Lifestyle Changes Or Medication?
Heinz Redwood
July 27, 2000
(Reviewed: December 13, 2002)
Introduction
The need for a preventive approach
to cardiovascular disease is well recognised and has had considerable success
during the past thirty years. Equally clear is the fact that prevention
is far from perfect: cardiovascular disease is still at the top of the medical
league table of morbidity and mortality and will probably remain there throughout
the professional lifetime of today's physicians. Moreover, prevention for
elderly patients still tends to be regarded as less promising, less necessary,
and less evidence-based than prevention for lower age groups (see " Why do official guidelines for the prevention of cardiovascular disease stop short at the age of 80?" ).
A cascade of preventive decisions
Prevention of cardiovascular disease
follows a sequence of steps leading to decisions by doctors, patients and
third-party payers. These involve:
- Definition of risk factors
- Screening
- Diagnosis of condition and degree of risk
-
Lifestyle changes and/or medication?
- Who pays?
- Prevention of recurrence (second heart attacks, etc)
Risk factors include smoking, obesity, excessive alcohol, unsuitable
nutrition, inadequate physical exercise, high total and low-density lipoprotein,
pre-existing illnesses like diabetes or kidney failure, and having already
had one heart attack or other cardiovascular events.
The need for screening sounds like plain common sense, but how much screening
is appropriate, at what level of diagnostic sophistication, for how many
people, and at what cost? Much of the diagnosis of cardiovascular risk
is based on observation and relatively simple forms of measurement (physical
examination, self-reportage of smoking and drinking habits, and so on),
although more expensive forms of testing (blood cholesterol, for example)
are spreading. Screening and assessing risk will also become more sophisticated
in step with our advancing understanding of genes as pre-disposing indicators
of disease. Although the need and effectiveness of screening for hypertension
is widely accepted, will health care budgets accommodate advancing technology
at rising cost?
'Who pays?'
More science and technology, far
from resolving the conflict over 'Who Pays?', will more likely intensify
it. This conflict overshadows the entire sequence of preventive activities
from screening and risk assessment to the choice between lifestyle changes
and medication (or both), through to the prevention of recurrence.
Who pays for screening? For advising patients on lifestyle changes and
monitoring their progress? For costly innovative drugs that can prevent
subsequent and even higher costs of hospitalisation or nursing home care?
For intensifying preventive activities in the effort to avert second and
third heart attacks?
To what extent will healthy (or seemingly healthy) patients be willing
and able to contribute financially? Will health professionals be expected
to 'pay' in terms of unpaid or under-remunerated time and effort? or are
insurers, employers, and taxpayers to be the source of funds for prevention
in public or private sector health care systems?
Today there are few valid answers or practical proposals to end the dilemma
of 'Who Pays' for preventive measures. The response to what everybody
sees as the growing need to develop preventive services is twofold: large
amounts of excellent research and academic advice on what ought to be
done, and - in relation to the theme of this paper - the relegation of
the elderly to the bottom of the pile.
The matter of 'Who Pays' for prevention is effectively set aside as inconvenient
in a society that is basically attuned to paying for treatment and continues
to fight over who pays for that. Moreover - let's face it - who wants
to pay for preventing cardiovascular disease in the elderly when the younger
prospective victims of AIDS and other infectious diseases represent a
potentially more dramatic threat to public health? Any search of the Internet
on the subject of Preventive Health Care will score at least 25 hits on
AIDS for one on cardiovascular disease, and the elderly are rarely mentioned
at all.
The sad irony of the situation is that the health care burden of infectious
disease in the industrialised world is tiny compared with that of cardiovascular
disease, and the cardiovascular focus is clearly on elderly patients.
That is not to deny the importance of preventing infections (which, without
prevention, can spread uncontrollably), but to point out that there are
other, less 'popular' preventive priorities that deserve more attention
than they are getting, and may in the long run have an even greater impact
on public health in the ageing societies of the industrialised world.
Preventive medication
Antihypertensive drugs
have become standard preventive treatment. Their safety and efficacy are
proven and their adverse reactions amply documented. The physician's armamentarium
of cardiovascular drugs has grown enormously since modern diuretics were
first introduced in the 1950s. It now includes beta-blockers, alpha-blockers,
calcium channel blockers, ACE-inhibitors and angiotensin-II antagonists.
