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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: task, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. On Scientists v. Politicians on Mammograms

Elvin Lim is Assistant Professor of Government at Wesleyan University and author of The Anti-intellectual Presidency, which draws on interviews with more than 40 presidential speechwriters to investigate this relentless qualitative decline, over the course of 200 years, in our presidents’ ability to communicate with the public. He also blogs at www.elvinlim.com. In the article below, he looks at the new recommendation that women only undergo routine mammograms after the age of 50. See Lim’s previous OUPblogs here.

Last week, the United States Preventive Services Task Force, a government-appointed group of 16 outside experts recommended that women should undergo routine mammograms only after the age of 50 and not 40, against the advice of the American Cancer Society and consistent with the recommendations of the American College of Physicians.

Medicine is not a precise science, so the task force could be right but it could also be wrong. Researchers and scientists make probabilistic claims from the data to offer recommendations, in this case, to the Department of Health and Human Services.

To prevent one additional breast cancer death, 1,000 women would have to get mammograms starting at age 40 rather than 50. But doing this would allegedly result in roughly 500 of the 1,000 women getting false positive results at least once, and 33 of them getting unnecessary biopsies, according to Jeanne Mandelblatt of Georgetown University.

According to researchers on the side of the Task Force, the adage that prevention is better than cure loses its intuitive force when one scrutinizes the risks associated with preventive care such as radiation or hormone therapy on abnormalities that may never have become cancerous tumors as well as the anxiety they provoke.

Now, other experts looking at the same data disagree on its interpretation. “We respect the task force, but we do not agree with their conclusions,” says Leonard Lichtenfeld, deputy chief medical officer of the American Cancer Society. “We are concerned the same evidence we think supports beginning at age 40 is being interpreted by others as not supporting mammography.”

Scientists looking at the evidence can disagree, but when they do, they point to the data in order to support their conclusions. Most politicians, on the other hand, do not look at the data and they can in good faith either accept or reject the experts’ recommendations since the experts do disagree. Only a few, however, grab one set of these recommendations, and then leap a few light years ahead, with uncanny certitude, to a conclusion solar systems away from the data on which the recommendations were originally offered.

“This is how rationing begins. This is the little toe in the edge of the water,” Rep. Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) said Wednesday on Capitol Hill. “This is when you start getting a bureaucrat between you and your physician.”

This is when you put a politician between the people and responsible government. They will offer answers, explanations, and analogies with more certititude than the scientists who perused the data, and if their golden tongues wagged with enough vigor, people will believe them because it is easier to acquire information via gossip than it is to collect it ourselves.

Our indifference to doing our civic homework would not be a problem but for the fact that demagogues are able to synthesize our indifference with their certainty to create political slogans but not political solutions. Resolution and confidence are virtues only when the answers are always obvious and unambiguous. But in the world of statistics in which researchers on both sides of the mammogram debate inhabit, and in the world of politics where the meaning of public opinion and the general will fluctuates, unsubstantiated certitude is the one cancer on democacy we should be screening for, every day.

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2. I have so much to do…

… but I can’t get any of it done.

Heard that one before? Said it before?

Me, too.

Maybe you’re a little like me. You have a gazillion ideas floating around in your noggin 24 hours a day. You wake up at 2:00 AM with a new project. Add it to the pile. 

There are plenty of systems out there for managing your time and I have tried quite a few. I’ve written articles on time management myself, but here’s a juicy little secret: Sometimes I suck at time management. Sometimes I get it wrong.

I use iCal (Yes, I’m a Mac Dude) and I’ve worked up several different systems for managing projects and my life; color-coding entries, creating calendar groups, using Mail notes, and syncing with my iPhone. Yet somehow none of my handy little gadgets or apps has been the Better Mousetrap for me.

I read something by Sark that magically simplified the way I’ve been thinking about the whole project/goal/time… thing. To sum up, she suggests that you break every thing you want to get done into “micro movements.”

For example, say you want to write a blog post but you just keep putting it off because what the hell are you going to talk about this time anyway (never happens to me, but we’ll pretend - ahem). You break writing your post into tiny little movements that get you closer to your goal, which is a posted entry. Then you schedule each step. The first step could be as simple as Tuesday, 4:00 PM: put notepad and pen next to laptop. The next step could be something like Wednesday, 9:00 AM: read one thing (could be anything; cereal box, paperback cover, blog post, ingredients on graham cracker package, whatever).

Get the idea? 

This seems so slow, right? You can schedule it however you want, but the point is to break a big project down into doable chunks. Saying to yourself “tomorrow I will write a scintillating new blog entry and post it” is just a humongous task. Can you do it? Maybe, maybe not. 

It’s highly probable that you can place a notepad and pen on your desk at 4:00. That’s pretty easy because you don’t have the pressure of thinking about what’s good, what’s interesting, who will care, do I need a photo, blah blah blah. It’s just one tiny step that you can manage.

I’ve been working on this for a week or so. I’m not perfect at it, but it seems like the smaller chunks I break things into, the easier it is and more I actually get done every day. It’s actually kind of fun scheduling times to “think” about things or just read something. Look at my calendar from this week:

 

An iCal entry to read something. I managed it.

An iCal entry to read something. I managed it.

In the past I would have made a goal to learn everything there is to know about licensing my art. Wow. No wonder I feel like I have so much to do.

In this case, I saw a section of Tara Reed’s web site and thought that I should take time to read it. That’s all. I don’t have to create 12 pieces of art, contact manufacturers, or imagine a new line of pajama wear. Just read an article. One micro step towards my humongous goal of licensing my art.

See the entry that says “Think about an agent?” Check. It’s kind of goofy and funny to see an entry like that in my iCal, but I feel better. Now I don’t have to think about an agent anymore today. Except now, because I just wrote that sentence. Wait, is that okay? Did I just f*** up?

The other thing I learned is, take it easy on yourself. Go ahead and be driven and goal-oriented, but jeez! Give yourself a break now and then.

Go read a cereal box or something.

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