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Overtreated: Why Too Much Medicine Is Making Us Sicker and Poorer

por Shannon Brownlee

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A critique of the modern-day American health-care system looks at the potential consequences of overtreatment, revealing how modern medicine provides huge amounts of unnecessary care that is wasteful, expensive, and dangerous to the health of patients.
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I don't disagree with everything Brownlee says, and certain points are valid. However, I dislike her writing. I find it over-sensationalized, and I can't even get through the first few chapters. Maybe it gets better, but right now, I just don't have the patience for it. This is quite pathetic given that the book is only 300 pages. I think I would have preferred to read this in an academic journal with more substance. ( )
  tyk314 | Jan 22, 2024 |
I don't disagree with everything Brownlee says, and certain points are valid. However, I dislike her writing. I find it over-sensationalized, and I can't even get through the first few chapters. Maybe it gets better, but right now, I just don't have the patience for it. This is quite pathetic given that the book is only 300 pages. I think I would have preferred to read this in an academic journal with more substance. ( )
  tyk314 | Jan 22, 2024 |
Conglomeration of thoughts:

Perhaps socialized medicine, not "Medicare for all," but medicine, care, insurance strictly regulated might be the answer. Her arguments for the VA system seem to be solid. But they, the VA, do seem to have some drawbacks.

This book was published before Obamacare/ACA was created, put into being, etc. I wonder what, if anything, the writer would change with that law in place.

If the problems with American Healthcare were visualized, it would be as follows:
Physicians, Insurance, Patients, Hospitals, Laws & Lawyers, Pharmaceutical Companies... all pointing fingers at each other but, in reality, all responsible for a portion of the issue (and some of them very well-meaning).

Intermountain Healthcare was touted as one of the better companies/hospitals. If that is true either a) something has changed in the last eight or so years or b) other hospitals are pretty terrible. ( )
  OutOfTheBestBooks | Sep 24, 2021 |
Shannon Brownlee knows why healthcare costs so much: poor top-down public policy that provides all the wrong incentives to everyone involved in dispensing it. She also knows the solution: top-down public policy that will force everyone to do the right thing. She gives great examples of over-treatment: fancy equipment and tests that really don’t help long-term survival rates, expensive procedures that upon closer examination don’t work, and of course the relentless pursuit of profit among Big Pharma and other Evil Capitalists. She promotes as a model healthcare system, the Veterans Administration, which scored well on all the metrics she promoted when this book was written (2007) but of course was later turned upside down when it emerged that the top officials were lying.

This is an example of a book that does not withstand the test of time. Sure, as a lesson for what happens when top-down policy makers run an entire industry like healthcare, this is an sobering case study, but don’t look here hoping for creative solutions. Brownlee’s only solution seems to be “more of the same, only be smarter about it.” ( )
  richardSprague | Mar 22, 2020 |
I had been looking for something to help me better understand the health care debate and how we got to where we are now. This book, which my book club chose to read, did it for me. ( )
  nmele | Apr 6, 2013 |
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A critique of the modern-day American health-care system looks at the potential consequences of overtreatment, revealing how modern medicine provides huge amounts of unnecessary care that is wasteful, expensive, and dangerous to the health of patients.

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