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by cyberax
126 days ago
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> You're not engaging with the logic. Ditto for you. > Stipulate that it is the only way to detect multiple lethal cancers. This is trivially true. > If you end up harming more people than you help, the intervention is bad. The only pathway through which diagnostic MRIs can feasibly harm people is aggressive follow-up of uncertain findings. And this is almost completely solved by just doing another scan several weeks/months in the future. With corresponding patient education. This is literally all what was needed in the case of prostate cancer screening: less aggressive biopsies and bias towards observation rather than action. Yet it took _two_ _decades_ to arrive at this point. And some doctors _still_ refuse to order screening tests out of this misplaced idea of "not knowing is better". And this is not the only time when "geeks knew better". For example, checklists for surgeries are a no-brainer to anyone with an aviation background. Yet they became standard only two decades ago ( https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6032919/ )! Over rather strong objections from doctors. |
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But, look: if you think routine prostate screening is a good idea, I don't have a counterargument. You're right: there's already an emerging discipline of watchful waiting with prostate pathologies.
The argument being made here is about full body MRI scans: doing a dragnet sweep looking for neoplasms anywhere and everywhere. Not the same thing! Similarly: my belief that the EBM people are right about full-body scans doesn't mean I oppose colon cancer screening!