Pubdate: Thu, 08 Feb 2001 Source: New England Journal of Medicine (MA) Copyright: 2001 Massachusetts Medical Society Contact: 10 Shattuck Street, Boston, MA 02115-6094 Fax: (617) 739-9864 Feedback: http://www.nejm.org/general/text/InfoAuth.htm#Letters Website: http://www.nejm.org/ Author: Daniel M. Fox, M.D. Note: Here are three items by Sally Satel from the MAP archives: The Swiss Heroin Trials: Scientifically Sound? http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99/n1368/a12.html WSJ book review: Battle Plan for the Drug War http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v98/n904/a02.html OPED: The Hard Line http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v98/n453/a06.htm "PC, M.D.: HOW POLITICAL CORRECTNESS IS CORRUPTING MEDICINE" By Sally Satel. 285 pp. New York, Basic Books, 2000. $27. ISBN 0-465-07182-1 In PC, M.D., Satel deplores the "political correctness" (the PC of her title) advocated by some physicians, academics in the fields of nursing and public health, psychologists, social workers, and health lawyers. She defines political correctness as the assumption that the health problems of the poor, members of minority groups, women, and persons with mental illness are mainly a result of their oppression by dominant groups in society. "Indoctrinologists" for political correctness in the health professions have what the author calls a "social empowerment agenda" that "will divert resources from strategies that really work" and is already "making some people sick, or sicker than they need to be." Satel devotes a chapter to each of seven examples of the effects of this social empowerment agenda. These examples are urging by an "academic elite" that the theory and practice of public health "encompass the quest for social justice"; the participation of former psychiatric patients ("consumer-survivors" of a "medical model" of care) in the delivery of mental health services; the preoccupation of some academic nurses with "fad therapies" and its contribution to the "dumbing down of nursing education"; false claims by leaders of the "modern women's health movement" that women are "not getting sufficient attention from medical research"; a misguided "lawyer-mounted campaign" for the "freedom" of "crack" cocaine- addicted women in South Carolina to use cocaine during pregnancy; simplistic analysis by officials of federal agencies and professional associations of the causes of disparities in access to care and health status between members of minority groups and whites of European descent; and the "strange new world" of "psychotherapy for victims," especially victims of actual or imagined abuse and discrimination. This book will be controversial. Satel's arguments and rhetoric blend analysis and anger. She can report engagingly on what she has witnessed and read. But she also dispenses harsh and inadequately documented opinions about issues and individual persons. Satel is sympathetic to many of the issues that she accuses "indoctrinologists" of taking to extremes. Thus, she acknowledges that health status has multiple determinants, that members of minority groups have historically had less access to health care and worse health status than other Americans, and that many persons with mental illness and addiction to narcotic drugs have not retained their civil rights. Her complaint is that political-correctness extremists support policies on the basis of ideology rather than evidence. Their strident advocacy increases the difficulty of gaining support for interventions that are both more moderate and more effective. Satel exaggerates the influence of these advocates. She elevates the status of "PC medicine" by calling it the "fourth era" of American public health, following the "sanitation, biological and lifestyle eras." PC medicine is, however, an insurgency rather than the defining theme of an era. For example, the academics in the field of public health who embrace the extreme version of the "social production of health" that dismays Satel have had little discernible influence on public health practitioners. Similarly, nurses who embrace New Age rhetoric and alternative therapies embarrass many nursing leaders. Satel overstates her criticism of politically correct professionals in her own field of mental health. Health care providers, managed-care organizations, and public officials in each state make most policy for the care of patients with mental illness; "consumer-survivors" and their sympathizers have a limited role. The courts and the media are increasingly skeptical of persons who, during therapy, recover memories of sexual and physical abuse. Moreover, Satel is too often an unreliable guide to the issues she discusses. Sometimes she oversimplifies complicated matters. For instance, she claims that public health is a "clinical enterprise" and ignores its other core functions. Similarly, her discussions of harm reduction as an approach to treating substance abusers and of community mental health fail to take into account the history and complexity of these concepts. She also makes dubious accusations. For example, Satel associates Harvey V. Fineberg and William H. Foege with the extremists among public health advocates because they have expressed opinions that she supports elsewhere in the book. Similarly, she assigns the National Institute of Drug Abuse sole responsibility for defining addiction as a "chronic and relapsing brain disease" and reduces the distinguished history of the Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law to the inaccurate epithet "consumer-survivor advocacy group." In addition, Satel omits pertinent information that would weaken her case. Describing the success of politically correct nursing in the United Kingdom, for example, she claims that "by 1995 all the traditional nursing schools had closed," that the new schools diverted students' attention to social science and "race and gender awareness," and that "patient care suffered" as a result. She neglects to add, however, that nursing education in Britain, which had been vocational since the 19th century, has recently been integrated into higher education, and that the effect on care of offering degrees in nursing is a controversial issue. Finally, Satel invents data. For instance, "California has approved legislation requiring their public medical schools to increase the number of training slots for primary care physicians and decrease slots for specialists." Not so: in 1993 and 1994, the California legislature twice passed and Governor Pete Wilson twice vetoed bills to achieve this purpose. Participants in the health sector have been debating for years the issues that Satel addresses. This book, like Satel's newspaper op-ed articles on similar themes, could make more people aware of these debates. If that happens, it will be regrettable that her publisher did not conduct a rigorous review of the manuscript. Daniel M. Fox, M.D., Milbank Memorial Fund, New York, NY 10022 - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake