An eminent physician has tentatively proposed that published
treatment guidelines be accompanied by dissenting expert opinions, much like
the U.S. Supreme Court does. Daniel Musher, MD, of Baylor College of Medicine,
served on the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practice of the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, which considered guidelines for a dual vaccine
approach for pneumococcal vaccination for adults.
He disagreed strongly with the published recommendation, but
was prevented from publishing his opinion alongside the recommendation. Dr.
Musher believes
the publishing of dissenting opinions is very valuable to the progress of
knowledge:
As citizens of the United States,
we are as much bound by a 5-4 decision of the High Court as a 9-0 vote
(although closely passed decisions are more likely to be overturned in future
cases).1 Similarly, as
practitioners of medicine, until new guidelines are written, we are seriously
constrained by, if not actually bound by, existing ones, without regard to the
unanimity of opinion in the recommending committee. Nevertheless, there is much
to gain from studying dissenting opinions, as was famously shown by the
writings of Justices Holmes and Brandeis, many of whose minority opinions, in
time, became the law of the land.2 I
propose that the failure to publish differing or dissenting views in medical
guidelines presents our profession with an inappropriately monolithic view—one
that is studied as gospel by physicians-in-training and forced on practitioners
by incorporation into a variety of performance measures.
This seems very reasonable, especially in a time when expert
guidelines determine the flow of billions of tax dollars and access to
treatment. There was a lot of controversy circa 2009 and 2010, when the
Affordable Care Act was passed, about whether women in their 40s would get
“free” mammograms every year.
In 2009, the US Preventive Services Task Force issued
guidelines recommending annual mammograms for women starting at 50 years, not
40 (as previously recommended). Needless to say, this upset many people. The
American Cancer Society maintained its recommendation that preventive screening
start at 40, as did the Mayo
Clinic. Politicians took note, and made an exception in Obamacare for
mammograms, such that the 2009 USPSTF revision was ignored when it came to
Obamacare’s “free” preventive care. (In January 2016, USPTF maintained
is recommendation.)
We are entering a period when access to care will be
centrally determined by political appointees who project an inappropriate
degree of certainty when they issue their guidelines. They could at least allow
dissenting experts the right be heard.
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