“There is a kind of gaping admiration that would fain roll Shakespeare and Bacon into one, to have a bigger thing to gape at; and a class of men who cannot edit one author without disparaging all others.” ― Robert Louis Stevenson
There is an underlying art in the
subjectivity of things colored by the choreography within the mind. Humans such
as us have this innate power to put things into numbered or lettered
“cubbyholes,” -all things beginning with C should be put in the “C” box and
this makes retrieval simple. Ah but therein lies the conditional fallacy of the
informal kind.
Let us go where our sophisticated
angels fear to tread…
I heard this comment from the podium, “Doctors and Pilots work in the same sphere -of safety,
hence they must follow similar practices of education and knowledge improvement
on a consistent basis.” On the face of it, it seems quite
innocuous and gleaming with factual radiance. But let us look at the basis of
this comparison. The pilot works with objects, such as, ailerons or flaps and
slats, governed by mechanical arms hoisted to the digital framework of
“fly-by-wire” modern aircraft, that make the aircraft fly. A host of digital
gremlins can damage the signal to noise ratio and cripple the aircraft, and the
only occurrence from such misbehavior is the non-functioning ailerons, flaps
and slats. End-result is always the same… a disabled aircraft in need of the
pilot’s decision-making process of where to land safely. An Airline Pilot’s
six-monthly retraining process is to make sure that the pilot can recognize the
fault while in a simulator and make appropriate decisions when faced with such
an emergency. The decision to land is mostly a judgement call based on location
of the aircraft when disabled, the altitude and its speed. Two real life cases
show the human ingenuity of thought. The 1989 Sioux City United Airlines Flight
#232 crash is a case in point where human intervention saved 166 lives. The
DC10 had lost all hydraulics and hence the ailerons, flaps and slat functions
required to change angle of bank and slow down the aircraft respectively.
Before and following the event 55 test pilot simulator mock training scenario
was not able to do what Captains Al Haynes and Denny Fitch were able to, save
lives.
Decision making is an experiential
learned process, one that cannot be learned by rote. It takes many years of
experience to reach such a level of understanding, as evidenced in the Hudson
River crash of the US Airways 1549. The decision to ditch into the Hudson River
was memorialized in a movie “Sully” as a heroic decision. How we frame our
musings to some extent depends upon our experiences. Ah but for that “ghost in
the machine” that keeps us steady, the world would devolve into chaos. As Penfield
mused, “There is no good evidence, in spite of new
methods, that the brain alone can carry out the work that the mind does.”
It appears that information, knowledge
and understanding are three very different things that should not be conflated.
Right?
Medical care differs a bit. Although some silly people might push the equitability a bit by saying that the heart is like the aircraft engine and blood is the fuel but they forget that the engine is driven by fuel regulator for thrust but the heart is driven by many more things; emotions, fear, anger, anxiety, stress, flight and joy. Id like to see an aircraft flying on such emotions, wouldn't you? There is more to a heart than meets the fan blades of a jet engine. Conflation? you bet!
Medical care differs a bit. Although some silly people might push the equitability a bit by saying that the heart is like the aircraft engine and blood is the fuel but they forget that the engine is driven by fuel regulator for thrust but the heart is driven by many more things; emotions, fear, anger, anxiety, stress, flight and joy. Id like to see an aircraft flying on such emotions, wouldn't you? There is more to a heart than meets the fan blades of a jet engine. Conflation? you bet!
Physicians are dogged with information
overload in this digital universe. It is important to distinguish the signal
from the noise and it appears that only experience is the validator. Attempts
at equating tests and retests as proposed by the ABIM/ABMS and the well-meaning
quasi intellectual authorities functioning as private entities who tout the
benefits of physicians running through the maze of their well-crafted expensive
tests, have not and cannot prove the benefit to the physicians or their
patients. Yet the inflationary conflation continues unabated and physicians are
forced via fiat to comply with meaninglessness.
An experienced physician understands as
he or she diligently tries to decipher the pathophysiology behind the ailment
and then offers the best salve. Some time he might choose a drug Y when X is
called for by statistical methodology, or even drug Z. His wisdom and
experience are, the result of many IBM Watson’s functioning in parallel modes
with petabytes of CPU power, unequalled.
Two equally disparate categorical
inputs that seem to be conflated are the terms “Value” and “Metrics.” What has
value to do with metrics. Simple as any statistician worth his “variable bias”
will tell you that if one weights “value” numerically, then value becomes an
easy tool to determine “benefit.” Ah, and therein lies the obfuscation. Who
determines the weight of the underlying value? That question is answered by the
experts, taking a sample of the population in 100s or even 1000s and then
inflating the results to meet the expectations of the 1,000,000s. And there
lies the ruminants of the inverse relationship of population medicine and
individual care. Determine what treatment works in a simple majority of a few
hundred or a few thousand and equate that treatment as the de-facto therapy for
the individual across a population of 7 billion+. Some may respond, and the
treatment is hailed as a success. Some wont, but the policy die are cast and
there is an impossibility in going back, especially when reimbursements are
predicated on the boxes checked and “T”s crossed.
A book called “Made to Stick” is an
interesting volume to read. It carefully punches the right code to pluck the
heart strings of the mental construct. Our arguments are based on inference and
analogy from mathematical and statistical fields into subjective domain. An
anecdote is used to bring to bear the entire burden of a constricting mandate.
A limited number of people’s dietary needs are conflated with health and thence
inflated to represent the whole society forcing a policy enactment which
ultimately harms the millions… The Food Pyramid is a classic example of such wrongheaded
behavioral mandates. The 60% Carbohydrate need per day has resulted in Obesity
the world over and cost billions if not trillions of dollars in healthcare
costs. Yet we don’t hear about that, since the pyramid is now a “plate.” The
art form of such conflated attributes has been perfected to a science where art
and science live in the same sphere cobbled together by data-scientists whose
very job depends on this burgeoning volume of useless rhetoric.
Might I suggest that we allow a smidgen
of thought, a grain of truth, a tincture of critical thinking in our youth so
they may address this ensuing societal debacle. Wonder if Shakespeare would
have changed his statement to “Kill all the Lawyers, epidemiologists and
Statisticians,” if he had known of their existence?
Although the list of subjects in the
conflation bucket are overwhelmingly beyond the reach of a short post, I must
mention the endless conflation of correlation with causation. That one takes
the cake, so to speak. The epidemiologists have found a new religion and have
added thousands if not millions into their enclave to figure out how to use the
“p-values,” “T-tests” and other statistical fiats to promote this
conflation-riddled “correlation is equal to causation” agenda driving science
and reason into a dark place, where even Darth Vader would fear to tread.
“But all the colors mix
together - to grey. And it breaks her heart. How she wishes it was
different.” –
Dave Matthews Band
Alas, I am, but a single voice.