Chronic Diseases and the Medical Industry: What You Need to
Know A Physician's View
Not many people know that tire manufacturers have the technology to
create a 100,000-mile tire. The tires on your car are made to last for between
30,000 and 60,000 miles, but by increasing the depth of the tread by a
half-inch and decreasing the tire's edge seal by a half-inch, the tire's life
could be doubled without increasing its height, at only a three or so percent
additional cost per tire. We could all save a bundle on tires. Fewer tires
would go to the landfill. Good for everyone, right? Well - not everyone. Tire
manufacturers haven't taken this step because they want us to buy more tires,
not fewer.
Planned obsolescence keeps a lot of huge corporations in business and
gives consumers plenty of new things to buy day after day. Longer-lived light
bulbs or batteries, more fuel-efficient cars, and shoes and clothing made to
weather both the passage of time and the whims of fashion would help consumers
to consume less. But this runs counter to the whole American way of doing
business.
Medicine in America is a business, just as the making of tires or
hairspray or dining room tables are businesses. It's an enormously profitable
business, growing ever more so by the year as more and more people get
chronically ill. Vast numbers of expensive medical technologies, procedures,
diagnostic tests, screening tests, treatments, surgeries and prescription drugs
exist today to diagnose and treat chronic illnesses - illnesses like heart
disease, allergies, asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), type
2 diabetes, high cholesterol, high blood pressure, depression, anxiety, ADHD,
cancer, arthritis, chronic fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia and psoriasis.
A chronic illness is a real cash cow for the medical industry because a
chronic illness is seen as incurable. It generally requires medical treatment
for months, years, or even the remainder of the patient's life. It's
interesting to consider, however, whether all these expensive medical marvels
are truly needed. Are they like the 60,000-mile tire - a status quo that could
be dramatically improved and made much more efficient with a few changes in
procedures and paradigms? Could it be that cures are being withheld and causes
of disease ignored because the medical industry would take a huge financial
loss if chronic diseases became curable diseases? Even worse, what if they told
you the causes of these chronic diseases? One simple thing they don't tell you
is PAIN is not something you have to live with. It is very curable with minimal
side effects and in most cases no side effects. They also don't tell you that
getting off of drugs, including opiates, is very easy and can be done without
suffering. Information is extremely powerful and there's always another way of
doing something in a better way. Knowing the human body is half the battle in
dealing with disease and prevention. Knowing the specific medical tests to
request from your doctor could find the solution to your problems. The more
knowledge you have when communicating with your doctor, the better chance you
have in gaining his respect and receiving his honest opinion concerning your
situation. Many problems have simple solutions. Unfortunately, the average
person is sent down a trail of medication after medication which never cures
them but just leads to further side effects which will need more medication in
the future.
It sounds like a wacky conspiracy theory when you put it this way. I'm
not suggesting that higher-ups in the medical industry are sitting in secret
meetings plotting ways to keep Americans sick enough to need medical care but
not quite sick enough to die. It isn't so much that any one element of the
medical system is scheming to keep people sick. By and large, everyone in that
system means well and wants to help, not harm. Despite these efforts, so-called
iatrogenic illness - illness caused by medical procedures or drugs - is at an
all-time high; no big surprise when you consider the complexity of the medical
system and the difficulties that system creates even as it tries to give each
individual patient the best possible care. Our medical system is reaching over
5,000 different drugs and climbing daily. How could any one doctor be able to
know each and every drug available and if that drug is right for you and if it
will conflict with your vitamins, herbs, foods, drugs, and lifestyle.
Our natural tendency as we see the downward spiral of modern medicine is
to look for a scapegoat, and doctors are too often made out to be the problem.
Most doctors strive to do their absolute best for their patients despite over
scheduling, insurance headaches and the speeding locomotive of medical research
that yields some 1,000 new discoveries every single day. How could any mortal
human - even one with an M.D. following his or her name - keep up without
making a mistake here and there? Overwhelmed, doctors just tend to follow
protocol, and most don't or can't take the time or energy to dig deeply enough
to make a truly accurate diagnosis. They fall into a pattern of controlling
disease symptoms rather than seeking a way to a cure.
