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LA Times Sunday

 

Let's get less physical

The yearly checkup is reassuring -- but unnecessary. To make it matter, doctors

and

patients must talk.

 

By Sara Solovitch, Special to The Times

 

SITTING in a cold, sterile room in a blue paper dress, you tell yourself you're

taking care of

business. That's when the doctor listens to your heart and lungs, hits the knees

with a

mallet, shines a flashlight into eyes, nose and mouth ¡ª and pronounces you fit

as a fiddle.

Ready to go for another year.

 

Don't kid yourself. Study after study has found that the annual physical exam is

almost

worthless, a medical anachronism that should be buried alongside the iron lung

and

mercurochrome. Doctors admit they rarely detect anything by listening to the

heart and

lungs of a healthy adult, and when they do, the results are usually spurious.

Ditto for

blood work.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Even routine prostate and manual breast exams have been discounted as poor

detectors of

cancer, leading some experts to suggest, only half-jokingly, that there is

hardly any

reason for a healthy, symptom-free man or woman to ever again disrobe in a

doctor's

office.

 

Yet the routine annual physical will not go gently into that good night. Most

primary care

physicians continue to perform it, and a study published last June in the

Archives of

Internal Medicine found widespread resistance ¡ª on the part of both patients

and doctors

¡ª to new guidelines that recommend more selective screening based on personal

and

family history.

 

" Most of us haven't had the guts to get rid of it, " says Dr. Fred Heidrich, a

physician at

Group Health Cooperative in Seattle and clinical professor at the University of

Washington.

 

Though this is not, as Heidrich adds, just a matter of guts. Many doctors and

patients see

something inherently valuable to these annual meet-and-greets, a benefit not

easily

measured by a study. The yearly physical is a chance to forge a bond, to talk

about habits

and mood and get a patient to make important lifestyle changes. It's a chance,

in these

days of rushed office visits, for patients to get some hard-to-come-by attention

that

makes them, quite simply, feel better.

 

Out of this debate, a more useful annual exam is taking shape. Instead of

offering blood

work and palpation to all comers, it provides something more pragmatic:

discussion.

About smoking, alcohol consumption, depression, eating habits, exercise, safe

sex, even

driving with seat belts.

 

The challenge, doctors say, is in shifting patients' expectations ¡ª and

convincing them

that they're not just being shortchanged by a health plan's obsession with the

bottom line.

 

 

Preventive testing has been around since Horace Dobell, a British physician,

called for

regular checkups and mass screenings for tuberculosis in 1861.

 

By 1947, the American Medical Assn. was recommending that all healthy people 35

or

older pay a yearly visit to the doctor for a battery of tests and a head-to-toe

physical

examination.

 

And by the 1960s, one of the measures of success for the American businessman

was

being treated to the " executive physical " ¡ª a three-day hospital stay with

work-ups on a

treadmill, an electrocardiogram and X-rays.

 

The annual physical became even more entrenched in medical culture with the rise

of

HMOs and a focus on preventive care. In the 1970s, Kaiser Permanente in Oakland

conducted a study in which thousands of patients received regular physical

exams, packed

with chest X-rays and urine, blood and hearing tests.

 

The study created expectation among patients, but it was simply " a giant

experiment, "

says one of its planners, Dr. David Sobel, now medical director for patient

education and

health promotion for Kaiser Permanente Northern California. " It was a great

wish, " he says,

" a dream that if you did these annual exams, it would actually be beneficial in

terms of

better health. "

 

The package didn't pay off. " When we went back and looked at the data to see if

these

things really made a difference, the answer came back no, " he says.

 

But the " giant experiment " did show the benefit of tests targeted at patients by

their age,

family history and personal risk profiles. Those tests are mammograms,

cholesterol

screening, blood pressure tests and colorectal screening.

 

Dozens of other studies have found that the annual physical does not prolong

life, prevent

disability or even detect disease.

 

" You go in to the doctor's office and they weigh and measure you so they can

determine

your body-fat index, then they sit you down and take your blood pressure. And

those are

the two things we know that can make a difference, " says Dr. Ned Colange,

chairman of

the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, an influential panel of experts that

evaluates the

costs and benefits of medical screenings.

 

" Everything that comes after that, if you're asymptomatic ¡ª there's no evidence

that

anything they're doing is going to make you live longer. "

 

In 1999, a study found that the traditional chest exam didn't accurately

diagnose

pneumonia.

