Yale Medicine, Autumn 2001.
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Keeping values alive in the marketplace

Most social institutions, according to Samuel O. Thier, M.D., former chair of the Department of Medicine and now CEO of the Harvard-affiliated Partners HealthCare, have failed to keep pace with the transition from the Industrial Age to the Information Age. “Medicine,” he said, “is perhaps as complicated as any social system we have. Doing anything to change it is going to create major problems.

“Nonetheless, if it continues to change in the fashion it is changing now, which is by chaos in the marketplace, without values driving that change, I fear for what might come out at the other end,” Thier said, as he delivered the Department of Medicine’s fifth annual Samuel O. Thier Lecture, named in his honor, on September 20.

Partners, founded in 1994 by Massachusetts General Hospital and Brigham and Women’s Hospital, has used the strength of its affiliations to preserve its values in an increasingly competitive marketplace. “Academic medicine,” Thier said, “provides not just the intellectual base, it provides social values, it provides education, it provides research, it advances care and it has been the safety net for the indigent and the people who are uncovered. The number of uninsured is still an embarrassment in this country. If those [academic] institutions are injured, then we have a major problem.”

 

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Getting it right for The Times, and in a hurry

Journalists who cover medicine must do so under severe time constraints and often under pressure from people hoping to exact commercial or political profit, said Gina Kolata, a medical reporter at The New York Times who gave the first Margaret Roth-Glynis McKiernan Annual Lecture during dermatology grand rounds in September. Typically, she said, publicists swamp her with letters, e-mails, faxes and phone calls, all touting a real or perceived advance in medical care. “One of the things you start to ask yourself is, ‘What am I supposed to believe and how am I supposed to believe it?’ ” she said. Her skepticism about a press release promoting an exercise regimen led her to a physician who had lost his license in New York for fraud and mistreatment of patients. “The onus in medical reporting is really on the reporter. You have to get it right. Sometimes you have to get it right in a very short time. It’s an imperfect system. I don’t know if there’s a better one.”

 

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“On the threshold of a gigantic new technology”

“One can be sobered by the realization that virtually all the earlier technologies of our species—stonework, metallurgy, internal combustion, electronics—have been used for peaceful purposes, but all have also been exploited vigorously for hostile ones,” said Matthew Meselson, Ph.D., a microbiologist and expert in biological weapons. In a talk on October 23 sponsored by the Institute for Social and Policy Studies, “Averting Hostile Exploitation of Biotechnology,” he noted that with the unlocking of the human genome the stakes are even greater. “We are on the threshold of a gigantic new technology,” said Meselson, Cabot Professor of the Natural Sciences at Harvard. “It is totally different from all the previous technologies because it has the potential to change what it means to be human.” Controlling this new technology, he said, requires an international norm that would bar its hostile use.

Production and use of biological weapons, Meselson believes, should rank with aircraft hijacking and state-sponsored torture as an international crime with universal jurisdiction. He used the example of former Chilean president Augusto Pinochet, who was arrested in England after a judge in Spain filed charges against him for the torture of dissidents in Chile. “The development, production and use of biological weapons is the result of decisions made by individuals,” Meselson said. “Why not hold individuals responsible?”

 

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With global health, “There is no them, only us”

When anthrax scares put Americans on edge last fall, public health took center stage as a national security matter, said Nils Daulaire, M.D., M.P.H., the CEO of the Global Health Council, an organization that identifies and reports on world health problems. To be sure, noted Daulaire, health issues have always mattered in some security contexts, including the work of the CIA, which uses infant mortality rates as a measure of a country’s stability.

In a talk sponsored by the School of Medicine and the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health in October, “Fighting Terror with Hope: Global Health in the New Reality,” Daulaire placed post-September 11 health issues in a context of globalization, security and justice. “It is fundamentally unjust that a child born in Afghanistan has a chance of dying in childhood that is 30 times greater than that of a child born in Fairfield, Conn.,” he said of statistics that predate the bombing campaign that began October 7. “Focusing on global health is an appropriate rejoinder to what happened on September 11. It is something we need to do for the good of our own security. We need it for a global sense of justice. Ultimately, we need it for our souls. When it comes to global health, there is no them, there is only us.”


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Keeping values alive in the marketplace  
|  Getting it right for The Times, and in a hurry  |  “On the threshold of a gigantic new technology”  |  With global health, “There is no them, only us”  

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Originally published in Yale Medicine, Winter 2002.
Copyright © 2002 Yale University School of Medicine. All rights reserved.