Their use as first-line or reserve therapy is specified in professional
guidelines with advice on how to prescribe these drugs for elderly patients.
In addition, cholesterol-lowering drugs took a leap forward with the
development of the statins, especially when improvements in cardiovascular
morbidity and mortality were demonstrated in large-scale international
outcome trials. Recent evidence also suggests that statins have beneficial
effects on mortality in diabetics and cardiovascular patients who do not
have raised levels of blood cholesterol.
It is now widely accepted that medication for hypertension 'works' and
that old cardiovascular drugs are cheap. Evidence is mounting that many
of the newer 'expensive' drugs are also cost-effective, although health
care payers still have problems in fitting the concept of longer-term
cost-effectiveness into the framework of administering short-term drug
budgets. This applies particularly to European health care systems in
which the public sector holds a monopoly or near-monopoly and is not obliged
to compete on the quality of outcomes.
The health care partners - physicians, patients and payers - are troubled
not only by the question whether to prescribe, use and pay for preventive
medicine, but when to begin to do so. Professional guidelines generally
state that lifestyle changes should precede medication, and that the latter
should preferably begin only when it is evident that lifestyle changes
are failing to deal with risk factors.
Changing lifestyles - some fallacies
This preference for
improving lifestyles first is based on rational assumptions. In real life,
however, such rational common sense may harbour a number of perilous fallacies.
Common sense dictates that it would indeed be desirable to substitute lifestyle
changes for medication or at least to postpone the need for drugs, but -
- To change one's lifestyle preventively demands a determined commitment on the part of the 'pre-patient'_..in a notoriously self-indulgent social environment.
- The more difficult the proposed change, the greater is the need for expert individual guidance from health professionals with skills in behavioural management.
- In defiance of common sense, changing lifestyles is not a cheap form of health care. Efficient performance is costly, and inefficiency is a waste of scarce resources.
- Are lifestyle strategies that involve health care expenditure cost-effective? That question can be answered with exemplary brevity: We don't know.
Whereas new drugs now have to prove that they are cost-effective, lifestyle
management is
blithely assumed to be 'A Good Thing' - like motherhood and apple pie
- without looking too deeply into such mundane matters as performance
quality, durability of outcome, or real cost.
Are primary physicians competent to counsel patients on lifestyle changes?
Doctors are far from certain about their ability to give lifestyle advice.
The American Task Force 8 on preventive cardiology1, and a French 'Health Barometer' study2 have produced disturbing results with remarkable national differences:
PRIMARY CARE PHYSICIANS' COMPETENCE AS LIFESTYLE COUNSELLORS Self-estimates, USA 1995, France 1998-99
|
ADVICE ON
|
% 'COMPETENT'
|
|
|
USA
|
FRANCE
|
|
Smoking
|
69
|
43
|
|
Diet
|
22
|
66
|
About two-thirds of American physicians felt competent to provide counselling
to smokers, but less than half of the French sample did so. By contrast,
only one-in-five American doctors regarded themselves as competent to
give dietary advice, whereas two-thirds of French doctors felt able to
do so. Material shortcomings in counselling competence were further displayed
in the French sample with scores of 59% for physical exercise, 48% for
accidents in daily life (very important for the elderly), 30% on alcohol
intake, and just 18% on drug abuse.
These are self-reported estimates by professionals who are generally
self-confident in matters of therapy and to whom patients normally turn
for personal advice. One is tempted to conclude: when you know that you
need to change your lifestyle (stop smoking, cut down drinking, lose weight)
and need competent help, your doctor may not necessarily be the best source
for this.
The Pitfalls Of Smoking Cessation
The relatively poor
'competence scores' on smoking, which is now unequivocally recognised as
one of the prime sources of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, prompted
me to look more closely at efforts to help smokers stop smoking. For prevention
of a whole galaxy of diseases, smoking is one of the most vital and most
difficult test cases for lifestyle change.
