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Australia is responding to the complex challenge of overdiagnosis

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-13, 23:31 authored by Ray Moynihan, Alexandra Barratt, Rachelle Buchbinder, Stacy CarterStacy Carter, Thomas Dakin, Jan Donovan, Adam Elshaug, Paul Glasziou, Christopher Maher, Kirsten McCaffery, Ian Scott
Overdiagnosis is now a health challenge recognised across many nations.1 Debates about its definition continue, but in short, overdiagnosis happens when health systems routinely diagnose people in ways that do not benefit them or that even do more harm than good.2 Overdiagnosis is unwarranted diagnosis, leading to harms from unnecessary labels and treatments and to the waste of health care resources that could be better spent dealing with genuine needs. To manage overdiagnosis and the sustainability of the health system more broadly, reversing the harm of too much medicine is becoming a health care priority, demanding effective responses in policy and practice. In Australia, a new alliance is developing a national plan to deal with this problem

History

Citation

Moynihan, R., Barratt, A. L., Buchbinder, R., Carter, S. M., Dakin, T., Donovan, J., Elshaug, A. G., Glasziou, P. P., Maher, C. G., McCaffery, K. J. & Scott, I. A. (2018). Australia is responding to the complex challenge of overdiagnosis. Medical Journal of Australia, 209 (8), 332-334.

Journal title

Medical Journal of Australia

Volume

209

Issue

8

Pagination

332-3340

Language

English

RIS ID

130992

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