Attack of the Hawk

In light of this week’s Shell Houston Open, here is a video tribute to the best Texan golfer never to have won the tournament, Ben Hogan.

The unreliable eyewitness

Daniel Simons lucidly explains what most trial lawyers know instinctively — an eyewitness is often quite unreliable.

Health Care Myth Busters

mythbustersFollowing on this post from last fall, check out this Scientific American excerpt of the new book, Demand Better! Revive Our Broken Health Care System (Second River Healthcare Press, March 2011) by Sanjaya Kumar, chief medical officer at Quantros, and David B. Nash, dean of the Jefferson School of Population Health at Thomas Jefferson University:

Most of us are confident that the quality of our healthcare is the finest, the most technologically sophisticated and the most scientifically advanced in the world. And for good reason–thousands of clinical research studies are published every year that indicate such findings. Hospitals advertise the latest, most dazzling techniques to peer into the human body and perform amazing lifesaving surgeries with the aid of high-tech devices. There is no question that modern medical practices are remarkable, often effective and occasionally miraculous.

But there is a wrinkle in our confidence. We believe that the vast majority of what physicians do is backed by solid science. Their diagnostic and treatment decisions must reflect the latest and best research. Their clinical judgment must certainly be well beyond any reasonable doubt. To seriously question these assumptions would seem jaundiced and cynical.

But we must question them because these beliefs are based more on faith than on facts for at least three reasons, each of which we will explore in detail in this section. Only a fraction of what physicians do is based on solid evidence from Grade-A randomized, controlled trials; the rest is based instead on weak or no evidence and on subjective judgment. When scientific consensus exists on which clinical practices work effectively, physicians only sporadically follow that evidence correctly.

Medical decision-making itself is fraught with inherent subjectivity, some of it necessary and beneficial to patients, and some of it flawed and potentially dangerous. For these reasons, millions of Americans receive medications and treatments that have no proven clinical benefit, and millions fail to get care that is proven to be effective. Quality and safety suffer, and waste flourishes.

At first blush, this may seem shocking, but it really provides a great incentive for the consumer of health care services and products to be as fully informed as possible about various treatment alternatives.

The human body is an incredibly complex organism. That we can predict and control outcomes relating to such complexity in even a fraction of cases is a remarkable achievement.

The approach we need to take is to embrace that complexity and randomness, educate ourselves as best we can on the risks that certain behaviors and habits have in regard to affecting bad health outcomes, and then lead our lives in a way that deals with those risks in a manner that is acceptable to each individual.

However, the reality is that neither we – nor our doctors – control the outcome of many of our health care decisions. We can make choices based on the best available information. But life is still largely a roll of the dice.

It’s SHO time!

1G Seventh Hole teeThe PGA Tour makes its annual trek to Houston this week for the Shell Houston Open at the Tournament Course at Redstone Golf Club. It’s always a fun event and well worth attending.

After a rocky divorce from The Woodlands and its popular TPC Course, as well as a difficult transition period in which most of the best PGA Tour players avoided the event, the 2010 tournament attracted the best field in the history of the event.

The 2011 tournament does not have quite a strong a field (four of the the top 10 players in the World Rankings are playing as opposed to six last year), but the field is as good as any of the non-major, non-World Golf Championship event on the Tour.

Phil Mickelson (6 in the World Rankings), Lee Westwood (2), Matt Kuchar (9) and Steve Stricker (10) are the highest ranking players participating this year, while defending SHO champ Anthony Kim (41), Ernie Els (13), Retief Goosen (18), Francesco Molinari (16), Padraig Harrington (36) , Hunter Mahan (19), Charl Schwartzel (26),  and defending British Open champ Louis Oosthuizen (24) are other well-known Tour members in the field. In addition, local fan favorites and past SHO winners Fred Couples, Stuart Appleby and Robert Allenby (30) are playing again this year.

The Houston Open is one of the oldest events on the PGA Tour and the event has really got its mojo back after picking up the week-before-the-Masters-date on the Tour schedule five years ago. The first tournament was in 1922, which ties the event with the Texas Open as the third oldest non-major championship on the PGA Tour behind only only the Western Open (1899) and the Canadian Open (1904). This is the sixth Houston Open to be played on the Tournament Course at Redstone and the ninth event overall at Redstone, which hosted its first three Houston Opens on the club’s Jacobson-Hardy Course while the Tournament Course was being built.

This year’s strong field is further confirmation that the tournament’s move to the week-before-The Masters-date was the right one (32 participants in the SHO will play in the Masters the following weekend). The Houston Golf Association continues to do a fine job of promoting the tournament with Tour players by grooming the Tournament Course as much as possible to resemble the conditions that they will face next the following weekend at Augusta National. However, the course is a flat-land course that bears little resemblance to the hilly venues of Augusta, so that grooming only works to a limited extent.

