How to stay calm when you know you'll be stressed | Daniel Levitin | TED

16,756,429 views ・ 2015-11-23

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:13
A few years ago, I broke into my own house.
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I had just driven home,
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it was around midnight in the dead of Montreal winter,
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I had been visiting my friend, Jeff, across town,
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and the thermometer on the front porch read minus 40 degrees --
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and don't bother asking if that's Celsius or Fahrenheit,
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minus 40 is where the two scales meet --
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it was very cold.
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And as I stood on the front porch fumbling in my pockets,
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I found I didn't have my keys.
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In fact, I could see them through the window,
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lying on the dining room table where I had left them.
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So I quickly ran around and tried all the other doors and windows,
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and they were locked tight.
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I thought about calling a locksmith -- at least I had my cellphone,
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but at midnight, it could take a while for a locksmith to show up,
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and it was cold.
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I couldn't go back to my friend Jeff's house for the night
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because I had an early flight to Europe the next morning,
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and I needed to get my passport and my suitcase.
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So, desperate and freezing cold,
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I found a large rock and I broke through the basement window,
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cleared out the shards of glass,
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I crawled through,
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I found a piece of cardboard and taped it up over the opening,
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figuring that in the morning, on the way to the airport,
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I could call my contractor and ask him to fix it.
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This was going to be expensive,
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but probably no more expensive than a middle-of-the-night locksmith,
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so I figured, under the circumstances, I was coming out even.
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Now, I'm a neuroscientist by training
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and I know a little bit about how the brain performs under stress.
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It releases cortisol that raises your heart rate,
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it modulates adrenaline levels
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and it clouds your thinking.
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So the next morning,
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when I woke up on too little sleep,
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worrying about the hole in the window,
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and a mental note that I had to call my contractor,
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and the freezing temperatures,
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and the meetings I had upcoming in Europe,
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and, you know, with all the cortisol in my brain,
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my thinking was cloudy,
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but I didn't know it was cloudy because my thinking was cloudy.
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(Laughter)
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And it wasn't until I got to the airport check-in counter,
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that I realized I didn't have my passport.
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(Laughter)
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So I raced home in the snow and ice, 40 minutes,
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got my passport, raced back to the airport,
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I made it just in time,
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but they had given away my seat to someone else,
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so I got stuck in the back of the plane, next to the bathrooms,
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in a seat that wouldn't recline, on an eight-hour flight.
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Well, I had a lot of time to think during those eight hours and no sleep.
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(Laughter)
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And I started wondering, are there things that I can do,
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systems that I can put into place,
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that will prevent bad things from happening?
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Or at least if bad things happen,
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will minimize the likelihood of it being a total catastrophe.
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So I started thinking about that,
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but my thoughts didn't crystallize until about a month later.
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I was having dinner with my colleague, Danny Kahneman, the Nobel Prize winner,
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and I somewhat embarrassedly told him about having broken my window,
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and, you know, forgotten my passport,
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and Danny shared with me
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that he'd been practicing something called prospective hindsight.
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(Laughter)
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It's something that he had gotten from the psychologist Gary Klein,
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who had written about it a few years before,
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also called the pre-mortem.
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Now, you all know what the postmortem is.
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Whenever there's a disaster,
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a team of experts come in and they try to figure out what went wrong, right?
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Well, in the pre-mortem, Danny explained,
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you look ahead and you try to figure out all the things that could go wrong,
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and then you try to figure out what you can do
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to prevent those things from happening, or to minimize the damage.
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So what I want to talk to you about today
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are some of the things we can do in the form of a pre-mortem.
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Some of them are obvious, some of them are not so obvious.
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I'll start with the obvious ones.
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Around the home, designate a place for things that are easily lost.
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Now, this sounds like common sense, and it is,
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but there's a lot of science to back this up,
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based on the way our spatial memory works.
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There's a structure in the brain called the hippocampus,
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that evolved over tens of thousands of years,
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to keep track of the locations of important things --
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where the well is, where fish can be found,
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that stand of fruit trees,
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where the friendly and enemy tribes live.
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The hippocampus is the part of the brain
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that in London taxicab drivers becomes enlarged.
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It's the part of the brain that allows squirrels to find their nuts.
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And if you're wondering, somebody actually did the experiment
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where they cut off the olfactory sense of the squirrels,
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and they could still find their nuts.
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They weren't using smell, they were using the hippocampus,
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this exquisitely evolved mechanism in the brain for finding things.
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But it's really good for things that don't move around much,
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not so good for things that move around.
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So this is why we lose car keys and reading glasses and passports.
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So in the home, designate a spot for your keys --
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a hook by the door, maybe a decorative bowl.
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For your passport, a particular drawer.
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For your reading glasses, a particular table.
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If you designate a spot and you're scrupulous about it,
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your things will always be there when you look for them.
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What about travel?
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Take a cell phone picture of your credit cards,
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your driver's license, your passport,
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mail it to yourself so it's in the cloud.
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If these things are lost or stolen, you can facilitate replacement.
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Now these are some rather obvious things.
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Remember, when you're under stress, the brain releases cortisol.
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Cortisol is toxic, and it causes cloudy thinking.
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So part of the practice of the pre-mortem
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is to recognize that under stress you're not going to be at your best,
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and you should put systems in place.
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And there's perhaps no more stressful a situation
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than when you're confronted with a medical decision to make.
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And at some point, all of us are going to be in that position,
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where we have to make a very important decision
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about the future of our medical care or that of a loved one,
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to help them with a decision.
