Sunday, July 15, 2018

Is AHRQ's National Guideline Clearinghouse disappearing for good tomorrow?



The AHRQ was started 30 years ago in 1999 when it was renamed from the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research (AHCPR) to the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) by legislative action.  I have referenced their guidelines on this blog for ADHD and depression.  The post on the depression guideline illustrated that AHCPR guidelines were generally of higher quality than the current managed care guidelines and screening guidelines.

Even looking at the web site today before it is taken down illustrates the depth of research and recommendation on the site.  A search for psychiatry yields 600 references including research and policy recommendations.  Interesting the guidelines at guidelines.gov has 74 psychiatric guidelines ranging from depression in children and adolescents to a guideline for CYP2D6 and CYP2C19 genotypes and dosing of tricyclic antidepressants.  A wide number of physician and nonphysician organizations have produced the guidelines.  These are unique sites with few comparable sites in the world.  Only the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) in the UK seems similar.  The NICE guidelines are produced by a more uniform methodology rather than disparate organizations.

When the current administration announced it was defunding AHRQ guidelines, there was some hope that someone else would take it over - at least the existing databases.  Some physician professional organizations were suggested.  Given the government's shaky history of ancient information technology and dubious failed upgrades, I am speculating that would be the reason why nobody else would want to take that on.  Clearly nobody in the administration is interested in a smooth transition.  The smoothest transition I can think of would be to make the data available through the National Library of Medicine and their collection of databases.  But as I type this there are about 8 hours to make that transition.

There are several serious questions for the Trump administration.  Some are speculative, but when people question how doctors are influenced by a slice of pizza, I think it is reasonable to ask about health care corporations that are influenced by tens to hundreds of billions of dollars and how they influence politicians.

1.  How does it make sense to take this data and these initiatives offline when the costs are trivial compared to other government projects?

Cost analyses have been done showing not much of a price increase corrected for inflation.  Various analyses have been suggested such as this one pointed out the agency's role in reducing hospital infections resulting in 124,000 fewer fatalities per year a cost saving of about $28 billion.


2.  And possibly even more important - what are the conflicts of interest involved?

The most significant one that I can see is that industry guidelines and standards go unchecked.  There are any number of groups that are primarily comprised of health care executives that are producing standards of care that have nothing to do with medical practice or standards.  Review practices by pharmaceutical benefit managers come under the same category.  These physician intimidation strategies have nothing to do the scientific evidence or quality of care. In this regard the wholesale suspension of guidelines that counter industry practices are suddenly gone.  It is far easier to do than reverse Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) regulations - but the zeitgeist is the same.

Taking down AHRQ means there is one less place in government healthcare sites with the word quality.  I don't think that is an accident either.  Today's healthcare industry would rather advertise how they are the best without using the quality word or any scientifically valid metrics.

3.  As a corollary to the above - what about the professional guidelines that are collated and listed on the site?

I don't have the time to follow other physician professional organizations but the American Psychiatric Association has fallen off greatly over the years.  Critical issues have not been addressed in some cases for decades.  The commonest cause for this problem is cited as the expense it takes to collect all of the experts and data, but in the information age it would seem to be easier than ever.  I speculate the the real reason is that these guidelines are just ignored.  Why produce a hundred page guideline on all the aspects of the treatment of depression when the dominant managed care standard is a 2 minute screening exam and an antidepressant prescription?  Why produce that document when it affects only 5% of the work force for mental disorders?  Why produce that document when the psychiatrists involved have so little political leverage against the industry and the government that they can never use it. 

AHRQ at least provided a broader forum for discussion.

4.  Why the minimal notification and lack of feedback?  

There are so many guidelines and so much information available on this site, it is impossible to know who is using it all and for what purpose.  Unilaterally taking down a resource like this with 4 months notice has to be considered nothing more than a political decision at this point.  If the number of people and organizations accessing this site was published somewhere - I have never seen it.

5.  What about the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid services, the CMS web site?

Since CMS is essentially the billing and regulatory web site for Medicare - I don't think it is any danger of being shut down.  But it does promote and spread a lot of unscientific information that is biased toward running the business side of health care at the expense of the medical side.  It is a massive bureaucracy that is responsible for the bulk of physicians paperwork burden every day. Some clear evidence for the lack of science is psychiatric diagnosis related groups and how they don't accurately reflect diagnoses or the expected course of treatment for hospitalized psychiatric patients.  The most recent post on this blog looks at the rationing of inpatient psychiatric services and how a lot of that has resulted from CMS regulation.  Just a few years ago, I wrote a blog piece about a 55 page CMS document about what psychiatrists would have to do to document the diagnosis and treatment of depression.  That was subsequently taken down.     