Moreover, even with its superior conditioning, the Tournament Course is a not a favorite of either players or spectators. Although is has a decent variety of interesting holes, the routing of the course is an unmitigated disaster, with 16 of the holes separated by a long walk and a drainage ditch from the 1st and 18th holes, the driving range and the clubhouse. Unfortunately, there is not much the Houston Golf Association can do about that routing problem, so let’s just hope that the course’s superior conditioning and the SHO’s attractive tune-up date for The Masters keeps prompting the top players to overlook the course’s less appealing characteristics. Here are a few tips on watching the tournament at Redstone.

The following are a few of the back stories to follow during the tournament:

Houston will be well-represented in the field. Steve Elkington, and The Woodlands’ Jeff Maggert and Roland Thatcher lead the local veteran contingent, while two new faces – Johnattan Vegas and Bobby Gates, both from The Woodlands – are legitimate contenders for a top-10 finish this week. Vegas already won the Bob Hope Classic earlier this season, and both he and Gates already have two top-10 finishes each this season. Vegas and Gates are students of Kevin Kirk, who is the head pro at The Woodlands Golf Performance Center and another in Houston’s long legacy of outstanding golf instructors.

Although Mickelson and Tiger Woods still are ranked higher in the World Rankings, Matt Kuchar is currently the most consistent American player on the PGA Tour and arguably the most consistent player on the Tour over the past two years (although Bay Hill winner Martin Laird is coming on strong in that category). And, as with many things in golf, there is a Houston connection to Kuchar’s rise to the top.

Defending SHO champion Kim and British Open champion Oosthuizen are both coming back from injuries that cost them a portion of theie 2010 season. Although neither has contended yet in the 2011 season, both players are extraordinary talents who could burst into contention at any moment.

Scott Stallings, who contended at The Transitions Tournament a couple of weeks ago – is a top-20 Tour player in driving distance and maintains an interesting blog Chief Executive Golfer and likely will be passing along thoughts about his experience during the tournament.

Three of the top-10 drivers in terms of distance on the Tour will be playing, J.B. Holmes (4), Angle Cabrera (5) and Transitions Tournament champion Gary Woodland (9). 

Although I’ve had my doubts that the HGA would be able to turnaround the SHO at Redstone, I’m happy to be wrong on that score. Houston has a rich golfing tradition and the HGA is a fine charitable organization. It’s going to be another great week at Redstone, so sit back and enjoy the SHO!

The Father of Golf Instruction

John JacobsWhile the saga of Tiger Woods’ latest swing change plays out on the PGA Tour, Golf Digest’s Jaime Diaz interviews the oracle of golf swing instruction, England’s John Jacobs.

“The golf swing has only one purpose: to deliver the head of the club to the ball correctly, and to achieve such impact repeatedly.” With that statement, the 86 year-old Jacobs really hatched the profession of teaching the golf swing during the 1950’s and 60’s, and then served as a mentor to many of the best golf instructors of the past generation, including Houston’s Jim Hardy.  The entire interview is essential reading for anyone interested in the golf swing, in particular, or teaching, in general. The following are just a few of Jacobs’ pearls of wisdom:

“Ben Hogan’s The Modern Fundamentals of Golf kept me in business.  .  .  .  The book should have been called How I Play Golf, and it would have been a great anti-hook book. But the title suggested it was good for everyone.”

“The feeling of wanting to take the club straight back, rather than on an arc, is intuitively human, but it’s the core of many faults. We think the longer we can make a straight line, the straighter the ball will go. But golf is a side-on game with the ball on the ground, so it’s the opposite.”

“The hardest thing about golf is that the natural correction is wrong. Slicers see the ball go to the right and aim farther left. It only makes their slices bigger.”

“Although it worked wonderfully for them, I think the team of Nick Faldo and David Leadbetter set a bad precedent for players becoming too dependent on instructors. I preferred that players work alone and ring me when they had a problem.  .   .   . I would say Jack Nicklaus had the right formula with Jack Grout: Meet once a year, with occasional visits for emergencies.”

“When Tiger’s mind was clear, he was probably as good as Jack, but I wouldn’t say better. Jack was not as well equipped in his short game, so he had to be better internally, and that’s where Tiger is being tested now. Tiger hits more bad shots than Jack did, but he has saved them with his putter and short game. Going forward, he should be focused on hitting fewer bad shots and needing his putter less.”

Which, interestingly, appears to be what Woods is currently attempting to do.

The greatest invention of the industrial revolution

Hans Rosling argues below that it was the humble washing machine. But Stephen Bainbridge makes a compelling argument in favor of an even more underappreciated invention.

Rethinking Obesity

The stigma attached to obesity has been an accepted practice of American society for a long time.