 

Other studies have found that chest X-rays of heavy smokers make little

difference in

whether or not they die from lung cancer. The most recent of these, published in

December 2005, found that while screening can detect early lung cancer, it also

produces

many false-positive test results, creating needless anxiety and further tests.

 

Even the once highly touted breast self-exam appears unhelpful. The American

Cancer

Society now calls it " optional " after a rigorous 2002 study of Chinese women

found that

such exams made no difference in the early detection of breast cancer or in

reducing

deaths.

 

The Preventive Services Task Force has since concluded that a manual breast

exam, even

when performed by a trained health professional, is also ineffective.

 

As early as 1984, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services called for

one-size-

fits-all physicals to be dumped in favor of periodic checkups that matched each

patient's

individual health profile.

 

 

 

None of this stops patients from wanting a full-blown physical. Studies have

consistently

identified strong patient demand for routine and unproven blood tests, such as

for

glucose and hemoglobin levels, and renal, liver or thyroid function.

 

Doctors appear keen on the physical too. Last year's Archives of Internal

Medicine survey

found that 65% of primary care doctors believe in the validity of the physical

exam, 78%

say patients expect it, and almost all ¡ª 94% ¡ª believe it improves the

physician-patient

relationship.

 

The result? Many primary care doctors continue to perform tests that seem to

impart little

benefit. " There's this disconnect between evidence-based medicine and how it's

practiced, " says the study's lead author Dr. Allan Prochazka, an internist at

the Denver

Veterans Affairs Medical Center.

 

That disconnect can harm.

 

For one thing, physicals take up money and time. As much as one-third of all

U.S. health

care dollars is estimated as wasteful, and as medical costs continue to spiral

skyward, the

annual exam is attracting attention as one place to save money.

 

" The physical exam takes time that could be better spent, especially if a doctor

only has

20 minutes before the next patient, " says Dr. Harold C. Sox, editor of the

medical journal,

Annals of Internal Medicine.

 

 

 

In addition, " If you run enough tests on virtually any healthy person, you're

going to find

something out of the norm, " says Sobel. " Then you have to do a lot of re-tests

and assure

the person that nothing is wrong. "

 

Sobel relates how one of his patients insisted on paying $900 out of pocket for

a whole

body CT scan, which came back with several questionable findings that never

would have

been detected without the scan. The patient eventually got a clean bill of

health, but not

before more tests and anxiety.

 

Heidrich, meanwhile, recalls a perfectly healthy man in his early 40s who was

given a

treadmill test before starting a new exercise regimen. That test indicated a

need for

further testing: a coronary angiogram. Unfortunately, the dye that's routinely

injected into

the heart during this test precipitated a clot that resulted in a stroke.

 

The mere act of acing a physical could even be misleading, according to some

doctors.

Tests may not be sensitive enough to show subtle precursors to disease in a

patient's body

¡ª such as a buildup of arterial plaque or the faint, precancerous changes to

lungs from

smoking.

 

The patient could get a clean bill of health and leave the office with false

reassurance.

 

But some doctors say the annual physical might help in ways not easily captured

by

studies.

 

For one thing, it imparts psychological comfort and helps establish a connection

between

physician and patient.

 

" I think all doctors think they confer some benefit by the laying on of hands, "

says Sox. " If I

have an extra five minutes, I will do a cursory examination because I think the

patients

want it and feel better about their doctor if he does that. "

 

The physical also carves out a time for counseling on important lifestyle

choices.

 

" If it increases the likelihood that a person will exercise, stop smoking and

lose weight, it's

a trade, " says Elizabeth McGlynn, a medical researcher and associate director of

Rand

Health, a Santa Monica think tank. " If the laying on of hands is not invasive,

establishes a

relationship and gives a doctor the chance to talk to the patient and give

advice, then I'm

not sure it's a bad deal. "

 

Indeed, simply talking and counseling have been shown to influence patients:

Some

studies have found that 5% of smokers quit on a doctor's advice.

 

Paula Golden is one. The 58-year-old L.A. businesswoman credits her internist

with

helping her stop smoking 2 1/2 years ago, coaxing her into action where friends

and

family had failed. " There's some ancient stuff going on when you sit down with

your

doctor, it's kind of like a modern-day shaman, " she says. " And if you're a

responsible

patient, you will confess to them your sins. "

 

Golden began observing the once-a-year rite soon after her 40th birthday. These

days,

she schedules it with almost religious devotion, always in the first week of the

new year.

