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In 1897, William Osler advised doctors not to "toy with the Delilah of
the press".1 Despite researchers being
generally delighted with journalists' translations of their work
into news2 (few would disagree with Mae
West that it's better to be looked over than overlooked), Osler's
counsel sadly retains widespread support in the health professions.
For too many, journalists spell trouble.
Some who have been bruised by what they consider trite,
sensationalised or misleading news reports of their research assume
that journalists are mere ciphers for doctors and scientists,
providing a sort of popular scientific abstracting service which is
falling down in its duty. While the news media may be an arm of the health
service in some countries, they play an entirely different role in
open societies like Australia. Here, facts frequently serve as
pretexts to publish richly subtextual moral tales intended to
resonate with readers, retain their loyalty and, in expanding
readership, attract greater advertising revenue. Journalists'
routines are governed by ambitions to get on the front page and break
"exclusive" news that will ripple for days through their rival's news
media. When this ambition dovetails with public health and the wider
public interest, most are happy to applaud the media as a highly
influential force for good. But, when popular news frames are invoked
to negatively frame potential advances in patient care or public
health, the media can be a powerfully conservative force that can damn
progress.
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Health and medicine are rich with news value.3 Doctors are cast by the news
media in many roles:4 for example, as medical
miracle workers;5 as sages interpreting
issues of contemporary morality; as intrepid, no-stone-unturned
disease detectives;6 or as entrepreneurs.
Rasmussen and colleagues, who describe their experience with the
media in this issue of the Journal,7 perceived their
role as just trying to save the lives of patients with acute myocardial
infarction (AMI). They aimed to compare the outcomes of transporting
patients with AMI to a large centre with facilities for angioplasty
and stenting with the conventional wisdom of rushing them to the
nearest hospital for standard treatment. These researchers were
following the long tradition of those who have sought to improve
survival rates through a randomised controlled trial. But reporter
Gerald Ryle and his editors at the Sydney Morning Herald
judged other news frames to be more compelling. They chose to see the
story as one of doctors who, "believing their own omnipotence",
"press-ganged" vulnerable people into some dangerous and radical
"experiment".8,9
Ryle's reports,8,10 the Herald's
editorial,9 and their sequelae voiced by
radio commentators, framed the trial as an example of arrogant
doctors dicing with patients' lives. The main ingredients of the
"story" were the notions that two inviolable conventions were being
trampled underfoot. Blind Freddy — or the Herald's editorial writer
— knows that transporting a person having an infarct to the
nearest hospital without delay, and obtaining patient consent to
treatment, are sacrosanct.
The transportation issue taps into the same ordinary person's
outrage when a local hospital is closed, and politicians explain that
patients are better served by travelling the extra distance to a
larger hospital. In criticisms of this aspect of the trial, the
important question of whether patients might actually benefit by
travelling the extra distance was lost.
Both the righteous indignation of the accusations that patient
consent to involvement in the trial would not be obtained, and the
restrained dissection by Rasmussen et al of the folly of that
indignation, will cause many heads to shake in disbelief. Almost by
definition, people in the midst of life-threatening medical
emergencies, who may be unconscious, in shock, in extreme pain or
delirious, surrender their normal sentient ability to consent. To
describe this as being "press-ganged" was sure to produce popular
outrage.
Were there alternative frames that could have just as easily
attracted journalistic interest in this trial? Opposition had often
been voiced in local newspapers, because of implications for local
hospitals of the trial's possible success. If it showed important
patient benefit, local coronary care facilities may have been
downgraded, with all the downstream implications. "Doctors seek to
stop life saving heart trial", with an investigation of the motives
and interests of local opposition to the trial, might have been
another headline that defined the same events with rather different
outcomes.
Alan Otten, with the Wall Street Journal for 44 years, notes
that "Well done investigative reporting produces public outrage . . .
Ten-thousand-watt klieg lights turned on a situation focuses the
minds of policy makers very fast."11 Ryle's front-page arc
lights precipitated ministerial intervention, stopping a trial
that may have led to many lives being saved. The sacred cow of the
shortest possible ambulance ride remains intact, as presumably does
the despair of those hoping to use research to find ways of improving
survival rates after AMI.
The history of medicine is full of tumultuous episodes where accepted
procedures were challenged by innovators and where the orthodoxy
stood to lose from the change.12 This episode adds to that
litany, but hopefully will not jaundice what is so often a mutually
productive relationship between medicine and the media.
Simon Chapman
Professor, Department of Public Health and Community Medicine
University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW
Competing interests: None declared.
- Osler W. Internal medicine as a vocation. [Address given at the New
York Academy of medicine, October 19, 1897.] Reprinted in McGovern
JP, Roland CG, editors. The collected essays of Sir William Osler,
vol.II. Birmingham, AL: Classics of Medicine Library; 1985: 151.
-
Phillips DP, Kanter EJ, Bednarczyk B, Tastad PL. Importance of the
lay press in the transmission of medical knowledge to the scientific
community. N Engl J Med 1991; 325: 1179-1183.
-
Lupton D. Medical and health stories on the Sydney Morning
Herald's front page. Aust N Z J Public Health 1995; 19:
501-508.
-
Lupton D, McLean J. Representing doctors: discourses and images in
the Australian press. Soc Sci Med 1998; 46: 947-958.
-
Lupton D, Chapman S. Death of a heart surgeon: some thoughts about
press accounts of the murder of Victor Chang. BMJ 1991; 303:
1583-1586.
-
Brown J, Chapman S, Lupton D. Infinitesimal risk as public health
crisis: media coverage of a doctor to patient HIV contact tracing
investigation. Soc Sci Med 1996; 43: 1685-1695.
-
Rasmussen HH, Hansen PS, Koyama Y, et al. Trial of a trial by media.
Med J Aust 2001; 175: 625-628.
-
Ryle G. Radical heart attack fix under fire. Sydney Morning
Herald 2001; 29 March: 1.
-
Medicine on trial [editorial]. Sydney Morning Herald
2001; 2 April: 12.
-
Ryle G. A trial of the heart. Sydney Morning Herald 2001; 29
March: 11.
-
Otten AL. The influence of the mass media on health policy.
Health Affairs 1992; Winter: 111-118.
-
Porter R. The greatest benefit to mankind. A medical history of
humanity from antiquity to the present. London: Fontana,1999 .
©MJA 2001
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