Heck, even those who should know better often embrace the simplistic thinking that obesity is merely the result of an individual’s lack of willpower.

But research is increasingly revealing that the obesity stigma is misplaced and counterproductive. Michelle Berman, MD noted this awhile back in this post on KevinMD.com:

Did you know that some psychologists and psychiatrists would like to classify obesity as a brain disease?

The reason for this is that there is mounting evidence that food, or certain types of food, can trigger the same addictive effects in the brain as drugs like heroin and cocaine.

There is also substantial evidence that some people lose control over their food consumption and exhibit other behaviors (e.g. tolerance, withdrawal)  that may meet diagnostic criteria  .   .   . for substance dependence.

Arya Sharma, MD picks up on this line of thinking in this recent KevinMD.com post:

Recently, I attended a scientific symposium on addictions. One of the books I picked up at that conference  .   .   .  is A. J. Adams’ “Undrunk: A Skeptic’s Guide to AA”. [.  .  .] The definition [of alcoholism] reads as follows:

Alcoholism is a primary chronic disease with genetic, psycho-social and environmental factors influencing its development and manifestations. The disease is often progressive and fatal. It is characterized by continuous or periodic impaired control over drinking, preoccupation with the drug alcohol despite adverse consequences and distortions of thinking, mostly denial.

Let us look at this definition of alcoholism and see what aspects of it (if any) apply to obesity.No doubt, as readers of these pages know, obesity is most definitely a chronic condition, whose development and manifestations are influenced by genetic, psycho-social and environmental factors. In some cases obesity may be more genetic, in others more psycho-social and sometimes purely environmental, but certainly, obesity would fit the bill as far as this statement goes.And yes, obesity is often progressive and fatal. [.   .  .]This may not seem as obvious as in the case of the alcoholic who dies of liver cirrhosis or totals his car (and himself) whilst DIU, but when you start looking at the many ways in which obesity can kill you, from heart attacks to cancer, there is no doubt that obesity is fatal (often after ruining most of your life first – another similarity to alcoholism).

Clear Thinkers favorite Art De Vany does an excellent job of explaining the physiological underpinnings of overeating in his recent book, The New Evolution Diet: What Our Paleolithic Ancestors Can Teach Us About Weight Loss, Fitness and Aging (Rodale 2010). The following oversimplifies De Vany’s explanation, so definitely read the book if you are interested in this subject.

But the essence of De Vany’s point is that the brain needs glucose – generally supplied by carbohydrates or body fat – in order to live and thrive. Thus, the brain signals that it needs more glucose, which triggers our desire to eat carbohydrate or for the body to use body fat to fulfill that need. The body (specifically the pancreas) generates insulin to absorb the ingested glucose into the bloodstream.

So far, so good. However, DeVany explains that most people who become obese fall into a sort of negative feedback loop in which they become insulin and leptin insensitive (leptin is a hormone that signals to the brain that hunger has been satisfied).

This is bad for a variety of reasons (inflammation on a cellular level, etc), but it is particularly damaging in regard to obesity – the body ends up generating excess insulin, which it stores as fat, and the brain becomes desensitized to leptin, which makes it much more difficult to satiate hunger.

Thus, insulin and leptin insensitivity cause a negative feedback loop in which the consumer becomes conditioned to being continually hungry (the brain is constantly hungry and signaling that it needs glucose), the consumer eats high-calorie, processed (and readily available) carbohydrate to fulfill that hunger, the body produces more insulin that it needs to absorb the glucose, the body stores the excess insulin as fat, the body rarely uses body fat to fuel the brain, and then the process starts all over again, partly because of the consumer’s increasingly insulin and leptin insensitive nature.

In short, willpower really doesn’t have that much to do with it. Physiological impulses do.

Stated simply, it’s hard to lose weight if you are always hungry.

As De Vany explains in his book, the solution to this obesity syndrome is to become insulin and leptin sensitive – and, thus, fat adaptive – through eating lean meats, vegetables and fruits and avoiding calorie-laden processed foods, as well as exercise and recreation that promote maintenance of lean body mass. Toss in some intermittent fasting (12-16 hours of no food, most of which occurs during sleep) a few times a week to help control cellular inflammation and you have the blueprint for a healthy lifestyle.

However, the more important message that DeVany delivers is that the social stigma attached to obesity is inhumane and counterproductive. That stigma drives obese people to “quick fixes” such as fad diets and excessive exercise routines, both of which rarely result in sustained weight loss.

Rather, the key to overcoming the compulsion toward high caloric food is to educate the consumer to understand the physiological underpinnings that drive the consumer’s compulsion and then to address those physiological issues.

In short, less stigma and better education equals less obesity and better health.

Sounds like a good trade to me.