

And, I realized, few people in their position do. Local executives for hospitals and clinics and home-health agencies understand their growth rate and their market share; they know whether they are losing money or making money. They know that if their doctors bring in enough business—surgery, imaging, home-nursing referrals—they make money; and if they get the doctors to bring in more, they make more. But they have only the vaguest notion of whether the doctors are making their communities as healthy as they can, or whether they are more or less efficient than their counterparts elsewhere. A doctor sees a patient in clinic, and has her check into a McAllen hospital for a CT scan, an ultrasound, three rounds of blood tests, another ultrasound, and then surgery to have her gallbladder removed. How is Lawrence Gelman or Gilda Romero to know whether all that is essential, let alone the best possible treatment for the patient? It isn’t what they are responsible or accountable for.

Health-care costs ultimately arise from the accumulation of individual decisions doctors make about which services and treatments to write an order for. The most expensive piece of medical equipment, as the saying goes, is a doctor’s pen. And, as a rule, hospital executives don’t own the pen caps. Doctors do.

If doctors wield the pen, why do they do it so differently from one place to another? Brenda Sirovich, another Dartmouth researcher, published a study last year that provided an important clue. She and her team surveyed some eight hundred primary-care physicians from high-cost cities (such as Las Vegas and New York), low-cost cities (such as Sacramento and Boise), and others in between. The researchers asked the physicians specifically how they would handle a variety of patient cases. It turned out that differences in decision-making emerged in only some kinds of cases. In situations in which the right thing to do was well established—for example, whether to recommend a mammogram for a fifty-year-old woman (the answer is yes)—physicians in high- and low-cost cities made the same decisions. But, in cases in which the science was unclear, some physicians pursued the maximum possible amount of testing and procedures; some pursued the minimum. And which kind of doctor they were depended on where they came from.

Sirovich asked doctors how they would treat a seventy-five-year-old woman with typical heartburn symptoms and “adequate health insurance to cover tests and medications.” Physicians in high- and low-cost cities were equally likely to prescribe antacid therapy and to check for H. pylori, an ulcer-causing bacterium—steps strongly recommended by national guidelines. But when it came to measures of less certain value—and higher cost—the differences were considerable. More than seventy per cent of physicians in high-cost cities referred the patient to a gastroenterologist, ordered an upper endoscopy, or both, while half as many in low-cost cities did. Physicians from high-cost cities typically recommended that patients with well-controlled hypertension see them in the office every one to three months, while those from low-cost cities recommended visits twice yearly. In case after uncertain case, more was not necessarily better. But physicians from the most expensive cities did the most expensive things.

Why? Some of it could reflect differences in training. I remember when my wife brought our infant son Walker to visit his grandparents in Virginia, and he took a terrifying fall down a set of stairs. They drove him to the local community hospital in Alexandria. A CT scan showed that he had a tiny subdural hematoma—a small area of bleeding in the brain. During ten hours of observation, though, he was fine—eating, drinking, completely alert. I was a surgery resident then and had seen many cases like his. We observed each child in intensive care for at least twenty-four hours and got a repeat CT scan. That was how I’d been trained. But the doctor in Alexandria was going to send Walker home. That was how he’d been trained. Suppose things change for the worse? I asked him. It’s extremely unlikely, he said, and if anything changed Walker could always be brought back. I bullied the doctor into admitting him anyway. The next day, the scan and the patient were fine. And, looking in the textbooks, I learned that the doctor was right. Walker could have been managed safely either way.

There was no sign, however, that McAllen’s doctors as a group were trained any differently from El Paso’s. One morning, I met with a hospital administrator who had extensive experience managing for-profit hospitals along the border. He offered a different possible explanation: the culture of money.

“In El Paso, if you took a random doctor and looked at his tax returns eighty-five per cent of his income would come from the usual practice of medicine,” he said. But in McAllen, the administrator thought, that percentage would be a lot less.

He knew of doctors who owned strip malls, orange groves, apartment complexes—or imaging centers, surgery centers, or another part of the hospital they directed patients to. They had “entrepreneurial spirit,” he said. They were innovative and aggressive in finding ways to increase revenues from patient care. “There’s no lack of work ethic,” he said. But he had often seen financial considerations drive the decisions doctors made for patients—the tests they ordered, the doctors and hospitals they recommended—and it bothered him. Several doctors who were unhappy about the direction medicine had taken in McAllen told me the same thing. “It’s a machine, my friend,” one surgeon explained.