6.  Finally what does this imply for other federally funded information programs?

My biggest concern in this era of massive profits for publishers is the National Library of Medicine (NLM) - commonly used by physicians offices on a daily basis.  It is a major resource for researchers, but it is also becoming a competitor for profitable online publishers.  If research is publicly funded - a copy is accessible without charge on the PubMed web site.  Will the day come when for profit medical publishers have enough leverage to put the NLM out of business?  Stranger things have happened.  

It is easy to blame that President Trump.  He is heading the first blatantly anti-science and pro-business administration that I can recall in my decades of existence.  But the reality is that the American healthcare system has been designed by an endless stream of bad decisions for the past 30 years all occurring in the confluence of special interest politics and massive special interest money with a little medical science (and a few doctors) sprinkled in. The press seems to focus on the influence of pharmaceutical companies, but the bulk of those bad decisions have been rationing decisions by the managed care industry.


George Dawson, MD, DFAPA


References:

1:  Heslin KC (AHRQ), Weiss AJ (Truven Health Analytics). Hospital Readmissions Involving Psychiatric Disorders, 2012. HCUP Statistical Brief #189. May 2015. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. http://www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov/reports/statbriefs/sb189-Hospital-Readmissions-Psychiatric-Disorders-2012.pdf.

Supplementary:

I pulled the following figures on lengths of stay for mood disorders and schizophrenia out of the above article.  If the site goes down at midnight this may be the only place that you can find it and any paper referencing it may lead to a dead end.




Updates:

07/16/2018: 3:30 PM  AHRQ.gov web site is up and running at this point but guidelines.gov is not found.





11 comments:

  1. "74 psychiatric guidelines ranging from depression in children and adolescents to a guideline for CYP2D6 and CYP2C19 genotypes and dosing of tricyclic antidepressants."

    How well do those really stand up today? I remember a decade ago there was a lot of excitement about matching antidepressants to genotypes (Mayo was trying to make that a standard of care) but those studies have not been replicated well. Also there is a lot more skepticism about drugs in kids and adolescents than there used to be. I'm pretty much done using SSRIs in anyone under 25 unless it is a severe case and I probably would use something else.

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    1. I think those genotypes are still relevant for metabolism and drug interactions. That is the typical genetic testing that is done by most of the companies, but the reports tend to be formulaic and seem to assume that you have never heard of hepatic cytochromes. When the first lectures on fatal drug-drug interactions in psychiatry first came out it was typically 2D6 inhibition (by fluoxetine or paroxetine) and and a lethal accumulation of tricyclics. In practice I have seen some delirium from these combinations, but studying the interaction comes down to stopping the offending drug and (for me) checking the plasma level. In most cases there is the expected elevation, but in some the levels are normal.

      Since I see referral populations, most of the time I am dealing with antidepressants started by somebody else. I end up giving a lot of advice about what is a side effect and changing medications in the case where a patient has been taking the medicine for years and has not noticed any positive effect.

      How can that happen with intensive PHQ-9 monitoring?

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  2. An editorial in JAMA said, and in my clinical experience I have found, that the genetic tests to determine which antidepressants to use add next to nothing to effective treatment. If someone is a "rapid metabolizer" of a particular drug, adjusting the dosage usually takes care of any such problems. That is, assuming you have done a complete psychiatric evaluation and have a good chance of having made the correct diagnosis, and then followed the patient closely for clinical response and side effects. That is happening less and less.

    There are also a lot of misleading "studies" around. A recent one said increasing the dose of an antidepressant when the lower dose doesn't seem to work seldom leads to improvement. What BS. Of course, they didn't evaluate patients for partial responses, which are often a good indication that the patients are underdosed.

    I agree with James O'Brien about adolescents and antidepressants. Most adolescents that get diagnosed with bipolar or clinical depression these days don't actually meet the DSM criteria according to the way the SCID directs the use of manual, so of course they don't need antidrepressants. PHQ on the PDQ and all that.

