Title: The Impact of Evidence Based Medicine on Health Disparities
1The Impact of Evidence Based Medicine on Health
Disparities
- Karen A. Vicari, JD
- Executive Director, Alliance for Better Medicine
2Good Evidence Based Medicine
- The integration of best research evidence with
clinical expertise and patient values. - David Sackett, et al. Evidence-Based Medicine
How to Practice and Teach EBM (New York
Churchill Livingstone, 2000)
3- The Best Research Evidence
-
- Clinical Expertise
-
- Patient Values
- Good Evidence Based Medicine
4Why do we need appropriate evidence based
medicine?
5Evidence can be a good thing
6The promise of EBM
- Done well, EBM
- Reduces inappropriate variation in care
- Can lower overall treatment costs
- Can improve patient outcomes
- Can reduce health disparities
7Cost-Cutting EBM
- The Best Research Evidence
-
- Clinical Expertise
-
- Patient Values
- Good Evidence Based Medicine
8Examples of cost-cutting EBM
- Rigidly applied treatment guidelines
- Step therapy protocols
- Tiered co-payments
- Formulary restrictions
9- Cost-cutting EBM doesnt allow for
- The clinicians expertise
- Patient values
- Individual patient differences
- Race
- Ethnicity
- Gender
- Co-occurring disorders
- Tolerance and preference issues
10(No Transcript)
11ExamplePatient
- Atypical Rheumatoid Arthritis Patient
- In 2001 (before insurers guidelines?) was told
to take a new, expensive drug for a very serious
disease - Patient, not feeling too bad, decided to try an
older, cheaper medication - In 2003, arthritis worsens and patient goes back
to the same doctor for the newer medication - Doctor says condition not serious enough
- Condition worsens until patient is disabled in
2005
12Patient (contd)
- Doctor says patient cant use the new medication
because patient doesnt meet the insurers
guidelines. - Advice to patient Keep your chin up and get
used to the pain. - Patient switches doctors. New doctor agrees that
patient does not meet the insurers guidelines,
but agrees that since patient is disabled, its
worth a try.
13- Cost-cutting EBM, or rigidly applied EBM
threatens individualized patient care - Cost-cutting EBM disproportionately impacts
people from different racial and ethnic groups
and patients with multiple co-occurring disorders
14Healthcare Disparities
- According to the National Healthcare Disparities
Report - Disparities related to race, ethnicity, and
socioeconomic status still pervade the American
healthcare system. - Healthcare Disparities exist within many
subpopulations including women, children,
elderly, residents of rural areas, and
individuals with disabilities and other special
health care needs.
15Cost-cutting EBM
- The Best Research Evidence
-
- Clinical Expertise
-
- Patient Values
- Good Evidence Based Medicine
16Oregon Drug Effectiveness Review Project
- Created to control Oregons Medicaid costs
- Has become a standard of cost-cutting EBM
- Similar processes are being followed by other
payers, including insurance companies and
Medicaid agencies
17Methodology of DERP (Oregon EBM)
- Choose 3-4 key questions
- Normally limited to the comparative safety and
effectiveness of drugs in a class - Rate the quality of available studies
- leads to the elimination of many studies
- Most included studies are RCTs
- Perform a systematic review of the best
evidence - Write a long report summarizing the available
evidence (300-800pp each report)
18- Standard Oregon Key Questions
- Do the drugs in the class differ in comparative
effectiveness, safety or adverse events? - Are there subgroups of patients (racial groups,
gender, or co-occurring disorders) for whom one
drug is more effective or associated with fewer
adverse events? - These questions are too limited to result in a
meaningful drug comparison - Dont look at tolerance and adherence
- Very little evidence exists about subpopulations
19Randomized Controlled Trials
- Considered to be the most reliable form of
evidence to determine efficacy - RCTs are expensive and most often done by drug
companies to pass FDA approval - Reliable because the populations included in
the trials are highly controlled - Trial participants are mostly white, young and
healthy - People typically subject to health disparities
are not adequately represented in RCTs
20Efficacy vs. Effectiveness
- Efficacy
- Whether a drug has the potential to treat a
specific problem. - Effectiveness
- Whether a drug actually works for a particular
patient to treat a specific problem. - Oregons reports determine simple efficacy, and
based upon this they conclude that all drugs in a
class are equal in their effectiveness.
21Example Efficacy
- Drug A Works on 60 of the population
- Drug B Works on 60 of the population
- Oregon will conclude or imply that the drugs are
equal and therefore interchangeable. - And, indeed, the 2 drugs are equally efficacious,
but not interchangeable. - This data tells us nothing about which
individuals will respond best to each medication.
22What the Oregon reviews dont tell us
- Drug A 3/day for 2wks refrigerated antibiotic
- Drug B 1/day for 1 week antibiotic
- Or
- Drug A Antihistamine which takes 2 days to work
- Drug B Antihistamine which starts working
immediately - The drugs are equally efficacious, but in the
real world, Drug B will probably produce the best
outcomes
23Examples of known variations in response to
medication by racial and ethnic subpopulations
- Puerto Ricans with asthma have significantly
lower responsiveness to bronchodilators than
Mexicans - 12-23 of Asians are genetically poor
metabolizers of diazepam, imipramine, and several
other drugs - Mexican Americans tend to metabolize certain
drugs quickly, where Caribbean Hispanic
populations (Dominicans and Puerto Ricans)
metabolize the same drugs slowly (including
cardiovascular drugs and psychotropic agents).
24Summary
- Cost-cutting EBM uses systematic reviews of RCTs
to determine broad efficacy - This type of process does not give information
about which treatment will be most effective for
a particular individual - Because of reliance on RCTs, this type of
process does not include adequate information
about subpopulations, including racial and ethnic
groups, children, elderly and those with
co-occurring disorders
25Populations subject to health disparities are
impacted by EBM
- Racial/ethnic differences in response to
medication not evident by RCTs - Language barriers
- Health Literacy barriers
- Cultural barriers
- Lower cost insurances will be more restrictive
26Current users of cost-cutting EBM
- Insurance Companies
- Oregon Drug Effectiveness Review Project
- Consumers Union Best Buy Drugs Program
- Pay for Performance programs
- Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ
drug reviews)
27What can advocates do?
- Understand the concerns
- Educate others
- Make the patient voice heard (loud and clear)
- Join coalitions
28Key Messages
- EBM cannot be applied too rigidlyit must allow
for the patient and physician to make the final
treatment decisions - Comparative effectiveness reviews dont tell us
much of value - Outcomes data and other real world data are
necessary to determine which patient will benefit
from which drug
29- Alliance for Better Medicine
- 1127 11th Street, Suite 925
- Sacramento, CA 95814
- Karen Vicari, Executive Director
- (916) 557-1167
- kvicari_at_sbcglobal.net