No one teaches you how to think about money in medical school or residency. Yet, from the moment you start practicing, you must think about it. You must consider what is covered for a patient and what is not. You must pay attention to insurance rejections and government-reimbursement rules. You must think about having enough money for the secretary and the nurse and the rent and the malpractice insurance.

Beyond the basics, however, many physicians are remarkably oblivious to the financial implications of their decisions. They see their patients. They make their recommendations. They send out the bills. And, as long as the numbers come out all right at the end of each month, they put the money out of their minds.

Others think of the money as a means of improving what they do. They think about how to use the insurance money to maybe install electronic health records with colleagues, or provide easier phone and e-mail access, or offer expanded hours. They hire an extra nurse to monitor diabetic patients more closely, and to make sure that patients don’t miss their mammograms and pap smears and colonoscopies.

Then there are the physicians who see their practice primarily as a revenue stream. They instruct their secretary to have patients who call with follow-up questions schedule an appointment, because insurers don’t pay for phone calls, only office visits. They consider providing Botox injections for cash. They take a Doppler ultrasound course, buy a machine, and start doing their patients’ scans themselves, so that the insurance payments go to them rather than to the hospital. They figure out ways to increase their high-margin work and decrease their low-margin work. This is a business, after all.

In every community, you’ll find a mixture of these views among physicians, but one or another tends to predominate. McAllen seems simply to be the community at one extreme.

In a few cases, the hospital executive told me, he’d seen the behavior cross over into what seemed like outright fraud. “I’ve had doctors here come up to me and say, ‘You want me to admit patients to your hospital, you’re going to have to pay me.’ ”

“How much?” I asked.

“The amounts—all of them were over a hundred thousand dollars per year,” he said. The doctors were specific. The most he was asked for was five hundred thousand dollars per year.

He didn’t pay any of them, he said: “I mean, I gotta sleep at night.” And he emphasized that these were just a handful of doctors. But he had never been asked for a kickback before coming to McAllen.

Woody Powell is a Stanford sociologist who studies the economic culture of cities. Recently, he and his research team studied why certain regions—Boston, San Francisco, San Diego—became leaders in biotechnology while others with a similar concentration of scientific and corporate talent—Los Angeles, Philadelphia, New York—did not. The answer they found was what Powell describes as the anchor-tenant theory of economic development. Just as an anchor store will define the character of a mall, anchor tenants in biotechnology, whether it’s a company like Genentech, in South San Francisco, or a university like M.I.T., in Cambridge, define the character of an economic community. They set the norms. The anchor tenants that set norms encouraging the free flow of ideas and collaboration, even with competitors, produced enduringly successful communities, while those that mainly sought to dominate did not.

Powell suspects that anchor tenants play a similarly powerful community role in other areas of economics, too, and health care may be no exception. I spoke to a marketing rep for a McAllen home-health agency who told me of a process uncannily similar to what Powell found in biotech. Her job is to persuade doctors to use her agency rather than others. The competition is fierce. I opened the phone book and found seventeen pages of listings for home-health agencies—two hundred and sixty in all. A patient typically brings in between twelve hundred and fifteen hundred dollars, and double that amount for specialized care. She described how, a decade or so ago, a few early agencies began rewarding doctors who ordered home visits with more than trinkets: they provided tickets to professional sporting events, jewelry, and other gifts. That set the tone. Other agencies jumped in. Some began paying doctors a supplemental salary, as “medical directors,” for steering business in their direction. Doctors came to expect a share of the revenue stream.

Agencies that want to compete on quality struggle to remain in business, the rep said. Doctors have asked her for a medical-director salary of four or five thousand dollars a month in return for sending her business. One asked a colleague of hers for private-school tuition for his child; another wanted sex.

“I explained the rules and regulations and the anti-kickback law, and told them no,” she said of her dealings with such doctors. “Does it hurt my business?” She paused. “I’m O.K. working only with ethical physicians,” she finally said.

