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Is Crowdsourcing the New Face of Evidence-Based Medicine?

Is Crowdsourcing the New Face of Evidence-Based Medicine?

Esther Gokhale
Date

In the 1990s, Ofer Ben-Shachar suffered a leg injury. Doctors recommended he get surgery, estimating they would have him back running marathons within weeks. Before going under the knife, Ben-Shachar wanted to find data on this surgical option to see how effective it really was. However, the little research he could dig up was confusing and inconclusive. Frustrated, he succumbed to the assurances of his confident surgeon. What happened instead was so debilitating, it took him five years before he was able to drive a car again (you can read more about this story here). He vowed that one day he would create a website to help people get the kind of information he wished he had had at the outset.

After selling a successful startup, Ben-Shachar was able to follow through on his promise and funded a venture that he has named HealthOutcome.


Health Outcome homepage showing the highest and lowest rated solutions for Lower Back Pain

The website reads, “To [Ofer’s] surprise, no one from the medical community (his doctor, the hospital, or his insurance company) contacted him to learn about the result of his surgery.” Ben-Shachar goes on to say, “There is no meaningful data on medical treatments or surgery outcomes available to patients or physicians." Despite over 51 million surgeries (750,000 of them back surgeries) performed annually in the US, there was little to no patient-reported outcome data available to patients. "We are actively addressing this void of outcome data with a platform built to capture the voice of the patient.”


Data on medical outcomes has been limited and is not always trustworthy

In response to this lack of information, HealthOutcome has democratized treatment outcome data by collecting crowdsourced ratings and reviews. People need to hear from each other, not just in anecdotes, but in numbers. Ben-Shachar explains, “after 80 reviews are submitted for an intervention, we see the rating stabilize, which is in itself a sign of validity. The scale of the studies we are doing here is beyond anything happening in clinical trials. At 1/10,000th the cost per patient, we pool unbiased results from the public and are reflecting important truths about what works and what doesn’t.” There is truth in numbers, and the website has gotten the attention of a group of Stanford researchers who have recently published an article about the site "Is Crowdsourcing Patient-Reported Outcomes the Future of Evidence-Based Medicine? A Case Study of Back Pain", showing it to be a valid tool for measuring medical outcomes.


In the Evidence-Based Medicine triad, ‘relevant scientific evidence’ can now be bolstered by crowdsourced outcome data

Researchers note that the findings on HealthOutcome are consistent with the findings from randomized controlled trials, while the numbers are vastly greater than can be achieved from a randomized controlled trial (RTC). Furthermore, HealthOutcome allows for people to rate treatment success many months or years later, giving a better picture of the longevity of an outcome. For most surgeries, doctors perform little or no follow-up, and controlled trials are limited in that they cannot check back in on the trial patients one, two, three years later to see how their condition has progressed.

The Gokhale Method Institute recognizes the need for research on our program, but has had to face the reality of how difficult it is for a small organization to gather ‘pure’ data, in the form of an RTC. These trials are expensive and take specialized knowledge and a specialized cast of characters to design, implement, analyze, and publish.


This figure shows the change of mean values of the number of check-marked pain-related questions from the Roland Morris Pain Questionnaire due to Gokhale Method Foundations course.

In our journey for scientifically sound data, various studies have been conducted on the Gokhale Method. A San Jose State University study showed increased vitality and increased hamstring flexibility from taking the Foundations Course. An ongoing in-house study has shown remarkable changes in the frequency of back pain that students experience before the course, at completion of the course, and four weeks after completion. These studies, though highly encouraging, fall short of the RTC standard.


Enter HealthOutcome with reliable and valuable data!

HealthOutcome, with its overwhelming validation of the Gokhale Method and Postural Modification, was therefore a very welcome recent discovery. Lower back pain is one of the conditions the site has highlighted and...drumroll…Postural Modifications wins by a landslide margin! While most treatment options on the site differ by only 0.1 or 0.2 points (on a 0–5 rating scale) from the next best treatment option, Posture Modification stands head and shoulders above the next best treatment: compare a rating of 3.7 for Posture Modification with 2.9 for Yoga, with over a thousand reviews between them.

The Gokhale Method had been added to the list of interventions on the site, and we’re very proud to have a 4.6 out of 5 rating. With less than 500 reviews, our treatment doesn’t yet make it ‘above the fold.’ However, this excellent rating is a huge deal for the Gokhale Method, for back pain research, and for the public.


