The Michigan Daily - Thursday, February 17, 1994 -E .Midwives may be safer than 4#octors By DWIGHT DAVIS FOR THE DAILY High-tech procedures used to assist in the birthing process lead directly to increased instances of complications during thatprocess, accordingto a study conducted on 1,406 women at the University's Medical Center, under the co-direction of Prof. Deborah Oakley *f the School of Nursing. Speaking before a crowded room in Rackham yesterday afternoon, as part of a continuing series of seminars spon- sored by the Michigan Initiative on Women's Health, Oakley presented preliminary results to her five-year study. The study sought to compare the procedures and effectiveness of certi- fied nurse midwives and physicians. "Safety is, of course, the No. 1 con- cern and there is general agreement that certified midwives provide safe care. The question now becomes one of cost and effectiveness," Oakley said. Oakley stressed that physicians and certified midwives start with a similar set of goals: to provide a safe and satis- fying birth experience. They also share many of the same methods and patients-of the 4 percent * U.S. births performed by certified midwives, most involve some collabo- ration with a physician, who provides backup support in case of complication. These similarities notwithstanding, Oakley said study after study has turned up significant differences in procedure and result, between women whose pri- mary care providers were certified mid- wives and those who saw physicians. Comparisons within samples of the 5 to 80 percent of U.S. births that certified midwives are qualified to per- form, so called "low-risk" births, con- sistently show certified midwives help- ing more women have spontaneous vaginal deliveries than physicians. Lev- els of fetal distress are comparable for the two goups. And in some studies the certified midwife-deliveried babieshad a higher average birth weight. 1 Certified midwives did all thiswhile performing far fewer expensive, high- tech procedures, which Oakley defined, as anything that gets plugged into the wall at some point such asintraveneous fluids, anesthesia, electric fetal moni- toring and Cesarean sections, which are done by a collaborating physician. Oakley added that all the studies suffered to varying degrees from an gability to control for such factors as a patient's request for certain procedures, that might not have been performed by the physician. The actual degree of risk of certain births, that may have incor- rectly been classified as "low risk." She added that the lumping in of family practitioners and medical stu- dents with fully trained obstetricians, when evaluating physicians as a group, lso blurs the value of the study. Oakley sought to control these fac- tors in the University study. Only fully trained obstetricians were included. All of the patients in the study included were screened for risks, both in the pre- natal and actual birthing process, that mould exclude them from the "low- risk" control group. The analysis of this group of pa- tients found that those cared for by *hysicians were more than twice as likely to have had anesthesia, nearly twice as likely to have had forceps used inthe delivery and more than 50 percent more likely to have a Cesarean section performed--18 percent of the total for physician provided care, verses 11 per- cent for certified midwive care. Most startling was Oakley's con- tention that complications were actu- Sly caused by the high-tech aides used childbirth. Although necessary in some instances, the study showed an increase in complications associated with these procedures that could not be accounted for in any other way. IS WINTER OVER? Violinist awarded for excellence in studio teaching With warmer temperatures and melting snow, reflections are back on campus. Angell Hall is reflected in the water. Study finds insurers 'arbitrary' on breast cancer treatments THE WASHINGTON POST WASHINGTON - Insurance companies cover an experimental breast cancer treatment so inconsis- tently that they often grant coverage to some patients and deny it to others with the same medical characteris- tics, according to a study by Duke University researchers. Decisions involving coverage of costly bone marrow transplants for 533 patients "appeared to bear little relation to available medical or scien- tific information, and often seemed arbitrary and capricious," the re- searchers say in today's edition of the New England Journal of Medicine. The report highlights one of more emotionally charged issues in the de- bate over national health care policy: When should potentially lifesaving experimental treatments be covered, and who should decide? When the decisions are left to in- dividual private insurers, patients "might just as well one day be ap- proved as the next day denied,"said study co-author William P. Peters, director of Duke's Bone Marrow Transplantation program. Physiologist John Cova, a con- sultant to the Health Insurance Indus- try Association, agreed that policies vary considerably, but he said insur- ance companies are not typically re- sponsible. Many employers determine their own health benefits policies and simply hire insurance companies to administer them, he said. "Our (employer) clients don't want to pay for experimental (treatments) or for therapies that aren't proven to be safe and effective," said Charles Cutler, vice president for medical ser- vices