About fifteen years ago, it seems, something began to change in McAllen. A few leaders of local institutions took profit growth to be a legitimate ethic in the practice of medicine. Not all the doctors accepted this. But they failed to discourage those who did. So here, along the banks of the Rio Grande, in the Square Dance Capital of the World, a medical community came to treat patients the way subprime-mortgage lenders treated home buyers: as profit centers.

The real puzzle of American health care, I realized on the airplane home, is not why McAllen is different from El Paso. It’s why El Paso isn’t like McAllen. Every incentive in the system is an invitation to go the way McAllen has gone. Yet, across the country, large numbers of communities have managed to control their health costs rather than ratchet them up.

I talked to Denis Cortese, the C.E.O. of the Mayo Clinic, which is among the highest-quality, lowest-cost health-care systems in the country. A couple of years ago, I spent several days there as a visiting surgeon. Among the things that stand out from that visit was how much time the doctors spent with patients. There was no churn—no shuttling patients in and out of rooms while the doctor bounces from one to the other. I accompanied a colleague while he saw patients. Most of the patients, like those in my clinic, required about twenty minutes. But one patient had colon cancer and a number of other complex issues, including heart disease. The physician spent an hour with her, sorting things out. He phoned a cardiologist with a question.

“I’ll be there,” the cardiologist said.

Fifteen minutes later, he was. They mulled over everything together. The cardiologist adjusted a medication, and said that no further testing was needed. He cleared the patient for surgery, and the operating room gave her a slot the next day.

The whole interaction was astonishing to me. Just having the cardiologist pop down to see the patient with the surgeon would be unimaginable at my hospital. The time required wouldn’t pay. The time required just to organize the system wouldn’t pay.

The core tenet of the Mayo Clinic is “The needs of the patient come first”—not the convenience of the doctors, not their revenues. The doctors and nurses, and even the janitors, sat in meetings almost weekly, working on ideas to make the service and the care better, not to get more money out of patients. I asked Cortese how the Mayo Clinic made this possible.

“It’s not easy,” he said. But decades ago Mayo recognized that the first thing it needed to do was eliminate the financial barriers. It pooled all the money the doctors and the hospital system received and began paying everyone a salary, so that the doctors’ goal in patient care couldn’t be increasing their income. Mayo promoted leaders who focussed first on what was best for patients, and then on how to make this financially possible.

No one there actually intends to do fewer expensive scans and procedures than is done elsewhere in the country. The aim is to raise quality and to help doctors and other staff members work as a team. But, almost by happenstance, the result has been lower costs.

“When doctors put their heads together in a room, when they share expertise, you get more thinking and less testing,” Cortese told me.

Skeptics saw the Mayo model as a local phenomenon that wouldn’t carry beyond the hay fields of northern Minnesota. But in 1986 the Mayo Clinic opened a campus in Florida, one of our most expensive states for health care, and, in 1987, another one in Arizona. It was difficult to recruit staff members who would accept a salary and the Mayo’s collaborative way of practicing. Leaders were working against the dominant medical culture and incentives. The expansion sites took at least a decade to get properly established. But eventually they achieved the same high-quality, low-cost results as Rochester. Indeed, Cortese says that the Florida site has become, in some respects, the most efficient one in the system.

The Mayo Clinic is not an aberration. One of the lowest-cost markets in the country is Grand Junction, Colorado, a community of a hundred and twenty thousand that nonetheless has achieved some of Medicare’s highest quality-of-care scores. Michael Pramenko is a family physician and a local medical leader there. Unlike doctors at the Mayo Clinic, he told me, those in Grand Junction get piecework fees from insurers. But years ago the doctors agreed among themselves to a system that paid them a similar fee whether they saw Medicare, Medicaid, or private-insurance patients, so that there would be little incentive to cherry-pick patients. They also agreed, at the behest of the main health plan in town, an H.M.O., to meet regularly on small peer-review committees to go over their patient charts together. They focussed on rooting out problems like poor prevention practices, unnecessary back operations, and unusual hospital-complication rates. Problems went down. Quality went up. Then, in 2004, the doctors’ group and the local H.M.O. jointly created a regional information network—a community-wide electronic-record system that shared office notes, test results, and hospital data for patients across the area. Again, problems went down. Quality went up. And costs ended up lower than just about anywhere else in the United States.

