Explaining the absence of surgical procedure regulation.

Q2 Social Sciences Cornell Journal of Law and Public Policy Pub Date : 2017-01-01
Jonathan J Darrow
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Abstract

Each year in the United States, surgeons perform approximately 64 million surgical procedures, ranging from tooth extraction to open heart surgery. Yet, notwithstanding the frequency of surgical procedures and their often critical importance to patient health, no state or federal agency either approves the use of new surgical procedures or directly regulates existing procedures. The absence of surgical procedure regulation differs from the regulation of new pharmaceutical products, which can be introduced into interstate commerce only after the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has reviewed "adequate and well-controlled [clinical] investigations" and concluded the data from those studies sufficiently establish the drug's safety and efficacy. Surgical procedures, by contrast, are more often conveyed from professor to student, the result being that surgical approaches may vary considerably from one geographic region to another. Whether different techniques produce different outcomes is not always clear, in part because the absence of regulation means that evidence often has not been systematically generated or may be in a form not suitable for comparison. Commentators have noted the differing treatment that persists between surgery and pharmaceuticals and have offered a number of justifications. For example, they have suggested that the surgical profession should self-regulate, that excessive regulation could deter surgeries of unproven benefit even when the surgery may be in the best interest of the patient, and that surgical trials could disrupt the doctor-patient relationship, such as by emphasizing uncertainty in a context where patient trust is important. In the context of innovative (as opposed to established) surgical procedures, controlled trials might be disfavored due to concern that desperate patients might unwisely submit themselves to risky experimental treatments undertaken by overzealous researchers. When commentators advocate for increased surgical regulation, they generally limit their calls for reform to innovative surgical procedures. The absence of direct regulation, however, has implications for the quality of evidence available to support an optimal choice from among all of the alternatives in the surgeon's armamentarium, whether innovative or standard, and whether surgical or non-surgical. This Article first examines the current framework of indirect regulation surrounding surgical procedures and then offers potential explanations as to why surgical procedures themselves are not already subject to direct federal regulation. Finally, it considers possible contributions of increased surgical regulation, including the identification of evidence gaps, the generation or collection of evidence to fill those gaps, and the impact on surgeon decision-making and patient consent.

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解释手术程序规范的缺失。
每年在美国,外科医生进行大约6400万例手术,从拔牙到心脏直视手术。然而,尽管外科手术的频率很高,而且往往对病人的健康至关重要,但没有一个州或联邦机构批准使用新的外科手术,也没有一个机构直接管理现有的手术。外科手术程序监管的缺失不同于对新药品的监管,只有在食品和药物管理局(FDA)审查了“充分和良好控制的[临床]调查”,并从这些研究中得出结论,充分确定药物的安全性和有效性之后,新药品才能引入州际贸易。相比之下,外科手术更多的是由教授传达给学生,结果是手术方法在不同的地理区域可能会有很大的不同。不同的技术是否产生不同的结果并不总是很清楚,部分原因是缺乏监管意味着证据往往没有系统地产生,或者证据的形式可能不适合进行比较。评论家们注意到手术和药物治疗之间存在的差异,并提出了一些理由。例如,他们建议外科专业应该自我监管,过度监管可能会阻止未经证明有益的手术,即使手术可能符合患者的最佳利益,手术试验可能会破坏医患关系,例如在强调患者信任很重要的背景下的不确定性。在创新(相对于既定)外科手术的背景下,对照试验可能不受欢迎,因为担心绝望的患者可能不明智地接受过度热心的研究人员进行的冒险的实验治疗。当评论员提倡加强外科监管时,他们通常将改革的呼声限制在创新的外科手术上。然而,缺乏直接的监管,影响了现有证据的质量,无法从外科医生的所有选择中做出最佳选择,无论是创新的还是标准的,无论是手术的还是非手术的。本文首先考察了目前围绕外科手术的间接监管框架,然后就外科手术本身为何不受直接联邦监管提供了可能的解释。最后,它考虑了增加手术监管的可能贡献,包括证据空白的识别,证据的产生或收集来填补这些空白,以及对外科医生决策和患者同意的影响。
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期刊介绍: Founded in 1991, the Cornell Journal of Law and Public Policy (JLPP) has quickly risen to become one of the leading public policy journals in the nation. A fixture among the top 10 policy journals, JLPP has consistently been among the top 100 student-edited law journals. JLPP publishes articles, student notes, essays, book reviews, and other scholarly works that examine the intersections of compelling public or social policy issues and the law. As a journal of law and policy, we are a publication that not only analyzes the law but also seeks to impact its development.
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