Skip to main content

Why a person might or might not want their health care to resemble a meal at The Cheesecake Factory--a response to Atul Gawande

When I drive down a street and see only national chain restaurants and retail stores, I am sad. Can we do no better than this, to make everything the same, supporting certain foods, certain products at the expense of the tremendous variety of such things that exist?

Atul Gawande just wrote a very compelling article in which he explored the chain restaurant The Cheesecake Factory as a model or metaphor for good health care.  He not only ate there, but toured the facility and observed the processes that allow this huge place to provide food that is interesting, delicious and affordable. His main thesis is that an industry that standardizes excellent practices can provide high quality care, and that it is not unthinkable that medicine could be substantially improved by adopting such a model. He also looked at some excellent hospitals that have begun to standardize such things as patient care in the ICU and total knee replacements.

There are many things that, through scientific inquiry, are known to be VERY GOOD IDEAS. Things like preventing blood clots in the legs with certain medications, elevating the head of the bed of patients on ventilators to prevent pneumonia, handling central venous catheters in such a way as to avoid catheter infections can save lives and should be done routinely. There are certain practices that are agreed to be "best practices" by either evidence or expert opinion, such things as maintaining quiet in patient care areas, numbing up arterial puncture sites, preserving normal sleep wake cycles, which significantly improve quality of care for patients. Both inpatient and outpatient medicine are positively crawling with "best practices."

Surgery is a field that is absolutely ripe for protocol driven procedures, because so many things can go wrong when a person is anesthetized and cut open, and so many things must be remembered and performed perfectly and quickly. Atul Gawande is a surgeon. His checklists (see his book, The Checklist Manifesto) seek to make the multiple complexities of practicing medicine and surgery easier to navigate.

The Cheesecake Factory is a fully realized real world example of well performed standardized processes, and therefore more delicious even than checklists. I am often frustrated as I watch, via medical charts, the variety of inattentive and thoughtless medicine that passes for OK in hospitals and clinics. It would be really nice if everybody knew and could practice in a way that actually made sense when there is really believable evidence to support these processes. In addition, I often find myself functioning at the very edge of my abilities due to the complex coordination of what seems to be nearly infinite data in the setting of real patients actually getting super sick and flirting with death. In these situations I long for processes that make it easy for me to be smart or impossible for me to be very stupid. I look for computers to help me focus on the important information and remind me when I forget something that needs to be done. I look for nurses to pay attention to things that were, at some point in the past, the private realm of doctors, such as tests and medication interactions and recommended prevention strategies.

But I don't want medical care to resemble a meal at the Cheesecake factory, though I hear the salmon is delicious.

Much of medicine is practiced on people who are as different from each other and as individual as snowflakes. My patients are never the same as one another, and the problems and stories they bring me require of me a different responses based on so very many things. A patient might come in with a numb toe, having recently split from her husband, with a lump in her throat. Or he might come in with "heartburn" and Asperger's syndrome and a notable suspicion of the medical profession. Not only are the possible diagnoses for each of these people myriad, so are the ways I might start to investigate them and the ways I might treat them while waiting for more data. These are the real patients who are difficult to treat with "evidence based medicine" since nobody ever did a study on them looking at what worked and what did not, because each one is unique.

When a physician is encouraged to use protocols and pathways in treating patients, he or she is tempted to force patients into artificial categories which lead to these protocols. Patients know when this is happening and they feel like herd animals, and they experience not being listened to. And yet I am not against pathways and protocols in general since they can help us avoid some egregious mistakes and obscene waste. The trick, I think, is to avoid being too impressed with The Cheesecake Factory, to use protocols in situations where they really are indicated and to preserve a sense of creativity and curiosity when faced with real people with really interesting problems.

Comments

BarbaraW said…
As with everything else in life what's needed is balance, achieving the golden mean between too much and too little, but sadly very seldom does the "needle" come to rest in the middle, it is always swinging from one extreme to the other.

Popular posts from this blog

How to make your own ultrasound gel (which is also sterile and edible and environmentally friendly) **UPDATED--NEW RECIPE**

I have been doing lots of bedside ultrasound lately and realized how useful it would be in areas far off the beaten track like Haiti, for instance. With a bedside ultrasound (mine fits in my pocket) I could diagnose heart disease, kidney and gallbladder problems, various cancers as well as lung and intestinal diseases. Then I realized that I would have to take a whole bunch of ultrasound gel with me which would mean that I would have to check luggage, which is a real pain when traveling light to a place where luggage disappears. I heard that you can use water, or spit, in a pinch, or even lotion, though oil based coupling media apparently break down the surface of the transducer. Or, of course, you can just use ultrasound gel. Ultrasound requires an aqueous interface between the transducer and the skin or else all you see is black. Ultrasound gel is a clear goo, looks like hair gel or aloe vera, and is made by several companies out of various combinations of propylene glycol, glyce...

Ivermectin for Covid--Does it work? We don't know.

  Lately there has been quite a heated controversy about whether to use ivermectin for Covid-19.  The FDA , a US federal agency responsible for providing unbiased information to protect people from harmful drugs, foods, even tobacco products, has said that there is not good evidence of ivermectin's safety and effectiveness in treating Covid 19, and that just about sums up what we truly know about ivermectin in the context of Covid. The CDC, Centers for Disease Control, a branch of the department of Health and Human Services, tasked with preventing and treating disease and injury, also recently warned  people not to use ivermectin to treat Covid outside of actual clinical trials. Certain highly qualified physicians, including ones who practice critical care medicine and manage many patients with severe Covid infections in the intensive care unit vocally support the use of ivermectin to treat Covid and have published dosing schedules and reviews of the literature supporting...

Actinic Keratoses and Carac (fluorouracil) cream: why is this so expensive?

First, a disclaimer: I don't know why Carac (0.5% flourouracil cream) is so expensive. I will speculate, though, at the very end of this blog. Sun and the skin: what happens If a person reaches a certain age, has very little pigment in her skin, and has spent lots of time in the sun, bad stuff happens. The ultraviolet radiation of the sun does all kinds of great things: it makes us happy, causes us to synthesize vitamin D which strengthens our bones and it gives us this healthy glow until we get old and wrinkled and leathery. And even that can be charming. The skin cells put up with this remarkably well for a long time, partly aided by melanin pigment which absorbs the radiation, which is why we tan and freckle, if we are fair skinned. Eventually, though, we absorb enough radiation that it injures the skin and produces cells which multiply oddly. It also damages the skin's elasticity which creates wrinkles. The cells which reproduce in odd ways peel, creating dry skin or...