The Gokhale Method needs more reviews, but it is quickly becoming the top-rated solution on the Health Outcome website

This site is a tremendous service to us all, and I hope it flourishes and expands to cover an increasing number of conditions. There has long been a need for an efficient, trustworthy way to collect reviews of available treatment options, both to help patients gather the information they need to make informed medical decisions, and to help inform medical professionals (who have little time to research new treatments for every condition and to compile detailed treatment reviews) of the variety and efficacy of the options available for their patients. There is also a great need for a platform that non-clinical treatment options, such as posture modification and exercise regimens, can use to efficiently gather data, learn how effective their programs are, and share this news. The Gokhale Method is very excited to be able to see quantifiable validation of what we hear from our students every day, and to share our success with a larger audience.

I hope as readers of this article, you will share your experience after taking the Gokhale Method Foundations course on HealthOutcome if you were suffering from either lower back pain or neck pain.

Crowdsourcing Nominates Posture Modification As Best Lower Back Pain Solution

Crowdsourcing Nominates Posture Modification As Best Lower Back Pain Solution

Date

We’re very excited to announce recent validation of the Gokhale Method and Postural Modification by the world’s first crowdsourcing platform for medical interventions, www.HealthOutcome.org.

 


Health Outcome homepage showing the highest and lowest rated solutions for Lower Back Pain

 

On this groundbreaking website, members of the public share what interventions they have tried for a particular condition, and rate how well those have worked. Lower back pain is one of the conditions the site has highlighted and...drumroll…Postural Modifications wins by a landslide margin! The Gokhale Method was recently added to the list of interventions to be rated and we’re very proud to have a 4.9 out of 5 rating. This is a huge deal for the Gokhale Method, for back pain research, and for the public.

The Gokhale Method needs more reviews, but it is quickly becoming the top-rated solution on the Heatlh Outcome website

Says founder Ofer Ben-Shachar, “after 80 reviews are submitted for an intervention, we see the rating stabilize, which is in itself a sign of validity. The scale of the studies we are doing here is beyond anything happening in clinical trials. At 1/10,000th the cost per patient, we pool unbiased results from the public and are reflecting important truths about what works and what doesn’t.”

Some of the results are no surprise, and reflect what clinical trials have been telling us - surgery doesn’t work (rated 1.8); cortisone injections don’t work (rated 2.1). But some results are surprising - physical therapy (rated 1.8) is worsted only by spinal fusion surgery (rated 1.7). Ouch! Yoga (3.2) comes in second after Postural Modifications (3.9) after a wide margin, followed by a cluster of interventions in the 2.4-2.9 range including massage, swimming, and stretching.


A spinal fusion x-ray

Why am I not surprised?
 

This is truly the dawn of modern research in medicine as I see it. There is truth in numbers, and large numbers are reporting in at the Health Outcome website. I’m looking forward to learning about other conditions as well. Knee replacements are looking good on the osteoarthritis section, and plantar fasciitis responds to supportive shoes.

Knee Replacement Surgery rates highly on Health Outcome for knee osteoarthritis; so does Supportive Shoes for plantar fasciitis

Previous to this website, there is no patient-reported outcome data available despite over 750,000 back surgeries and over 51 million surgeries performed every year in the US. In addition, medical studies are suspect, as testified by the former Editor-in-Chief of The New England Journal of Medicine:It is simply no longer possible to believe much of the clinical research that is published, or to rely on the judgment of trusted physicians or authoritative medical guidelines. I take no pleasure in this conclusion, which I reached slowly and reluctantly over my two decades as an editor of The New England Journal of Medicine.” Marcia Angell


Data on medical outcomes has been limited and not trustworthy

Health Outcome is the offshoot of the healing odyssey of its founder. After suffering a leg injury in the 90’s, Ben-Shachar searched the medical literature for hints on whether to undergo the surgery he was being recommended. Frustrated by a lack of compelling data, he succumbed to assurances of a confident surgeon who predicted he would be back to running marathons within weeks. What happened instead was so debilitating, it took him five years before he was able to drive a car again. He vowed that one day he would create a website to help people get the kind of information he wished he had had at the outset of his saga. After selling his internet startup company and doing well in other endeavors, he was able to found Health Outcome. It’s a tremendous service to us all, and I hope the site flourishes and expands to cover an increasing number of conditions. People need to hear from each other, not just in anecdotes, but in numbers.

I hope the readers of this article will share their experiences and learn from others too!

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