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  3. Mainstream psychiatric guidelines are now wrong on just about everything.

    Psych Times recently had articles about psychotherapy as the seventh option for refractory depression and another on all the wonderful medication choices for pediatric bipolar disorder.

    Of course psychiatrists who are on board as pharma-shill Powerpoint zombies would do well in this HMO model and I'd be canned or quit in a day. And just wait until Collabo-care becomes mainstream if we think it is bad now.

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    1. I would not forget the current movement to replace psychiatrists with nonphysician prescribers.

      As recently as today I noticed a clinic that was staffed by 2 or 3 psychiatrists is now staffed by 5 or 6 non-physician prescribers.

      That is really why collabo care is doomed. There will come a time fairly soon when the nonphysician prescribers are as plentiful as nursing staff.

      The total amount of psychiatric medications will increase proportionally.

      Maybe then the media can put this myth of a psychiatrist shortage to rest. You really can't have a shortage when every class of medications is being overprescribed and that seems to be the only important metric.

      http://real-psychiatry.blogspot.com/2017/03/the-best-strategy-to-address.html

      http://real-psychiatry.blogspot.com/2016/08/a-better-analysis-of-psychiatrist.html


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  4. We may already be near the endpoint. If the standard of care is so basic and shallow that a GP or NP can do it, what the hell is the point of psychiatric residency? Eventually, what's the point of a human being anyway...an algorithm can do it and that's the natural consequence of Collabo. You'd be much better off coming out of medical school and internship earning a PhD instead of residency. You could prescribe with very little additional training at above the level of community standard. And if you knew quantitative psychology and had more training in therapy you'd be well prepared for the new population of patients who drop out of the dominant paradigm that doesn't work.

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  5. Hate to say it, but, it will take lawyers to possibly save the profession at some level. When this over-prescribing becomes so hideous and complicated with serious consequences, and liability can be legitimately charged, then the public will scream for people to come in and save the day.

    The question is, how many of us colleagues have a red letter "S" under our shirts...

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    1. I think that would have happened by now.

      My index case dates back at least 10 years now. I was contacted by a store manager (not a patient) who asked me about one of his employees. He was going though a divorce and made the mistake of being seen in a primary care office where he was given a mood disorder questionnaire and apparently diagnosed with acute bipolar disorder because he left the office with 3 scripts - valproate, quetiapine, and citalopram. I was being called because I knew the managed and he wanted to know if the patient could seem "out of it" due to that medication combination.

      I don't think that lawyers or anyone else will save the profession.

      As long as it is OK for anyone to prescribe these medications combinations with little training or common sense there will be problems.

      The outcomes are not uniformly bad. I see people who have been taking medications for years to decades for what were essentially acute stressors or adjustment disorders.

      They wanted to just keep taking it.

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    2. BTW - shortly after I heard about this case - I also heard a forensic expert had testified about how the Mood Disorders Questionnaire was the "standard of care".

      I just had a primary care visit and the PHQ-9 is apparently the PHQ-2. They had a hard enough time dealing with the physical symptoms.

      I shudder to think what would have happened if I had endorsed the suicide question!

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    3. Stimulants are just behind opioids in terms of massive backlash. This point was made in the Take Your Pills documentary. What is happening societally with people gaming the system with BS ADHD diagnoses to get more time on tests is reaching a boiling point. On the other hand I look at some of these competitive upper class moms with their trophy kids and they seem to only care about what they consider success at the expense of mental health. College mental health is a disaster...20 year olds on multiple meds and multiple accommodations. It's not like employers can tell anymore who knows the material and who did the work. Some employers would just like to keep their employees drugged for productivity. Psychiatric medication is certainly a godsend for a few people who get proper care but for the population I think it's now in the territory of a net negative. That was always the predictable outcome with the democratization of psych prescribing by generalists, who don't know that the hell they are doing. To be fair, many psychiatrists who are Powerpoint zombies with no philosophy of science don't either.

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  6. "I also heard a forensic expert had testified about how the Mood Disorders Questionnaire was the "standard of care"."

    Which shows how low the standard of care has sunk. Basically HMO quickie care is the standard of care.

    I have a problem with that.

    If Jeff Lieberman is a 10 and David Healy a 0 on the antidepressant enthusiasm index, right now I'm about a 2. And that's mostly because some established patients clearly need them and because I still use MAOIs.

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