The Challenge of Aging
Growing older is challenging enough, but trying to get a handle
on medical breakthroughs that might actually improve our lives,
breakthroughs that might even save our lives is overwhelming.
Never mind the hundreds of press releases that churn out of
university research labs, private enterprise and government
think tanks, never mind the barrage of television talks shows
that naively and implicitly endorse an abundance of untested
consumer fads and follies every waking day.
With mountains of medical information, much of it accurate and
some not, individuals with access to the Web and other health
information resources are starting to wonder whether or not the
family Doctor has the latest research in hand. We start to
wonder: Is our doctor aware of the latest clinical trial
affecting our malady? Maybe he is, maybe not.
Our doctors and other health support personnel are highly
skilled, naturally talented individuals who are also overworked,
are being asked to take on more responsibility everyday. The
knowledge base we are building about disease, genetics and
biomedical research is simply explosive. Even as universities
and teaching hospitals exploit technology as best they can to
empower their students, knowledge overload is limiting the very
capabilities we are trying to improve upon. While medical
students can take advantage of the support of their school's
resources, how does the mid-career health professional keep
attuned to all of the relevant advances in their specialty? Like
it or not, we need to take more responsibility for understanding
our health. It means learning to tell the difference between the
science of medicine and the politics of healthcare.
We must learn to discern among our own conflicting attitudes
about our health: we may be angry about the high cost of
medicines, but we still welcome the health benefits from having
them. The wait in the doctor's office may indeed be the result
of a poorly managed healthcare system, but much of the treatment
you receive there is the culmination of many years of pure
scientific research. It is essential we take the time to know
the difference.
Who are the people that need this information most? The answer
is simple: the terminally ill, the chronically afflicted and the
elderly. Burdened with the reality of disease and declining
quality of life, real discovery and its application should be
the paramount mission of the caregiving community. Aside from
the immediate need of these people, all of us need to better
understand our bodies, the possibility of disease, the
complexities of our imperfect health care system and what to
expect as we move through our own life cycle. No matter who we
are, we are in need of an ongoing education in science,
regardless of our station or our age, our lives depend on it.
As a community, we need to discover new ways to communicate, we
need new ways to archive, store and retrieve accurate data, we
need new ways to disseminate timely scientific information and
do it in a way that can be accessed and understood by a less
educated population. We need a new focus on interpretation,
education and dissemination.
As individuals, we need to learn how to express ourselves more
effectively, we need to articulate our concerns and shed the
Godlike reverence we have for doctors and replace it with a real
respect for their abilities, experience and limitations. Most
importantly, we need to begin doing it for ourselves.