“It’s a 4.5 Liter engine with a 325 pound-foot torque, at 7400 rpm and a 3.81 displacement puts this car ahead of any other…”and
attention deficit took over. The backdrop of a car showroom and the voice of a
salesman is sweet harmony to imagination.
Yes, I wondered, we can certainly measure the volumetrics of
the car engine in precise detail. We can measure most anything on the planet
with exquisite precision.
From ancient time when
Eratosthenes was able to measure the circumference of the earth to within a few
stadia (plural for stadium), man has been on this quest to quantify then
qualify through measurement anything that exists on earth, from ether to the
rock of Gibraltar. Time has allowed us to gather more and more measuring tools.
From ancient times when the distance between the earth and the sun, aptly named
Astronomical Unit = approximately 93 million miles, took many failures of measurement
from Aristarchus to Kepler, finally it was Christiaan Huygens who determined
that it was equal to 24,000 earth radii, man’s quest to measure never wavered.
We came to find out that the Cesium radiation period determines that "The second is the duration of 9,192,631,770 periods
of the radiation corresponding to the transition between the two hyperfine
levels of the ground state of the caesium-133 atom." And using this information,
humans devised the Atomic clock. Time linearity was harnessed. Progress!
We can
measure the very large galaxies millions of light years away through
cosmological red shifts to the miniscule cellular interiors and thence to the
absurdly minute small atoms within, with tunneling microscopes. We can smash
protons and electrons together to reveal the approximate behavior of the “big
bang.” We can approximate the energy of the Higgs boson (the God Particle) at 125
GeV based on mathematical calculations after the smash. And Einstein who could imagine the Spooky entanglements mathematically decades ago was experimentally proven correct!
Satellites hover and tell us our positions within inches and we send a spacecraft hurtling past into into the interstellar space, named "Voyager." Human ingenuity is Amazing!
Image of Saturn surface from the Voyager
Satellites hover and tell us our positions within inches and we send a spacecraft hurtling past into into the interstellar space, named "Voyager." Human ingenuity is Amazing!
When it
comes to humans, measuring humans, we have been even more curious; the
developing fetus on a 3-dimensional sonogram lays out features of the baby
vividly and from birth starting with the APGAR score to the baby’s height and
weight to blood pressure and red cell volume, from intraocular pressure to
intra-arterial pressure, from the speed of electrical impulse generation in the
brain and its impact on the synapse to the beat generation from the Purkinjee
fibers to the myocardial cell contraction, almost everything is measured and
quantified. We measure salts, hormones, enzymes and other sediments including circulating tumor cells in the
blood. We tie behavior to psycho-neuro-chemicals in the brain. We measure the
change in ratios of various elements from health to disease. We check and check
and recheck to stay healthy. We graph circadian rhythms and everything from circulation in clogged arteries to emotional volatility, to cancer and throw them all in the
stress-me basket. Indeed we have arrived at our purgatory!
Today, however we have a seismic shift
in our thinking as we find a new pleasure in measuring the genes and their
mutations that cause loss or gain of genetic function. Some of us have come
to realize that genes are motivated by nature primarily and through nurture
secondarily in equal measure. We have learnt that miRNAs and methylation processes constantly
modulate gene function via external pressures. Oh yes, we can measure the human
milieu quite well. Essentially down to what makes us tick. We can outline functional
paths within our brain, the moment life begins and even have the audacity for perpetuating
a lack of responsibility, to subsume our behavior to the function of a gene code. We can map the brain yet remain searching for the elusive mind, just like we have the body but always are on the look out for the soul? Ah
yes, we are the Lewis and Clark muddling through the forests, not figuratively but metaphorically, of
digital 1s and 0s and calling it the new dawn!
And the
new sheriff in town wants to measure something else. His particular penchant is
trying to measure a different metric; the human emotion. He seems to think if
we can measure the happiness and quality of that happiness or sadness then we
would have measure of performance just like the 10 point numerical scale of
pain. Yet what he fails to recognize is the vice within the 10-point pain
scale. Is my 5 point pain as a stoic equal to your 5-point volatile emotional
pain? If the answer is yes then I guess the metric is valid. If the answer is
no then we better go barking up a different tree. What do you think? Where is
the threshold? Some qualifiers are definitely needed, “oh but that would make
it so difficult!” Whether we use the numerical scale or the Wong-Baker FACES
pain scale the answer would be the same. The thinking goes…if we can tie
emotions to a scale and the scale to value then we can tie cost to value and
voila, problem of costs in healthcare will be solved. The bureaucrats crackle
their knuckles as their salivary drools thicken. Does the smile mean happiness and does a frown mean anger, always?
Alas
even Kant at his most vulnerable in his hardened shell of the categorical
imperatives would have shied away from such acts of calumny. As I understand
Kant’s deontological ethical philosophy, he would believe that an action should
be judged by its implications, “Act only according to that maxim which you can
at the same time will as universal law.” Would such actions become the universal
law? But hey, forget those philosophical
fire-hoses of discretion. This is the brave new world, where anything goes just
to “feel good,” or be in the act of “thinking of doing good,” or be involved in
the “public good” business. There is no withholding
any assistance from the passions but allowing them to promulgate thoughts and
those thoughts into actions that hold hostage an entire society. The
hypothetical imperatives have now become the categorical imperatives.
