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So...car keyless remotes and your chin. Bad Science?
posted by GJ on February 28, 2008 @ 10:49AM

Maybe not

5 comments | Tags: pseudoscience, cars, science

What is it with Pittsburgh Penguin hockey and blood?
posted by GJ on February 27, 2008 @ 9:51AM

Egads, now they're running over people with Zambonis in Pittsburgh.  Oh, the humanity!

1 comment | Tags: hockey, funny, pictures

Ultrasound Screening -- Not Such a Good Idea
posted by GJ on February 20, 2008 @ 10:10AM

First off, if you missed it, look below this long post for the update post from Kristen.

Now, I get a e-zine from Skeptic Magazine weekly, which usually has a nice column that I enjoy reading, but usually it's very skeptic-centric and would either be totally uninteresting to the rest of you, or fan the flames of, well, you know.  It's not like we haven't played out that game often enough here.

Anyhow, I'm including this latest one because it's really not about woo, pseudoscience, religion, or any of that.  Note the lack of a "woo" tag this time.  It's simply an interesting point of view about a procedure that is done all over the country that in all likelyhood, is really just a waste of money.  Read on for the details:


Ultrasound Screening: Sometimes Ignorance is Bliss
by Harriet Hall, M.D. 

I never thought I’d be promoting ignorance! I’ve always thought the more information, the better; but there are exceptions. I’m going to explain something that is very counterintuitive and grates against every fiber of our truth-seeking skeptical brains.

The ad shouts, “Tests That Can Save Your Life … Stroke is America’s third leading killer … Half of all stroke victims have no warning signs before a stroke occurs.” Life Line Screening comes to your community, sets up their ultrasound machines in a church or community center, and offers screening for stroke (carotid artery), abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA), peripheral arterial disease (PAD), and osteoporosis for $129. The Healthscreens company adds gallbladder, kidney, liver, thyroid, and heart screens for a total of nine screenings for $215. They say “Don’t Wait … Until it’s too late!”

A skeptic asks: if these tests save lives, why doesn’t my doctor order them, and why doesn’t my insurance company pay for them? The ultrasound peddlers answer that doctors don’t care about prevention and insurance companies are stingy. That’s nonsense. Doctors do care very much about prevention, and insurance companies would save money in the long run by diagnosing things early. Doctors do use these tests to screen patients at high risk and to aid in diagnosis (and when used that way, they are covered by insurance). They just don’t use them to screen the entire population of mostly healthy people.

What could be wrong with checking all these areas of your body for potential problems? Wouldn’t you like to know if your neck arteries are clogged? Wouldn’t you like to know you had an aneurysm that was about to explode? Wouldn’t you like to know if there was a lump lurking somewhere in your anatomy? Like everyone else, I would like to know those things, but my critical thinking skills have overcome that desire. I wouldn’t take those ultrasound tests even if they were free.

Obviously we’re not going to do every possible test on every possible person. You could test all 5-year olds for gonorrhea, but you probably wouldn’t. What makes a good screening test? The answer depends on the four possible outcomes of any test:

  1. True positive (the test is positive and you have the disease)
  2. False positive (the test is positive but you don’t have the disease)
  3. True negative (the test is negative and you don’t have the disease)
  4. False negative (the test is negative but you really do have the disease)

A good screening test has a low rate of false positives and negatives.

It makes a big difference how common the disease is in the population being screened. The rarer the disease, the more likely a positive test will be a false alarm. Only 10% of positive mammograms actually turn out to be cancer. Assuming you find a true positive result, you want it to make a difference. Does early diagnosis prolong your life span, or does it just prolong the time you carry the “sick” label? Is there an effective treatment that will prevent death or improve well-being? Are there risks to the treatment that must be weighed against the benefits?

We no longer do routine screening urinalysis. It wasn’t productive. If patients had no symptoms, a urinalysis rarely found anything that mattered, and we wasted a lot of time and effort trying to explain minor transient findings.

We no longer do annual chest x-rays. Why? Because they did more harm than good. There was a small risk from the radiation itself. When a lung cancer was big enough to see on x-ray, it was usually too late for treatment to prolong survival; and we found too many questionable shadows that required further investigation. My father-in-law was a case in point. A routine chest x-ray showed a mass. They operated and found something benign and insignificant, but he had complications from the surgery and died. His screening test killed him.

The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force wrestles with these issues, studies risk/benefit ratios, examines the latest and best research, and makes recommendations for screening the general asymptomatic population. They recommend one-time ultrasound screening for AAA in men between the ages of 65 and 75 who have ever smoked; they recommend against screening in women. They recommend against screening for PAD, because if we find PAD the recommendations are the same ones we make for everyone: smoking cessation and exercise. They recommend osteoporosis screening for women over age 65 (or 60 if they have risk factors). When ultrasound is used for osteoporosis screening, about a third of patients have a positive result that must then be confirmed by a DEXA test; it makes more sense to use DEXA in the first place. When tests fall under the USPSTF recommendations, Medicare and insurance companies usually pay.

