DutchNews.nl - DutchNews.nl brings daily news from The Netherlands in English

9 May 2025
Newsletter Donate Advertise
  • News
  • Life in the Netherlands
  • Jobs
  • Podcast
  • About us
  • Search
  • Home
  • Economy
  • Art and culture
  • Sport
  • Europe
  • Society
  • Environment
  • Health
  • Housing
  • Education
  • News
    • Home
    • Economy
    • Art and culture
    • Sport
    • Europe
    • Society
    • Environment
    • Health
    • Housing
    • Education
  • Life in the Netherlands
    • Latest
    • Opinion
    • Books
    • Travel
    • 10 Questions
    • Learning Dutch
    • Inburgering with DN
    • Food & Drink
    • Ask us anything
  • Jobs
  • Podcast
  • About us
    • Team
    • Donate
    • Advertise
    • Writing for Dutch News
    • Contact us
    • Privacy
    • Newsletter
  • Search

Doctors draw up list of 1,366 treatments which are often a waste of time

November 25, 2016

doctor euros healthcare costHospital doctors have drawn up a list of 1,366 treatments which do not benefit patients and are not scientifically proven, the Volkskrant said on Friday.

Around one-third of the treatments which have little positive effect concern diagnostic techniques and four in 10 are to do with medication, the paper said.

Doctors are trained to treat people, not wait and see, research leader Tijn Kool told the paper. ‘They carry out treatment because that is what they were trained to do or because other colleagues do this. And don’t forget, patients can sometimes demand research.’

For example, patients with stomach complaints are routinely given endoscopies, even though the practice is usually only beneficial to the over-60s, Erasmus teaching hospital chairman Ernst Kuipers said.

An endoscopy costs around €300, bringing the bill to €600m a year. Kuipers estimates around one third of the procedures are a waste of time and says stopping them would save €20m. ‘We would also stop putting patients through an uncomfortable process and free up doctors for other tasks,’ he said.’

Rising costs

The total healthcare bill reached €95bn last year, a rise of 40% on 10 years ago.

The eight Dutch teaching hospitals were commissioned to look into ways of keep care affordable by health minister Edith Schippers three years ago.

Over the next few months, doctors are going to look into the effect reducing the use of eight different procedures and treatments. For example, they will attempt to find out if catheters, often a source of infection, can be removed more quickly.

Share this article
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Reddit
  • Copy URL
Health
Thank you for donating to DutchNews.nl.

We could not provide the Dutch News service, and keep it free of charge, without the generous support of our readers. Your donations allow us to report on issues you tell us matter, and provide you with a summary of the most important Dutch news each day.

Make a donation
Latest
Show more
Not a holiday camp: Faber plans to stop all outings for refugees
Major chaos awaits on Dutch motorways from this weekend
New pope Leo XIV is seen as socially engaged bridge-builder
Police bust record number of drugs labs, many in urban areas
National library in The Hague robbed of 6 rare Russian books
NewsHomeEconomyArt and cultureSportEuropeSocietyEnvironmentHealthHousingEducation
Life in the NetherlandsLatestOpinionBooksTravel10 QuestionsLearning DutchInburgering with DNFood & DrinkAsk us anything
About usTeamDonateAdvertiseWriting for Dutch NewsContact usPrivacyNewsletter
© 2025 DutchNews | Cookie settings

Help us to keep providing you information about coronavirus in the Netherlands.

Many thanks to everyone who has donated to DutchNews.nl in recent days!

We could not provide this service without you. If you have not yet made a contribution, you can do so here.

The DutchNews.nl team

Donate now

Dutchnews Survey

Please help us making DutchNews.nl a better read by taking part in a short survey.

Take part now