at Prudential Insurance Co. of America, which under certain circum- stances covers transplantation treat- ments for breast cancer. The procedure has been used pri- marily for treatment of advanced can- cer when the disease has spread. It involves first removing a por- tion of a patient's bone marrow, the substance that constantly replenishes a person's oxygen-carrying red blood cells, infection-fighting white blood cells and clot-forming platelets. This is necessary because the chemo- therapy treatment that follows is given in such high doses that it kills marrow cells along with - presumably - breast cancer cells. The bone marrow is then reinfused in the patient, where it grows and replenishes the blood-forming cells. Inevitably, however, a transplant pa- tient experiences a period of extreme immune system suppression when infections normally fought off easily can be fatal. The treatment is dangerous, un- pleasant and expensive. At the same time, it is increasingly viewed by many women with breast cancer as the last chance for a cure. About 180,000 new cases of breast cancer are diagnosed each year, and about 50,000 women die from it. Some researchers believe that as many as 15,000 women annually could be can- didates for the procedure. Peters said it costs an average of $72,000, but insurance officials said it can cost more than twice that much. The National Cancer Institute is evalu- ating the procedure in clinical trials and has not yet concluded whether it is superior to other treatments for advanced cancer. The results reported by some phy- sicians come from treatment trials in which the most promising patients are chosen for the procedure. The National Cancer Institute relies on experiments in which patients are assigned randomly to receive either bone marrow transplant or conven- tional therapy to determine the procedure's worth. The institute is sponsoring three such "randomized controlled trials" for women with various stages of cancer. Results from them will not be available for at least two years. Based on Duke's experience, Peters said, 15 to 20 percent of pa- tients whose breast cancer had spread to other parts of their bodies remain alive and cancer-free five years after undergoing the treatment, compared with only 1 to 2 percent of patients treated with chemotherapy. The health insurance industry has been reluctant to pay for the experi- mental treatments for several rea- sons. Their usefulness is unproven and, perhaps more important, rou- tine coverage of the procedure would help it become the "standard of care." In the case of bone marrow trans- plants for breast cancer, this would cost insurance companies to claims of $1 billion a year as demand for the procedure increases. Lacking uniform national stan- dards, denying coverage also entails risks for insurers. A California jury recently awarded the family of a breast cancer patient $89 million af- ter her health plan refused to pay for the procedure and she died. By MEGAN SCHIMPF DAILY STAFF REPORTER Paul Kantor wants his students to be as independent as they can be. "If we really allow people to think independently, it's remarkable what they come up with on their own," he said. "I've learned an enormous amount when students have latitude in interpreting and finding technical solutions to problems." Kantor, a studio violin teacher in the School of Music, recently won the 1994 Harold Haugh Award ' . honoring excel- The impac lence in studio is enormou teaching. He gave ater an a master class yes-grae an terday at the lasting thai School of Music. In place of the performing, usual lecture, can impact Kantor decided toa give the master audience a class - a lesson moment, bi given before anlr audience - be- onger. cause he felt it was in the spirit of the studio v award. Each of the 18 departments in the school nominates one teacher by secret ballot. An ex- ecutive committee then chooses the person to be honored. "It's a tremendous honor to be recognized by your colleagues," Kantor said. "I was so gratified." Gabriel Bolkosky, a School of Music junior, said the independence Kantor teaches distinguishes him from other teachers he has had. "He teaches you to be your own musician, not just to be a Kantor stu- dent," Bolkosky said. He added that Kantor often says, "This is just grist for the mill," when making a comment, since his idea is only one of many to consider. He wants his students to be aware of that. "It's important to be your own musician," Bolkosky said. "I have to be responsible for what I choose to do." Kantor said he thinks individual- ity in an artist is critical. "I think that's terribly important. It affects so many things. We try to be individuals as artists and strive for a certain unique sound and a unique way of expressing yourself," he said. While Kantor still plays the vio- lin, teaching gives him the greatest satisfaction. "The impact you have is enor- mous. It's greater and more long- lasting than performing, where you c i t can impact the audience at that mo- ment, but not much longer," he said. "I love it." After helping a student, Kantor said teachers experience a moment that performers do not. "There's a moment of recognition when you can hear the results. It's a wonderful moment. I've never expe- rienced anything like that in playing. It's very unique to teaching and very special," he said. Kantor has a unique ability to solve students' problems, said Alfonso Lopez, who