Grand Junction’s medical community was not following anyone else’s recipe. But, like Mayo, it created what Elliott Fisher, of Dartmouth, calls an accountable-care organization. The leading doctors and the hospital system adopted measures to blunt harmful financial incentives, and they took collective responsibility for improving the sum total of patient care.

This approach has been adopted in other places, too: the Geisinger Health System, in Danville, Pennsylvania; the Marshfield Clinic, in Marshfield, Wisconsin; Intermountain Healthcare, in Salt Lake City; Kaiser Permanente, in Northern California. All of them function on similar principles. All are not-for-profit institutions. And all have produced enviably higher quality and lower costs than the average American town enjoys.

When you look across the spectrum from Grand Junction to McAllen—and the almost threefold difference in the costs of care—you come to realize that we are witnessing a battle for the soul of American medicine. Somewhere in the United States at this moment, a patient with chest pain, or a tumor, or a cough is seeing a doctor. And the damning question we have to ask is whether the doctor is set up to meet the needs of the patient, first and foremost, or to maximize revenue.

There is no insurance system that will make the two aims match perfectly. But having a system that does so much to misalign them has proved disastrous. As economists have often pointed out, we pay doctors for quantity, not quality. As they point out less often, we also pay them as individuals, rather than as members of a team working together for their patients. Both practices have made for serious problems.

Providing health care is like building a house. The task requires experts, expensive equipment and materials, and a huge amount of coördination. Imagine that, instead of paying a contractor to pull a team together and keep them on track, you paid an electrician for every outlet he recommends, a plumber for every faucet, and a carpenter for every cabinet. Would you be surprised if you got a house with a thousand outlets, faucets, and cabinets, at three times the cost you expected, and the whole thing fell apart a couple of years later? Getting the country’s best electrician on the job (he trained at Harvard, somebody tells you) isn’t going to solve this problem. Nor will changing the person who writes him the check.

This last point is vital. Activists and policymakers spend an inordinate amount of time arguing about whether the solution to high medical costs is to have government or private insurance companies write the checks. Here’s how this whole debate goes. Advocates of a public option say government financing would save the most money by having leaner administrative costs and forcing doctors and hospitals to take lower payments than they get from private insurance. Opponents say doctors would skimp, quit, or game the system, and make us wait in line for our care; they maintain that private insurers are better at policing doctors. No, the skeptics say: all insurance companies do is reject applicants who need health care and stall on paying their bills. Then we have the economists who say that the people who should pay the doctors are the ones who use them. Have consumers pay with their own dollars, make sure that they have some “skin in the game,” and then they’ll get the care they deserve. These arguments miss the main issue. When it comes to making care better and cheaper, changing who pays the doctor will make no more difference than changing who pays the electrician. The lesson of the high-quality, low-cost communities is that someone has to be accountable for the totality of care. Otherwise, you get a system that has no brakes. You get McAllen.

One afternoon in McAllen, I rode down McColl Road with Lester Dyke, the cardiac surgeon, and we passed a series of office plazas that seemed to be nothing but home-health agencies, imaging centers, and medical-equipment stores.

“Medicine has become a pig trough here,” he muttered.

Dyke is among the few vocal critics of what’s happened in McAllen. “We took a wrong turn when doctors stopped being doctors and became businessmen,” he said.

We began talking about the various proposals being touted in Washington to fix the cost problem. I asked him whether expanding public-insurance programs like Medicare and shrinking the role of insurance companies would do the trick in McAllen.

“I don’t have a problem with it,” he said. “But it won’t make a difference.” In McAllen, government payers already predominate—not many people have jobs with private insurance.

How about doing the opposite and increasing the role of big insurance companies?

“What good would that do?” Dyke asked.

The third class of health-cost proposals, I explained, would push people to use medical savings accounts and hold high-deductible insurance policies: “They’d have more of their own money on the line, and that’d drive them to bargain with you and other surgeons, right?”

He gave me a quizzical look. We tried to imagine the scenario. A cardiologist tells an elderly woman that she needs bypass surgery and has Dr. Dyke see her. They discuss the blockages in her heart, the operation, the risks. And now they’re supposed to haggle over the price as if he were selling a rug in a souk? “I’ll do three vessels for thirty thousand, but if you take four I’ll throw in an extra night in the I.C.U.”—that sort of thing? Dyke shook his head. “Who comes up with this stuff?” he asked. “Any plan that relies on the sheep to negotiate with the wolves is doomed to failure.”

