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Date: | Wed, 25 Nov 1998 14:23:34 -0800 |
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There is yet to be published a perfect study, that is one without flaws of
some kind.
The Kaiser study may have not yielded a statistically significant finding;
however, if there are two drugs on the market, both of which offer about
the same benefit to the taker of the drug, but one can be purchased for a
long-term use (say, two years) for $200 LESS than the other drug, would
this information not be considered sufficiently important to share with
other professionals.
Dare I say that insurance companies would PUSH consumers to have prescribed
the less expensive of the drugs?
Another question to ask is: how relevant CLINICALLY is the finding of a
$200 cost savings?
If a finding is not statistically significant, but is clinically relevant,
that may be just as important as the finding itself.
PS One of the easiest ways to pooh-pooh any study is to say (with a frown
or a sneer), "that study is flawed." (without necessarily explaining the
flaw)
Off the soap box and push it under the computer (how did YOU know that is
where I store mine?) :-)
mailto:[log in to unmask]
"We are all faced with a series of great opportunities brilliantly
disguised as impossible situations."
Kathleen G. Auerbach,PhD, IBCLC (Ferndale, WA USA) [log in to unmask]
WEB PAGE: http://www.telcomplus.net/kga/lactation.htm
LACTNET archives http://library.ummed.edu/lsv/archives/lactnet.html
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