Abstract
The March issue of Breathe focuses on overdiagnosis, underdiagnosis, overtreatment and undertreatment in respiratory diseases http://ow.ly/63OW30ntCeu
At a time when technical possibilities for medical investigations are plentiful and ever expanding, there is growing awareness that more is not always better and that “too much medicine” may be harmful. In recent years, the global Choosing Wisely educational campaign has aimed to bring attention to unnecessary healthcare. Unnecessary healthcare includes overtesting, overdiagnosis and overtreatment [1]. The March issue of Breathe aims to challenge us to rethink our clinical practice, to reflect on the evidence, and to identify potential cognitive biases that might influence us to provide “too much” or “too little” medicine [2].
This issue contains a number of articles on the topic of over- and underdiagnosis and over- and undertreatment in respiratory diseases. The pro–con articles on whether asymptomatic patients with moderate-to-severe sleep apnoea should be treated [3, 4] debate a hotly contested topic in sleep medicine and illustrate that evidence is not self-explanatory but needs to be interpreted. Facts are not neutral; they are theory- and value-laden [5, 6], and different people may arrive at varying conclusions based on the same evidence. An article that examines the evidence for screening for sleep disordered breathing in pregnancy, challenges us as clinicians to communicate uncertainty in the evidence to patients [7]. An article giving a global perspective of over- and underdiagnosis of COPD highlights the seeming paradox that under- and overdiagnosis of COPD coexist in the same setting [8]. Further, the question of whether “aggressive” (surgical) investigation of solitary pulmonary nodules can be justified [9] and the topic of overdiagnosis of pulmonary embolism [10] are explored. Further articles will be published as online exclusives for the March issue. Keep checking the Breathe website for newly added content.
We continue the Journal club series that was successfully launched in the December 2018 issue of Breathe. I would like to thank Frits Franssen who is the new section editor for the Journal club papers and Cristina Calarasu who is coordinating the commissioning of papers with the early career members of the European Respiratory Society. Topics include: excessive care in the intensive care unit [11]; low-dose CT instead of chest radiography in suspected pneumonia [12]; and procalcitonin-guided antibiotic therapy in lower respiratory tract infections [13]. The lung function corner explores the use of the transfer coefficient of the lung for carbon monoxide and the accessible alveolar volume [14].
The thread topics for upcoming Breathe issues are now listed on the website to allow potential contributors to plan well in advance. For 2019 we have planned the following threads: quality of life/living well with a chronic respiratory disease (June), oxygen (September) and biomarkers (December).
I hope that you enjoy this edition of Breathe and leave you with the words of Gilbert H. Welch to reflect upon:
“True professionals provide considered advice. And sometimes doing nothing is exactly the right thing to do. The same is true of medicine. Recognize that the doctor who advises no action may be the one who really cares for you.”
Footnotes
Conflict of interest: C.C. Dobler has nothing to disclose.
- Copyright ©ERS 2019
Breathe articles are open access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Licence 4.0.