Diagnosing
Examining the patient, reviewing the laboratory data and the patient's
history helps to identify or determine the nature and cause of a disease or
injury. At least this is the way the system was designed to operate. But the
system has become so overwhelmed that laboratories cannot keep up with the
demands and it is very easy for them to make mistakes. This is why the medical
community always tells you to get at least 3 opinions before doing any invasive
procedures. The key to getting 3 other accurate opinions is, never tell the
doctors what the last test result revealed.
Laboratory Testing
Lab tests can be frustrating, unreliable and misread. 1. First the
proper tests need to be requested. This is one of the big problems in blood
testing. 2. Then the blood needs to be drawn properly. Yes there are many ways
and times to draw blood. Remember blood draws are only a snapshot of the
blood's condition at the time it is drawn. 3. Proper storage and delivery time
plays an important role in diagnosing. 4. Reading the result is critical. The
tests need to be read in whole to make up a complete picture of your health. 5.
Having a past history of blood work is helpful and in some cases necessary. 6.
Always request a copy of all blood work for your home files. This is
critical.
There are well over 10,000 blood tests available and many more new ones
are being invented each day. Did you know that there is more than one blood
test for a single condition? Why would we need more than one test per disease?
The reason is disease has many stages. There is the acute and chronic disease.
There are diseases that make themselves easy to find while others are more
difficult to find. Many blood tests are looking for antibodies. Other blood
tests are looking for the antigens.
An Antibody is a protein produced by a host to bind to, and thus
inactivate, foreign particles. The particle is called the antigen. It is
frequently but not always a protein. The binding of antibody to antigen is very
specific so that, if all goes well, the antibody binds to that specific antigen
only. The part of the antigen molecule to which the antibody binds is called
the epitope.
An Antigen is anything that can stimulate an immune response in
your body. They are usually described as anything that your body recognizes as
foreign, or not belonging to you. In one part of the immune response, the B
cells manufacture antibodies to fight off the antigens. They are produced by
your B cells and are shaped in such a way that they are able to attach to
antigens and remove them from the body.
Past history with many diseases seems to show that if a condition is
acute we may be able to detect the antibody. If the condition is chronic it
seems to be more helpful to find the antigen. The problem is determining which
diseases are in their acute phase and which ones are in their chronic stages.
We cannot judge that by the length of time a person has been sick. All
pathogens have their own time of maturity. The second part of this is some
diseases only stay in the blood stream for a short period of time. They make
their home in a blood cell or deep in tissue where there may be little or no
blood. We have all heard of the skin - eating bacteria. To make things even
more complicated, there are many diseases that create the same antibody or
antigen response as other ones.
With all this information you now can understand why so many people
never really get a definitive diagnosis. It is estimated that over 75% of all
diagnoses is done by observation and the process of elimination. The medication
prescribed is decided by the symptoms and the doctor's knowledge of their past
history. This is why we call it PRACTICING medicine. There are ways of making
medicine much less "practicing" and more scientific.
In many instances, doctors refrain from giving patients clinical tests
that could help them make the most accurate diagnosis of the core problem. For
example: a simple urine culture can identify the pathogenic bacteria that is
causing a urinary tract infection. Instead of trying a broad-spectrum
antibiotic - a common practice that is making a powerful contribution to the
evolution of antibiotic-resistant bacteria - in hopes of eradicating whichever
bug is at the root of the infection, doctors could culture the urine and target
a specific drug to that specific bacteria. But the test isn't covered by
insurers and takes extra time, so it isn't done. In the worst cases, the
infection continues unabated even as the patient takes a course of
broad-spectrum antibiotics thereby possibly causing a painful kidney infection
or leading to a more serious disease later in life.
Due to no fault of the physicians who are its base of support, the
medical business inexorably moves away from simple prevention and simple cures
in favor of costly long-term treatments because it is a for-profit system, rife
with costly bureaucracy and conflicts of interest. Business is business, no
matter what the industry. These businesses are run by businesspeople, not
humane health practitioners. Their interests are in finding out what keeps the
money flowing, not what cures patients.