Carotid artery testing can lead to life-saving treatment for patients who have symptoms, but if you have no symptoms, you may not need treatment. Even if the artery is 60–99% blocked, surgery may only reduce risk of stroke by 1% per year, and the surgical risks may outweigh the benefits.

Indiscriminate ultrasound screening is a blunt instrument: it sees a lot of suspicious findings that are due to benign conditions that don’t require treatment. Diagnosing the benign conditions requires more tests, which may be expensive, invasive, and possibly even lead to complications and death. When ultrasound finds something important, it is often something that would have been found later when symptoms developed, and usually finding it sooner makes no difference in survival. And think of all the needless worry!

These direct-to-consumer peddlers of ultrasound fail to divulge crucial information; so their customers can’t really give informed consent to a procedure that, while harmless in itself, can lead to various kinds of indirect harm. They play on people’s fears and their desire to take control of their own medical care. They imply a promise of far more than they can deliver. They may not do as much harm as the peddlers of whole body screening CT scans (which involve substantial radiation exposure), but in my opinion, they are just as wrong-headed.

8 comments | Tags: medicine, science

Latest news!
posted by Kristen on February 19, 2008 @ 3:29PM

Hi all!  Long time no talk!  I have a few tidbits to share:

 1.  Cousin Joe and Liz are expecting!  Their baby is due I think a month after Michelle and Geoff's, which by the way, is (probably) of the female variety. 

2.  I joined the ranks of the rest of the Baumbach's who wear glasses!  I think a bunch of you saw how I couldn't see "Are you smarter than a fifth grader" on our living room TV this past Christmas--but then I put Steve's glasses on and waalaa!  I could see!  For now I'm only going to use them to drive.  Now that I have them and can see the difference when I drive (especially at night) it freaks me out that I was on the road without them.  I'm pretty blind!  My eye doctor said that without glasses I am "barely" legal to drive in Virginia.  Nice.

3.  My school started a club hockey team this year, and I volunteered to be the school liason for the club.  It's kind of like Marc' Solvay team from HS, where we partner with another HS to have enough team members.  Lucky for me the season just ended, so I won't have to do much until next year except get the website up.  But they did give me a cool shirt. 

 Thanks GJ for the birthday card--it got to me right on my birthday!  Now I really feel like a putz that Trevor's was a month overdue!  I better put Darcy's in the mail today.  And maybe yours too.  LOL

2 comments | Tags: family

Blu-Ray Wins!
posted by Geoff on February 15, 2008 @ 4:49PM

With the announcement from Walmart today that they will no longer carry HD-DVD hardware or software, the HD-DVD coffin has been nailed shut. I knew the end was fast approaching when I received an email from Netflix last week that they were phasing out HD-DVD over this coming year. Soon after, Best Buy endorsed Blu-ray, and now Walmart dropped it entirely.

Toshiba should be formally announcing the dismantling of HD-DVD in the coming weeks, putting to bed this useless war. Unfortunatly, I bought into the losing format. Not a total loss as it still makes my DVD's look extra crisp, but I will miss the HD content for the time being. Blu-ray still has some catching up to do in terms of performance, reliability, and price. While their counterpart has been eliminated, the true competitor, DVD, is still the predominate choice.  Not surprisingly as the difference between the two is marginal, and that is coming from a big screen viewer.

On that note, stick with your DVD's for the time being.

2 comments | Tags: technology

Games coming
posted by GJ on February 9, 2008 @ 10:03PM

That's right, GJ is bored and starting to write computer games again.  First up is an Asteroids clone--mostly because it's based on a game I'm very familiar with (my original favorite!) and I found a good demo sample of a version of it for my development tool of choice, BlitzMax.  Anyhow, once I get a hold of Marc to remember what the freaking password is to my own freaking site, I'll upload my latest build of this game.

What I want from you--test it, try it out, and let me know what you want to see me add.  Here's my list so far:

    todo:
         * add sound
         * add explosion
         * add enemy
         * revise thrust model
         * add player lives
         * create real high score list, make persistent
         * revise graphics

     bugs:
         * level up issue

I'm also toying with increasing the resolution (it's 800x600 now, PC only).  

So, I'll take your thoughts, and if you'd like to give me stuff (like new graphics, sound files, or suggestions on variations on the game you'd like to see, or egads, BUGS) please post 'em here.

6 comments | Tags: games

Gas Hog
posted by Steve on February 1, 2008 @ 6:30PM

Man, I had no idea how much I really spend on gas for the car(s).  I just received my year end summary from the credit car I always use, and from April 30th of this past year to 12/31, I spent about $2300 on gas!  And that's only 2/3 of the year!  Holy crap!  Granted, gas prices haven't helped any....

5 comments | Tags: None

     
 
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