Gwande explores widespread wasteful care
In his latest piece for The New Yorker, Atul Gwande, MD, addresses the high rate of wasteful medical care.
He cites a study on Medicare patients that found 25-42 percent in one year received at least one of 26 tests and treatments considered useless. In one day in his own practice, seven of eight patients had received unnecessary care.
While clearly a widespread problem, Gwande says physicians are far more concerned with doing too little than doing too much.
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