Instead, McAllen and other cities like it have to be weaned away from their untenably fragmented, quantity-driven systems of health care, step by step. And that will mean rewarding doctors and hospitals if they band together to form Grand Junction-like accountable-care organizations, in which doctors collaborate to increase prevention and the quality of care, while discouraging overtreatment, undertreatment, and sheer profiteering. Under one approach, insurers—whether public or private—would allow clinicians who formed such organizations and met quality goals to keep half the savings they generate. Government could also shift regulatory burdens, and even malpractice liability, from the doctors to the organization. Other, sterner, approaches would penalize those who don’t form these organizations.

This will by necessity be an experiment. We will need to do in-depth research on what makes the best systems successful—the peer-review committees? recruiting more primary-care doctors and nurses? putting doctors on salary?—and disseminate what we learn. Congress has provided vital funding for research that compares the effectiveness of different treatments, and this should help reduce uncertainty about which treatments are best. But we also need to fund research that compares the effectiveness of different systems of care—to reduce our uncertainty about which systems work best for communities. These are empirical, not ideological, questions. And we would do well to form a national institute for health-care delivery, bringing together clinicians, hospitals, insurers, employers, and citizens to assess, regularly, the quality and the cost of our care, review the strategies that produce good results, and make clear recommendations for local systems.

Dramatic improvements and savings will take at least a decade. But a choice must be made. Whom do we want in charge of managing the full complexity of medical care? We can turn to insurers (whether public or private), which have proved repeatedly that they can’t do it. Or we can turn to the local medical communities, which have proved that they can. But we have to choose someone—because, in much of the country, no one is in charge. And the result is the most wasteful and the least sustainable health-care system in the world.

Something even more worrisome is going on as well. In the war over the culture of medicine—the war over whether our country’s anchor model will be Mayo or McAllen—the Mayo model is losing. In the sharpest economic downturn that our health system has faced in half a century, many people in medicine don’t see why they should do the hard work of organizing themselves in ways that reduce waste and improve quality if it means sacrificing revenue.

In El Paso, the for-profit health-care executive told me, a few leading physicians recently followed McAllen’s lead and opened their own centers for surgery and imaging. When I was in Tulsa a few months ago, a fellow-surgeon explained how he had made up for lost revenue by shifting his operations for well-insured patients to a specialty hospital that he partially owned while keeping his poor and uninsured patients at a nonprofit hospital in town. Even in Grand Junction, Michael Pramenko told me, “some of the doctors are beginning to complain about ‘leaving money on the table.’ ”

As America struggles to extend health-care coverage while curbing health-care costs, we face a decision that is more important than whether we have a public-insurance option, more important than whether we will have a single-payer system in the long run or a mixture of public and private insurance, as we do now. The decision is whether we are going to reward the leaders who are trying to build a new generation of Mayos and Grand Junctions. If we don’t, McAllen won’t be an outlier. It will be our future.
Friday, April 03, 2009

Alice Waters has been preaching the virtues of cultivating fresh food for decades. As Lesley Stahl reports, this world-renowned chef and restaurateur hopes a slower approach to the food we eat will keeps us healthier and greener.



Dr. Armm of Lotus East-West Medical Center in Santa Monica, California
 says, "This is a very important issue, eating fresh food grown locally, seasonally and organically. Thank you, Alice Waters. You inspire so many".


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Saturday, February 14, 2009
Look forward to your comments and questions on the subject of "Psychotherapy".
- Dr. Brendan Armm

Visit us online at www.lotusew.com
Saturday, February 14, 2009
Look forward to your comments and questions on the subject of "Naturopathic Medicine".
- Dr. Brendan Armm

Visit us online at www.lotusew.com
Saturday, February 14, 2009
Look forward to your comments and questions on the subject of "Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine".
- Dr. Brendan Armm

Visit us online at www.lotusew.com
 
Saturday, February 14, 2009
Look forward to your comments and questions on the subject of "Integrative Medicine".
- Dr. Brendan Armm

Visit us online at www.lotusew.com
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