Second Opinions Often Sought But Value Is Not Yet Proven
Actress Rita Wilson, who was diagnosed with breast cancer and underwent a double mastectomy recently, told last month that she expects to make a full recovery ābecause I caught this early, have excellent doctors and because I got a second opinion.ā
When confronted with the diagnosis of a serious illness or confusing treatment options, everyone agrees it can be useful to seek out another perspective.Ā Even if the second physician agrees with the first one, knowing that can provide clarity and peace of mind.

A second set of eyes, however, may identify information that was missed or misinterpreted the first time.Ā A study that reviewed existing published researchĀ found that 1resulted in major changes to diagnoses or recommended treatments.
Another provided by Best Doctors, a second-opinion service available as an employee benefit at some companies, found that more than 40 percent of second opinions resulted in diagnostic or treatment changes.
But hereās the rub: While itās clear that second opinions can help individual patients make better medical decisions, thereās little hard data showing that second opinions lead to better health results overall.
āWhat we donāt know is the outcomes,ā says Dr. Hardeep Singh, a patient safety researcher at the Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center and Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, who co-authored both thoseĀ studies. āWhat is the real diagnosis at the end? The first one or the second one? Or maybe both are wrong.ā
That doesnāt mean second opinions are a bad idea. Experts estimate that in 10 to 15 percent of cases.
āThereās no getting away from it, diagnosis is an imprecise thing,āĀ says , a senior fellow at RTI International who also co-authored the studies. Graber is the founder and president of the Society to Improve Diagnosis in Medicine.
Second opinion requests were related to diagnosis questions in 34.8 percent of cases in the Best Doctors study. These included 22.5 percent of patients whose symptoms hadnāt improved, 6.3 percent who hadnāt gotten a diagnosis and 6 percent who had questions about their diagnosis.
In Wilsonās case, she wrote that after two breast biopsies she was relieved to learn that the pathology analysis didnāt find any cancer. But on the advice of a friend, she decided to get a second opinion, and that pathologist diagnosed invasive lobular carcinoma. Wilson then got a third opinion that confirmed the second pathologistās diagnosis.
Getting a second opinionĀ may not involve a face-to-face meeting with a new specialist, but it will certainly involve a close examination of the patientās medical record, including clinical notes, imaging, pathology and lab test results, and any procedures that have been performed. Some people choose to have that second look done by physicians in their community, but other patients look for help elsewhere.
In addition to employer-based services like Best Doctors or Grand Rounds, medical centers such as the and in Baltimore also offer individual patients online second opinions.
āIt really does give people relatively easy access to expertise,ā says Dr.Ā C. Martin Harris, chief information officer at the Cleveland Clinic.
The doesnāt accept insurance. A medical second opinion costs $565, while a consultation with a pathology review costs $745.
Face-to-face meetings with specialists who provide a second opinion and review a patientās medical record are more likely to be covered by insurance than an online consult,Ā but nothing is guaranteed.
āUsually itās not the second opinion where the hiccup is,ā says Erin Singleton, chief of mission delivery at the Patient Advocate Foundation, which helps people with appeals related to second opinions. āIt may be that the MRI that they want to do again wonāt be approved.āĀ Many insurers wonāt pay for diagnostic or other tests to be redone, she notes.
PatientsĀ seeing an out-of-network specialist for a second opinion may encounter significantly higher out-of-pocket costs, particularly if they want to subsequently receive treatment from that provider. In those instances, the foundationĀ can sometimes work with patientsĀ to make the case that no specialist in theirĀ network is equally experienced at treating their condition.
Of course, asking for a second opinion doesnāt necessarily mean accepting the advice. In the Best Doctors survey, 94.7 percent of patients said they were satisfied with their experience. But only 61.2 percent said they either agreed or strongly agreed that they would follow the recommendations that they received in the second opinion.
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