Aug 20, 2020
You may or may not know (I don’t know why you would, honestly), but I speak Swedish. I mention this because there’s this famous and really culturally emblematic Swedish word which is this: lagom. It means “the exact right amount.” In Swedish culture, the exact right amount deserves its own word. For example, “Did you have enough watermelon?” “Why, yes, I had half a slice. It was lagom.”
Lagom has no direct translation in US English because, in the United States, we don’t need a word for “the exact right amount.” Why? Because the exact right amount already has a word: the most. More. More is always better.
I think this shows up in health care in this country, and it definitely showed up in my conversation with Dr. Bishal Gyawali in this health care podcast. There’s this cultural bias in this country that more is better. The point I’m making is that there’s a sort of fundamental belief that aggressive therapy—the most aggressive therapy—is the best therapy and conservative therapy, or following the treatment pathway that works for the majority of patients, is kind of like a surrender.
It’s not about being pro or anti anything. It’s about being data driven. It’s about finding the “lagom” amount of care that the data suggest is the best amount of care and not immediately assuming that if something isn’t done that it’s been a subpar outing.
In this health care podcast, I’m talking with Bishal Gyawali, MD, PhD. Dr. Gyawali is a practicing oncologist; assistant professor at Queen’s University in Kingston, Canada; and he has studied and worked in Nepal, Japan, and the US, and now in Canada. He’s a thought leader in studying the data impartially and finding ways to help patients and oncologists systematically make the best decisions toward high-value oncology care that is not financially toxic.
You can listen to Dr. Gyawali sum this up in his own words or read his paper on the topic, but here’s his top-line suggestions:
Bishal Gyawali, MD, PhD, is a medical oncologist with work experience in various low- and high-income countries. He graduated medical school in Nepal with seven gold medals and received his PhD from Nagoya University, Japan, as a MEXT scholar. He then practiced as a medical oncologist at Civil Service Hospital, Kathmandu, Nepal. He currently works as a medical oncologist and scientist in the Division of Cancer Care and Epidemiology at the Queen’s University Cancer Research Institute in Kingston, Ontario, Canada, where he is also an assistant professor of public health sciences. He was a research fellow at PORTAL (Program On Regulation, Therapeutics And Law) from 2018-2019.
He also serves as a medical consultant for the not-for-profit Anticancer Fund, Belgium, and as editorial board member for the Journal of Global Oncology and ecancer. His clinical and research interests include cancer policy, global oncology, evidence-based oncology, financial toxicities of cancer treatment, clinical trial methods, and supportive care. Dr. Gyawali is an advocate of the “cancer groundshot,” a term he coined to imply that research investment should be made on known high-value interventions in cancer care that are affordable and easy to implement globally. Dr. Gyawali is active in the oncology and clinical research communities on Twitter.
03:18 Oncology decisions on the individual level and oncology
policy decision making.
05:10 Reverting to the mean.
06:29 “We’re assuming … more care is good care, which is not
necessarily true.”
06:49 “What we need to focus on is above-average level of health
outcomes.”
07:55 “Sometimes we forget the goal, and we get so entangled in the
path itself that we forget the
destination.”
11:19 Cutting out low-value care
during the pandemic.
12:09 Reevaluating cancer screens and looking at the evidence for
appropriate use cases.
13:24 Distinguishing the term “survival” from “mortality.”
16:34 “If a person dies, it does not matter what the person died
of.”
17:26 “A lot of the things that we do routinely in medical practice
need to be reevaluated.”
18:53 The FDA approval of oncology agents and things that make a
difference.
20:37 “What exactly are we gaining from these drugs?”
20:53 EP282 with Aaron
Mitchell, MD, MPH.
23:15 Dr. Gyawali’s advice
to policy decision makers.
23:42 Policy decision-making interventions that are possible.
24:50 “The problem with these guidelines … is that a lot of these
people who are on these guidelines, they have huge conflicts of
interest to the industry.”
26:58 How to pay less for low-value care.
27:42 A better path forward to pay for value.
31:02 Ways to help on the individual level.
32:07 “At the end of the day, the ultimate use of an intervention
happens in the clinic.”
34:24 “We should never be pro or anti anything; we should just be
pro-data.”
Check out our newest #healthcarepodcast with @oncology_bg as he discusses #oncologyscreening and #oncologycare. #healthcare #podcast #oncology #digitalhealth #healthcarepolicy #oncologypolicy
“We’re assuming … more care is good care, which is not necessarily true.” @oncology_bg discusses #oncologyscreening and #oncologycare. #healthcarepodcast #healthcare #podcast #oncology #digitalhealth #healthcarepolicy #oncologypolicy
“What we need to focus on is above-average level of health outcomes.” @oncology_bg discusses #oncologyscreening and #oncologycare. #healthcarepodcast #healthcare #podcast #oncology #digitalhealth #healthcarepolicy #oncologypolicy
What’s the difference between “survival” and “mortality”? @oncology_bg discusses #oncologyscreening and #oncologycare. #healthcarepodcast #healthcare #podcast #oncology #digitalhealth #healthcarepolicy #oncologypolicy
“If a person dies, it does not matter what the person died of.” @oncology_bg discusses #oncologyscreening and #oncologycare. #healthcarepodcast #healthcare #podcast #oncology #digitalhealth #healthcarepolicy #oncologypolicy
“A lot of the things that we do routinely in medical practice need to be reevaluated.” @oncology_bg discusses #oncologyscreening and #oncologycare. #healthcarepodcast #healthcare #podcast #oncology #digitalhealth #healthcarepolicy #oncologypolicy
“At the end of the day, the ultimate use of an intervention happens in the clinic.” @oncology_bg discusses #oncologyscreening and #oncologycare. #healthcarepodcast #healthcare #podcast #oncology #digitalhealth #healthcarepolicy #oncologypolicy
“We should never be pro or anti anything; we should just be pro-data.” @oncology_bg discusses #oncologyscreening and #oncologycare. #healthcarepodcast #healthcare #podcast #oncology #digitalhealth #healthcarepolicy #oncologypolicy