Think about it: peptic and duodenal ulcer were fairly common, and so were effective antibiotics, starting in the mid-40s. . Every internist in the world – every surgeon – every GP was accidentally curing ulcers – not just one or twice, but again and again. For decades. Almost none of them noticed it, even though it was happening over and over, right in front of their eyes.
This is unfair. Modern attempts to eradicate h pylori use "triple therapy" of two different antibiotics plus a PPI, taken simultaneously, all for a unusually long period of time (one to two weeks). If you just give a patient a random antibiotic for some other disease, that's not going to produce astounding results: you need the PPI to alter the transport of the antibiotic and prevent it from getting immediately broken down in the acidic environment of the stomach, and you need both antibiotics in case the bacteria develop resistance to one. Although some doctors probably got lucky and eliminated h pylori by chance, it's not like every time anyone took an antibiotic it was curing their stomach ulcers and no one noticed.
Why else didn't people catch onto h pylori's role in stomach ulcers quicker? Well, at least 80% of people with h pylori don't have ulcers or any symptoms whatsoever, and 20% of people with ulcers don't have h pylori, so that's going to confuse people. Second, h pylori is hard to stain and very hard to culture, so all you have are these Bigfoot-esque rumors of "I saw this bacterium in the stomach...I think...no, I don't have any to show you." A bunch of studies looked for bacteria in the stomach and find none, because of previously mentioned staining and culturing problems. And whenever people tried treating ulcers with antibiotics - and they did do the studies - they get equivocal results because they weren't using the exact right drug combo to hit h pylori and keep it gone. The first person to successfully culture h pylori was the guy who won the Nobel Prize for discovering it.
Now, just from reading this article, you might believe that doctors are lax about looking at possible infective causes for chronic disease. Let's look at what PubMed has to say about possible infective causes of schizophrenia. There are 195 studies on "schizophrenia + influenza", 100 on "schizophrenia + herpesvirus", 84 on "schizophrenia + toxoplasma", 24 on "schizophrenia + cytomegalovirus", 17 on "schizophrenia + varicella", 10 on "schizophrenia + Lyme disease", 4 on "schizophrenia + neurocysticercosis", and one on "schizophrenia + trichinosis" (note that some of these studies are counted multiple times). This is not too atypical: after (among other things) the whole h pylori debacle people realized this was low hanging fruit and have been trying to pick it for the past thirty years.
I think that's generally a useful principle: if you know something is low-hanging fruit, then unless you're special so does everyone else, which means it's not low-hanging fruit anymore. And that's probably why h pylori seems so clear to Cochrane with thirty years of hindsight, while the people who figured it out at the time won the Nobel Prize, which generally isn't given for pointing out the obvious.
This illustrates an important point: doctors are lousy scientists, lousy researchers. They’re memorizers, not puzzle solvers.
Oh, be nice now.
This illustrates an important point: doctors are lousy scientists, lousy researchers. They’re memorizers, not puzzle solvers.
...
Oh, be nice now.
Actually being an accomplished researcher in the field of medicine, having done more science in the field than vast majority doctors in the world, he has good reason to say this.
Those of us who have found the arguments for stagnation in our near future by Peter Thiel and Tyler Cowen pretty convincing, usually look only to the information and computer industries as something that is and perhaps even can keep us afloat. On the excellent West Hunters blog (which he shares with Henry Harpending) Gregory Cochran speculates that there might be room for progress in a seemingly unlikely field.
Link to post.
I think Greg is underestimating the slight problems of massive over-regulation and guild-like rent seeking that limits medical research and providing medical advice quite severely. He does however make a compelling case for there to still be low hanging fruit there which with a more scientific and rational approach could easily be plucked. I also can't help but wonder if investigating older, supposedly disproved, treatments and theories together with novel research might bring up a few interesting things.
Many on LessWrong share Greg's estimation of the incompetence of the medical establishment, but how many share his optimism that our lack of recent progress isn't just the result of dealing with a really difficult problem set? It may be hard to tell if he is right.