has t you have been a student of s. lt's Kantor for four years. d more long- "From my very n first lesson, he was able to determine , where you my weaknesses the and how to solve them. He could t that pick them outright ut not much away," Lopez said. "He's always going to find a Paul Kantor musical aspect to work on. ioin teacher Don Sinta, a saxophone profes- sor in the School of Music, agreed. "You want to be around someone who serves as a very distinct role model and points out the things he sees and hears," Sinta said. "His per- ception as a teacher is very high." Lopez said Kantor gives construc- tive criticism. "He always focuses on a problem from a very positive point of view. He's never negative and he never puts a negative connotation on anything, he said. Kantor said he wants to keep the love for music alive in his students. "I try to convey and perpetuate the natural enthusiasm students have for music. That's why they go into music in the first place," he said. "In the quest for better, the joy and fun of music making can get lost. I try to keep that alive." Bolkosky agreed. "He's really concerned with stay- ing fresh. Teachers can get burned out," he said. "He's always monitor- ing himself and making sure he's not going stale." Lopez, a School of Music senior, said Kantor has given him values be- yond music. "He worked with my attitude and showed me how to feel good about myself and my playing. I'll take the love for music and the desire to make music for other people from him." Clintons try to win senior citizen support for health care plan THE WASHINGTON POST EDISON, N.J. - President Clinton and first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton joined forces yesterday to in- form senior citizens about the ben- efits that the administration's health care plan would bring to them and to enlist their help in the legislative battle. At the start of a renewed adminis- tration push for the support of the nation's 36 million senior citizens, a critical constituency in the health de- bate, the president also issued a blunt appeal for the explicit backing of the American Association of Retired Per- sons (AARP). The powerful lobby - which sponsored the Clintons' appearance at Middlesex County College -has endorsed the principles of Clinton's plan and said it is the best starting point, but has so far refused adminis- tration entreaties to go further. "The time has come to be counted, to stand up," Clinton told the group yesterday, enumerating the benefits you're going to have to fight for it." The AARP, he said, "ought to be for the only plan that helps you. Oth- erwise the interest groups will con- vince Congress that you don't really care, and you will lose these parts of our plan." But an AARP spokesperson said the group was not ready to go any further, with its membership confused about the plan and leery about what it would mean for them. A recent AARP poll indicated that more than half those questioned either opposed the Clinton plan or did not know whether to sup- port it. In addition, said Martin Cony, AARP's director of federal affairs, "When the president indicates flex- ibility, as he should, that also sug- gests there may be some elements of the plan that may be subject to change that might be important to us." In his zeal to push the program, Clinton went a bit overboard, describ- ing his proposal as "the only one" that Thirty-six million senior citizens are a critical constituency in the ongoing health care debate. provides long-term care and prescrip- tion drug coverage. In fact, single- payer plans under consideration would include such benefits. Both Clintons, appearing together to sell the administration's health care plan for the first time since October, continued their assault on the insur- ance industry's "Harry and Louise" advertisements criticizing the Clinton plan. "I always want to say to Harry and Louise," Clinton said. "You know those health care ads where the actors are telling you how scared you ought to be of our program -they never put any real people on there." At the same time, the White House said it was "looking into" Republican complaints that a Democratic National Committee ad distorted the views of Republican Gov. Carroll A. Campbell Jr. of South Carolina. White House press secretary Dee Dee Myers said the criticism was "under review" and that the White House wants to "determine what the circumstances are." As some of his aides acknowl- edged, the president's speech was somewhat disjointed, as he sought to weave his opposition to the balanced- budget amendment under consider- ation in the Senate with the need for health care overhaul: 1994 SUMMER EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY DO YOU HAVE WHAT IT TAKES? THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN CONFERENCES AND SEMINARS WILL BE HIRING SUMMER CONFERENCE: --FRONT DESK STAFF-- " Gain valuable work experience. I:Prnvide niiulity and nrofenniunal ervicet o our Group Meetings U Hindu Students Council, MLB, Room 2002, 8 p.m. U Orthodox Christian Fellow- ship, Michigan Union Pond Rooms. 7 p.m. linity in a Tokyo Hostess Club, Anne Allison, sponsored by the Center for Japanese Studies, Lane Hall Commons, noon. U Religions Perspectives on Rec- onciliation for Bosnia, spon- Q Campus Information Center, Michigan Union, 763-INFO; events info., 76-EVENT; film info., 763-FILM. Q North Campus Information Center, North Campus Com- i