The world has changed stupid, get with the program!
The world has changed stupid, get with the program!
https://youtu.be/xwOCmJevigw
Similarly
quality of a human state is a difficult measure. The moment to moment emotional
energies that crackle through the brain change the internal and external
emotions of the human being. I feel good and the thought of a lost friend kills
that feeling. I feel sad and the thought of winning a prize elates me.
Measuring such volatility and using that as the parameter of success is
tantamount to, perhaps foolhardiness? Must we then ask for everything that is
going on in the brain and the mindfulness on a momentary basis? Mustn't we? Or can we compartmentalize, as the experts do writing lengthy treatises?
If value
was being judged by a single individual who also happens to have her emotional
cake to bake in the measurement, well then all bets should be off. Wouldn't you agree? The
multivariate of the "measured" and the "measurer" would be in play and confound answers on
a large scale. Yet to a mind indulged with the liquor of metrics none of that matters. Reality is that the "measurer" would have to have their emotive moment to moment
state of being, assessed and recorded in parallel too! Maybe the human being is
a mathematical model, with limbs tied to the Golden Ratio n’ all and as such
can and should be measured for functional efficiency that could be the surrogate to a form of well being? If that's possible?
Speaking
of functional efficiency, productivity is one measure that can be allocated to
the value of good health, but therein lie the specter of employment,
entitlement, vacation time and desire. “I am well,” suddenly takes on a different meaning in
different circumstance as does “I am not feeling well.” Speaking from the dais
and pontificating the virtues of life before 75 years of age is all well and
good, but don’t these high minded priests and priestesses remember what “Said a
blade of grass?” Functional efficiency is now indeed rooted in a foul jar of expertise!
So what
do we do?
How do
we measure a human being’s quality? Or for that matter, how do we measure a
physician’s work in helping his/her fellow man/woman survive through illness and gain that quality?
Oh that one is easy. If the illness is appendicitis, an uncomplicated appendectomy
is the answer, unless of course an anomalous artery is nearby or a co-morbid state decides to exert its influence. If it is pneumonia then an antibiotic is mostly curative, unless you develop an allergy to the antibiotic. After all we are all human beings made to order under precise sets of rules and creative force. Aren't we? But
what if it is an incurable chronic ailment like diabetes or arthritis or
cancer? Is cure the measure? If it is, the best professors in the ivory towers
would fail the test. Wouldn't they? They would never admit it though. But let’s
just keep that to ourselves.
Scoring
value is a difficult thing. A patient recovering from an illness dealt with the
news of hospital stay costs would necessarily be disheartened and score low on
the “Happy Quality Scale.” Meanwhile a terminally ill patient might have found
peace in his or her wretched state and score high. How would that impact the score?
A non-compliant patient due to medication cost or lack of access would not be
too happy with the world. A compliant patient with dwindling resources would
equally not give a smile willingly.
So we
arrive at this conundrum of lunacy created by a confederacy of some "very
intelligent thinkers” that everything from spit to pee and blood to tears is measurable,
hence so should the real quality of emotion. And measuring emotions has value
and value is therefore quality and quality can be paid in dollars.
The "turfing" war is about to begin in earnest among well-intentioned physicians!
The "turfing" war is about to begin in earnest among well-intentioned physicians!
Therefore
if we weight the sampling errors appropriately and place alphas and betas in
the equations we would arrive at a formula that will guide the value of therapy
as benefit to the patient. Further derivation from that would justify the
appropriate reimbursement to the hapless physician. Are there Avogadro's constant or Plank's constants for human beings that can be fitted into our equation to gain that subtle but elusive inference? Not yet! Although the reactive heuristic makes us act as if we do, by latching on to the Confidence Coefficient of 1.96 and with that and the statistical jargon we attempt to prove our hypotheses time and time again, forgetting what the Nobel Laureate Philip Anderson said, "Many good scientist instinctively distrust a measurement which is always on the ragged edge of "statistical significance" and have learned to be very skeptical of marginal statistics."
The new HR-2 MACRA Bill soon to be signed into law, quantifies such actions and emotions- should anyone
care to understand, will do the following: Derive risk adjustment calculations,
Quality and Outcome metrics, case management, resource use monitoring,
interoperability of the EHRs, establish data registries, develop practice
assessment checklists, determine the operability of the physician NPIs and
their ability to prescribe…and on and on and on, you get the message! Happy navigating the tall
grass…
“So the
monthly lease on that would be…” I was all ears!
Great post.
ReplyDeleteIf you haven't seen it you might enjoy the McCloskey article I link to here: http://wbonds.blogspot.com/2013/11/the-pursuit-of-happiness.html?m=1