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"No one can in five, or even in fifty, years learn
all that one could wish about disease and its prevention and treatment. You have to go on learning all your lives, and, a healthy state of
ignorance is a saving grace." So said a Dr Andrews a hundred years
ago when welcoming new medical students (p 953). Ignorance is bliss,
and economists, practitioners of the dismal science, have a notion of
"rational ignorance." It would be wholly irrational to try to learn
everything, yet doctors seem to be prone to the disease of pretending
to know more than they do. Nothing could be worse for learning, not
least because much of what we "know" is wrong.
Thus it is widely known that you need to request electroencephalography
(EEG) in a patient with "funny turns" in order to prove or exclude
epilepsy. In fact such an investigation is more likely to mislead than
help and may give rise to a wrong diagnosis of epilepsy. A group from
Liverpool audited over 400 requests for EEG and decided that over half
were inappropriate (p 954). Feedback, education, and guidelines
reduced the overall number of requests but still a third were
inappropriate. Misconceptions, particularly those inculcated at medical
school, go deep: unlearning may be harder than learning.
Iain Chalmers describes how he learnt as a young doctor from Dr
Spock's famous book Baby and Childcare that babies should not sleep on their backs Or consider what gauge needle you should use to perform a lumbar
puncture. Most of us were taught, as Susannah Baron describes (p 994),
to use a 20 gauge needle, but anaesthetists know (and are supported by
evidence from trials) that using a finer gauge, atraumatic needle is
simpler, quicker, more effective, and less likely to cause headache.
This knowledge unfortunately has not spread far beyond anaesthetists,
as Baron has learnt when being given intrathecal injections to treat
her non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.
Some things that the world would expect doctors to know they
simply don't know. Surely, the world must think, doctors know whether
to use antibiotics when treating acute bronchitis. After all, doctors
all over the world have been treating tens of millions of cases every
year for decades. How could the answer to such a simple question not be
known? But it isn't, as an editorial makes clear, despite four
systematic reviews (p 939). The problem, the authors suggest, is that
the trials have not been clear about which patients have been treated,
particularly whether they have any pneumonia. We remain ignorant and in
a state of grace.
to avoid choking on vomit and flattening their heads (p 998). "We now know," writes Chalmers, "that the advice . . . led to thousands, if not tens of
thousands, of avoidable cot deaths."
Footnotes
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Read all Rapid Responses
Israeli students are refusing to perform intimate examinations on anaesthetised women without their informed consent.