Using the wealth
of knowledge that has accumulated in every field of medicine, physicians
are now better equipped than ever before to serve patients. Yet even though
sets of medical standards called clinical practice guidelines have been
developed by experts in each specialty and sub-specialty of medicine, a
study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association
(Vol. 282, No. 15) found the guidelines are not always used.
Researchers from the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and the Johns
Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health in Baltimore, Md., found that,
in some cases, guidelines were not used because doctors were unfamiliar
with them, did not agree with them, or were not sure they could apply them
well to patients. In other cases, doctors were not sure a particular guideline
would yield the desired results. The study also cited doctors' perceptions
of inconvenience and a lack of staff, facilities, or time as reasons for
failing to follow guidelines.
For cancer patients, guidelines are of great value
The study has prompted leaders in the cancer field to emphasize the
high value of guidelines to patients. "Recognized, accepted guidelines
are expert distillations of years of hospital tumor board records, experienced
doctors' expertise, and the latest scientific clinical studies," said Harmon
Eyre, MD, executive vice president for research and medical affairs for
the American Cancer Society (ACS).
"They're the procedures that have been shown to most often produce the
best outcome for patients in specific situations. We believe cancer therapy
doctors have the obligation to be aware of cancer practice guidelines,
to choose the most appropriate ones, and to try to adhere to them," he
added.
The ACS and the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN), a group
of 17 top cancer centers in the US, plan a continued push for increased
use of guidelines. NCCN plans to seek more collaboration among specialist
doctors to achieve consensus where disagreement on specific guidelines
exists.
Barriers should be removed
In addition, other barriers to the use of guidelines should be removed,
such as time and convenience issues in prevention and early detection,
said Dr. Eyre. "We can prevent a lot of cancers if we can find incentives
for nurses in doctors offices to identify smokers so that the doctors can
offer smoking cessation counseling at every visit. And if nurses routinely
prepare women for a clinical breast exam once a year -- providing counseling
on necessity and a gown so that the doctor's time is used well and inconvenience
is minimized -- use of that early detection guideline can result in huge
savings of lives and dollars."
Dr. Eyre envisions a future in which patients and insurers are informed
about which doctors and facilities are getting better results from wider
use of cancer treatment guidelines. "As a nation, right now we're not effectively
collecting data on which institutions and doctors are using the guidelines
most consistently. We should be. It means better outcomes," he said.
The NCCN has begun a pilot program at several of its cancer centers
in which it is collecting that kind of data and getting feedback to patients,
doctors, and even insurers, which should result in greater demand for adherence
to the guidelines, according to William T. McGivney, PhD, chief executive
officer of NCCN. "As more patients learn that the guidelines mean better
outcomes for them, demand for treatment following approved guidelines increases,"
he said. "And insurers realize that money is expended efficiently when
the best treatment is offered first."
Easy-to-understand guidelines for patients
ACS recently began translating NCCN's professional practice guidelines
for cancer into easily understandable language and making them available
free of charge to patients. Guidelines for treatment of breast cancer and
prostate cancer are available at both the ACS and NCCN web sites or by
calling 1-800-ACS-2345 or 1-888-909-NCCN.
ACS News Center stories are provided as a source of cancer-related
news and are not intended to be used as
press releases.
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