"Currently, cessation clinics have little impact. When offered free
by HMOs in the United States, smoking cessation clinics recruit only about
1% of subscribers who smoke (Prochaska3, 1996). In the Minnesota
Heart Health project, for example, 40 million dollars was spent with five
years of intervention in four communities, totalling 400,000 people. There
were no significant differences between treatment and control communities
not only in smoking, but also on diet, cholesterol, weight, blood pressure,
and overall risks of cardiovascular disease." (Luepker et al4 , 1994,
cited by Prochaska, ibid 1996).
Message for the Department of Shattered Illusions: we are shocked, but
can anything be done?
The answer is "Yes", but not quickly or cheaply or simplistically.
Prochaska's experiments demonstrated effective results when the system
was adapted to the smoker, instead of demanding adaptation by the smoker
to the system. In other words, different types of patients need counselling
along different lines at various stages of their preparedness to stop
smoking. Marked improvement can occur after 18 months of focused effort
(Prochaska, op.cit. Ref. 3).
The identification of the behavioural characteristics of patients as
a clue to the potential efficacy of improving hypertension control has
been reported in the USA by analysing a nationally representative quota
sample of 1186 adults with diagnosed hypertension. Although the study
(Weir et al5 , 2000) was not specifically concerned with the elderly, it
gives interesting clues for them, because 40% of the sample was aged 65+
(compared with 13% of the U.S. adult population).
Four behavioural groups were identified in terms of hypertension control:
A - Users of medication with healthy lifestyles (46% of 'A' were aged
65+)
B - Users of medication, good compliance, poor on lifestyles (38% were
65+)
C - Forgetful users of medication, obese, little smoking/alcohol (37%
were65+)
D - Unlikely to take medication, heavy smokers, poor dieters (21% were
65+)
"Group A and B members have better health outcomes than Group C
and D members".
It is worth noting that the elderly (overall 37% of Groups A-D) were
over-represented in the 'good' Group A, averagely distributed in Groups
B and C, and markedly under-represented in the 'bad' Group D.
In other words - and perhaps not surprisingly - although the attitudes
of elderly patients with hypertension do not differ vastly from other
age groups in A-C, they are far less likely to show indifference or put
up active resistance to medication and lifestyle changes (Group D) than
younger age groups.
Group A, for example, smoked 2.2 cigarettes per day, compared with 12.9
in Group D. In Group A, 94% expressed "confidence in ability to stop
smoking (or not start)", compared with 64% in Group D. As for avoiding
"foods high in fat": A - 72%, D - 27%; "confidence in ability
to exercise three times a week: A -89%, D - 51%; "average non-compliance
with medication": A - 4.0%, D - 7.2%; and "not taking medication
is a threat to my health": A - 94%, D - 81% (Weir et al, ibid 2000).
These examples also indicate that attitudes to medication are less dramatically
different between Groups A and D than attitudes to lifestyle changes.
The latter, as already noted, are even more difficult to achieve than
compliance with medication, and require carefully judged counselling which
many doctors do not feel competent (or interested?) to give.
As a parting shot on smoking cessation, an Irish study of doctors at
a teaching hospital in Dublin demonstrated that:
"Irrespective of the health of the patient, the probability of receiving
advice about cigarette smoking was directly related to their age. Over
75% of patients aged 65 or younger would be offered advice. This compared
with 64% of those between 66 and 75, 42% of those between 76 and 85, and
only 30% of those who were older than 85". (Maguire et al6, 2000)
This despite the fact that the risk factors of the 65+ age group are
the same as for younger patients and the likelihood that the elderly will
actually be more responsive to lifestyle counselling.
It seems that there is a real need for health care systems and health
professionals to respond and adapt to known behavioural patterns among
their patients, and for a more balanced approach to the relationship between
lifestyle changes and medication. Both are needed but, contrary to what
is widely believed, medication is generally more predictable in terms
of compliance and outcomes than lifestyle changes. In terms of results,
lifestyle changes require levels of expertise, dedication, determination
and willingness to pay that are evidently not being achieved to the required
and desired degree in to-day's health care systems and by today's doctors
and patients.
Related Links
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Another way to treat depression?
Why Do Official Guidelines for the
Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease Stop Short at the Age of 80?
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