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And so I want to talk about that.
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And I'm going to talk about a very particular medical condition.
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But this stands as a proxy for all kinds of medical decision-making,
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and indeed for financial decision-making, and social decision-making --
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any kind of decision you have to make
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that would benefit from a rational assessment of the facts.
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So suppose you go to your doctor and the doctor says,
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"I just got your lab work back, your cholesterol's a little high."
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Now, you all know that high cholesterol
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is associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular disease,
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heart attack, stroke.
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And so you're thinking
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having high cholesterol isn't the best thing,
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and so the doctor says, "You know, I'd like to give you a drug
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that will help you lower your cholesterol, a statin."
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And you've probably heard of statins,
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you know that they're among the most widely prescribed drugs
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in the world today,
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you probably even know people who take them.
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And so you're thinking, "Yeah! Give me the statin."
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But there's a question you should ask at this point,
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a statistic you should ask for
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that most doctors don't like talking about,
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and pharmaceutical companies like talking about even less.
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It's for the number needed to treat.
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Now, what is this, the NNT?
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It's the number of people that need to take a drug
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or undergo a surgery or any medical procedure
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before one person is helped.
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And you're thinking, what kind of crazy statistic is that?
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The number should be one.
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My doctor wouldn't prescribe something to me
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if it's not going to help.
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But actually, medical practice doesn't work that way.
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And it's not the doctor's fault,
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if it's anybody's fault, it's the fault of scientists like me.
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We haven't figured out the underlying mechanisms well enough.
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But GlaxoSmithKline estimates
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that 90 percent of the drugs work in only 30 to 50 percent of the people.
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So the number needed to treat for the most widely prescribed statin,
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what do you suppose it is?
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How many people have to take it before one person is helped?
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300.
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This is according to research
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by research practitioners Jerome Groopman and Pamela Hartzband,
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independently confirmed by Bloomberg.com.
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I ran through the numbers myself.
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300 people have to take the drug for a year
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before one heart attack, stroke or other adverse event is prevented.
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Now you're probably thinking,
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"Well, OK, one in 300 chance of lowering my cholesterol.
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Why not, doc? Give me the prescription anyway."
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But you should ask at this point for another statistic,
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and that is, "Tell me about the side effects." Right?
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So for this particular drug,
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the side effects occur in five percent of the patients.
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And they include terrible things --
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debilitating muscle and joint pain, gastrointestinal distress --
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but now you're thinking, "Five percent,
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not very likely it's going to happen to me,
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I'll still take the drug."
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But wait a minute.
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Remember under stress you're not thinking clearly.
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So think about how you're going to work through this ahead of time,
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so you don't have to manufacture the chain of reasoning on the spot.
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300 people take the drug, right? One person's helped,
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five percent of those 300 have side effects,
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that's 15 people.
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You're 15 times more likely to be harmed by the drug
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than you are to be helped by the drug.
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Now, I'm not saying whether you should take the statin or not.
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I'm just saying you should have this conversation with your doctor.
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Medical ethics requires it,
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it's part of the principle of informed consent.
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You have the right to have access to this kind of information
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to begin the conversation about whether you want to take the risks or not.
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Now you might be thinking
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I've pulled this number out of the air for shock value,
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but in fact it's rather typical, this number needed to treat.
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For the most widely performed surgery on men over the age of 50,
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removal of the prostate for cancer,
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the number needed to treat is 49.
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That's right, 49 surgeries are done for every one person who's helped.
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And the side effects in that case occur in 50 percent of the patients.
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They include impotence, erectile dysfunction,
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urinary incontinence, rectal tearing,
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fecal incontinence.
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And if you're lucky, and you're one of the 50 percent who has these,
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they'll only last for a year or two.
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So the idea of the pre-mortem is to think ahead of time
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to the questions that you might be able to ask
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that will push the conversation forward.
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You don't want to have to manufacture all of this on the spot.
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And you also want to think about things like quality of life.
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Because you have a choice oftentimes,
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do you I want a shorter life that's pain-free,
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or a longer life that might have a great deal of pain towards the end?
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These are things to talk about and think about now,
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with your family and your loved ones.
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You might change your mind in the heat of the moment,
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but at least you're practiced with this kind of thinking.
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Remember, our brain under stress releases cortisol,
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and one of the things that happens at that moment
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is a whole bunch on systems shut down.
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There's an evolutionary reason for this.
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Face-to-face with a predator, you don't need your digestive system,
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or your libido, or your immune system,
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because if you're body is expending metabolism on those things
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and you don't react quickly,
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you might become the lion's lunch, and then none of those things matter.
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Unfortunately,
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one of the things that goes out the window during those times of stress
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is rational, logical thinking,
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as Danny Kahneman and his colleagues have shown.
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So we need to train ourselves to think ahead
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to these kinds of situations.
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I think the important point here is recognizing that all of us are flawed.
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We all are going to fail now and then.
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The idea is to think ahead to what those failures might be,
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to put systems in place that will help minimize the damage,
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or to prevent the bad things from happening in the first place.
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Getting back to that snowy night in Montreal,
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when I got back from my trip,
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I had my contractor install a combination lock next to the door,
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with a key to the front door in it, an easy to remember combination.
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And I have to admit,
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I still have piles of mail that haven't been sorted,
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and piles of emails that I haven't gone through.
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So I'm not completely organized,
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but I see organization as a gradual process,
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and I'm getting there.
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Thank you very much.
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(Applause)
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