 

" It gives me a very strong sense of well-being, " she says. " Like, 'Yeah, I can

go another

year.' "

 

 

The annual physical is morphing into a different kind of meeting ritual between

physician

and patient. Experts in the healthcare industry are trying to refocus the

checkup to a

discussion of family medical history, calcium and vitamin D needs for older

women, and

screening tests tailored to the individual.

 

Almost all tests recommended by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (such as

Pap

tests, colorectal screening and cholesterol tests) are age-specific.

 

For some tests, there is still debate ¡ª for example, about the value of annual

mammograms for women between 40 and 50 years old. For most women the

recommended age is 50.

 

Doctors also debate the value of prostate testing for men with no prostate

cancer

symptoms.

 

On one side sits the American Cancer Society. It recommends that two tests be

given to all

men beginning at age 50: the PSA blood test, which measures the level of a

protein in the

blood, and a digital rectal exam.

 

On the other side sits the Preventive Services Task Force. It says there's no

strong evidence

that the benefit of such tests outweighs potential harm. That's because current

prostate

testing is unable to distinguish between aggressive and slow-moving cancer,

often leading

to unnecessary treatment.

 

" What I tell my patients is that it's controversial whether a man should have it

at any age, "

says Seattle physician Heidrich. " For every one man who is saved from prostate

cancer,

there are 10 who are rendered impotent or with a leaky urinary tract. "

 

In recent years, the health care industry has sought to alter patient

expectations by

tweaking the name and nature of this annual ritual. Many HMOs now refer to it as

the

" wellness visit. "

 

The shift poses a delicate issue for HMOs, which are concerned that their

attempts to

introduce more targeted checkups will be perceived as just another way to cut

skyrocketing medical costs. In 2004, Group Health, the largest HMO in Seattle,

stopped

performing routine manual breast exams on women when they went for their

mammograms. Several women objected and sought visits with their doctors to have

it

done.

 

Given the long waits, co-pays, and abbreviated visits, many healthy patients may

wonder

why they should even bother going to see the doctor in the first place. And, in

fact, some

doctors predict that the annual exam may one day be replaced with a

questionnaire, a

follow-up phone call and a postcard reminder ¡ª like the kind that veterinarians

send to

dog owners ¡ª that it's time for your next Pap smear.

 

" Myths fall hard, " says Sobel. " Patients come in to see me and they're smoking,

they're

overweight, they've got a poor diet. But what they want is some chest X-rays, a

complete

exam: 'Reassure me.'

 

" We sometimes ignore the most obvious things, " he says. " They may not have the

magic of

medicine but they have the biggest impact on health. "

 

*

 

(BEGIN TEXT OF INFOBOX)

 

Tests that hit their target

 

Instead of receiving a standard battery of tests, adults should be given more

targeted

health screenings, according to preventive health authorities. Here are the main

tests they

should have, and when:

 

¡¤ A cholesterol check at least every five years, starting at age 35. Those who

smoke, have

diabetes or a family history of heart disease should start having their

cholesterol checked

at age 20.

 

¡¤ Blood pressure, at least every two years.

 

¡¤ Colorectal cancer screening, starting at age 50 and then every 10 years.

 

¡¤ Depression screening, if a person has felt " blue " or hopeless and taken

little interest or

pleasure in things for two weeks straight.

 

¡¤ Diabetes testing every five years. People with high blood pressure, high

cholesterol, who

are overweight or have a family history of diabetes should be tested more often.

 

In addition, a woman should have:

 

¡¤ A Pap smear every year or every two years after having two normal tests in a

row. Some

experts recommend having both a human papillomavirus (HPV) test and a Pap test

every

three years as long as both tests are normal.

 

¡¤ A mammogram every one to two years, starting at age 50. She should talk to

her doctor

about whether to consider mammograms earlier, between ages 40 and 50. The

decision

will depend, in part, on the age at which she started her period, whether she

has a family

history of breast cancer and whether she has ever had a breast biopsy.

 

¡¤ An annual chlamydia test, if she is 25 or younger and sexually active. If

older, she

should talk to her doctor to see whether further testing is warranted. She

should also

discuss testing for other sexually transmitted diseases.

 

¡¤ A bone density test for osteoporosis, beginning at age 65. If she weighs 154

pounds or

less, she should talk to her doctor about beginning as early as 60 years old.

 

And a man should:

 

¡¤ Talk to his doctor about the possible benefits and harms of prostate cancer

screening if

considering a prostate-specific antigen (PSA) test or digital rectal examination

(DRE).

 

¡¤ Discuss with his doctor whether he should be screened for sexually

transmitted

diseases such as HIV.

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