Comparative
Effectiveness Research: What It Means for You
By Carolyn M.
Clancy, M.D.
April 7, 2009
Anytime you get
news from your doctor, you’ll likely have three
immediate questions: what does this mean, what
should I do about it, and how will this affect
my life? Quality health care uses the best
available science to help you answer those
questions.
Say you’re a
55-year-old woman and your doctor tells you that
a test shows your bones are getting thinner,
known as decreased bone density. Your doctor
will give you all sorts of treatment options.
Should you take drugs? Start taking vitamin D
and calcium? Begin an exercise program? Or just
watch and wait?
Because health
care can be so varied and so personal, you
always have choices. But the seemingly
straightforward question - "What’s the best option
for me?" - can be a very difficult question to
answer. In health care, one size does not fit
all, and treatments that are good for one
patient aren’t necessarily good, or even safe,
for you.
It would be nice
if the best option for each individual patient
were always clear-cut, but the truth is it often
is not. That’s why we have a kind of scientific
research called
comparative effectiveness. This kind of
research, or evidence, compares how the
different treatments for specific conditions
have worked for others. It can also help you and
your doctor make the best decisions for you.
If you’re the
woman with thinning bones, you might have
osteoporosis - but not necessarily. There are
effective medicines you could take, but there is
limited information about how they work over the
long term. You could take calcium, but some
women develop kidney stones when they do.
Exercise is always good, but there are no
precise guidelines on how much you should
increase your physical activity. Many women with
low bone density never break a bone, so watching
and waiting may be a good option.
How do you decide
what to do?
This is the kind
of help that comparative effectiveness research
can provide. It’s the kind of research that
directly helps patients. (In fact, research on
thinning bones has already been published in a
consumer guide, which may be appropriate if
you’ve been diagnosed with osteoporosis.)
The good news is
that we’re about to do much more comparative
effectiveness research.
This type of
research has been in the news a lot lately. My
agency, the Agency for Health Care Research and
Quality (AHRQ), has been heading up comparative
effectiveness research for a long time through
its
Effective Health Care program. Now, the
Federal Government is stepping up funding for
this research. The
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009,
also known as the stimulus package, contains a
big investment into comparative effectiveness
research.
Why is this
research so important?
Because good
information is the key to good health care. Did
you know that once a new piece of scientific
evidence emerges as a medical advance, it takes
up to 17 years before doctors routinely
incorporate that information into how they
practice medicine?
One of the
reasons health care quality varies so much is
that sometimes doctors or nurses just don’t know
or follow the latest research. And, even when
they do keep up, often through extensive effort,
it is usually not possible to find valid
information that applies to the question at
hand. Modern medicine is highly advanced, but
the science does you no good if you don’t get
the right advice from your doctor or other
health care professionals.
It’s also
important to keep in mind what comparative
effectiveness doesn’t do. It does not make
policy or health care decisions for you. It does
not tell your doctor how to practice medicine.
And it does not make decisions about what kind
of treatments your insurer will pay for.
Instead,
comparative effectiveness research will help you
and your doctor determine what you should do to
treat or manage an illness. Medicine is
performed best when doctors and patients
together make choices based on the best
available information. That’s what comparative
effectiveness research does: it weighs the
evidence to help guide your decisions and
presents that information to you and your
doctors in a way you can use.
If you’ve
recently been diagnosed with a disease or
condition, please visit AHRQ’s Effective Health
Care program’s
consumer guides page to see if we’ve
published information that can help.
I’m Dr. Carolyn
Clancy, and that’s my advice on how to navigate
the health care system.
More Information
Agency
for Healthcare Research and Quality
Effective Health Care
Comparative Effectiveness Definition
http://effectivehealthcare.ahrq.gov/tools.cfm?tooltype=glossary&TermID=118
Agency
for Healthcare Research and Quality
Effective Health Care
Osteoporosis Treatments That Help Prevent
Broken Bones: A Guide for Women After Menopause
http://effectivehealthcare.ahrq.gov/healthInfo.cfm?infotype=sg&DocID=92&ProcessID=8
Agency
for Healthcare Research and Quality
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act,
Comparative Effectiveness Funding
http://www.ahrq.gov/fund/cefarra.htm
Agency
for Healthcare Research and Quality
Effective Health Care
Summary Guides
http://effectivehealthcare.ahrq.gov/healthInfo.cfm?infotype=sg#subListconsumer
Current as of April 2009
Internet Citation:
Comparative Effectiveness Research: What It
Means for You. Navigating the Health Care
System: Advice Columns from Dr. Carolyn Clancy,
April 7, 2009. Agency for Healthcare Research
and Quality, Rockville, MD. http://www.ahrq.gov/consumer/cc/cc040709.htm
|