Since most of us were born into and have lived within this medical
paradigm for our entire lives, we tend not to think that it could be any other
way. We accept that some diseases can't be cured, and we accept the diagnoses
that are handed to us, our family members and others we care about. We accept
that we'll have to pay for medicine to treat those chronic conditions
indefinitely. As the medical system currently in place becomes too costly to
manage, it's time to look for simpler, less costly answers.
Standard medicine comes in three forms: 1. Emergency
medicine, which is outstanding and saves lives. 2. Acute and temporary
medical treatments, which most often are just a step below emergency medical
treatments; and 3. Chronic treatment, which might temporarily relieve
symptoms, but allows the disease process to continue and leads to other serious
side effect diseases.
Chronic treatments themselves can be dangerous; remember HRT? Vioxx?
Fen-phen? Bextra? Commonly used drugs have a vast number of side effects that
aren't serious enough (at least, not that we've discovered) to cause the drugs
to be withdrawn, but can reduce patients' quality of life dramatically. From
here on, I'll only address treatments and diagnoses of the chronic variety.
Mainstream medicine is best for dealing with acute and emergency issues.
It's time to reconsider the idea of chronic disease diagnosis and the
question of whether a chronic disease is really incurable.
Of course, the first key to curing a chronic condition is a proper
diagnosis. This allows the appropriate application of mainstream and natural
remedies. Diagnosing a chronic condition can be difficult; one can masquerade
as another. It isn't as straightforward as many of us would like to believe. A
chronic skin condition might be diagnosed in different ways by different
practitioners. One patient I know was diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis based
on her signs and symptoms - despite a negative blood test. She was treated with
methotrexate (a toxic chemotherapy drug) and steroid drugs (which cause many
unpleasant side effects, including weight gain, sleeplessness, and loss of bone
mass over time) which didn't resolve her symptoms. It turned out that she had
Lyme disease and Mycoplasma, which are often misdiagnosed as RA. The real
problem she faces with a delayed diagnosis is there's no Western medical
treatment that will be successful. Her doctor may tell her that he can treat
her but the truth will be known in a very short period of time.
My point here is that a doctor's diagnosis isn't gospel. Ask plenty of
questions, get second and third opinions. When treatments don't work, consider
that your diagnosis might be the problem. Research tests that might help better
define the imbalance in your body that is causing you to be unwell. For more
specific information, go to Health Consultation. We
have done a lot of research on appropriate but lesser-known medical tests and
have advised hundreds of clients which ones they should try to help nail down
the correct diagnosis. Most important, never be discouraged if there is no
found diagnosis. Most conditions can be treated by just the symptomology.
A medical diagnosis is a different thing entirely from the diagnosis you
will get from a naturally oriented practitioner like a homeopath or a
naturopathic physician. Let's say you visit an M.D. at your local HMO-approved
medical center, and you complain of constant sinus congestion and allergic
runny nose. He's going to diagnose you with nasal allergies - a chronic
condition. (Never mind that you didn't have it a year ago - it's chronic,
starting now.) There's no cure, he tells you. He can offer you a referral to an
allergist who will then offer you a series of costly skin-prick tests to
identify the allergens you are sensitive to. Or, the doctor you're already
talking to can write you a prescription for a steroid spray to shoot up your
nose every day during allergy season (which may be all year if you're allergic
to indoor dust or mold) and tell you to use over-the-counter allergy drugs and
decongestants as needed.
Having spent a total of about five minutes talking to the doctor, you're
set with a brand-new lifetime diagnosis and requirements for daily medications.
Your life has just changed dramatically, and not for the better. You're still
you, but you're You with Allergies - a mysterious invader into your life,
without cause and without cure.
Now, let's imagine the same visit, but to a naturopathic physician. The
naturopathic physician will spend a lot more time talking with you. He'll ask
you about your diet, your stress levels, whether you exercise, and about your
health history and your family's health history. He might describe your
symptoms as allergies but his whole approach will be different because he knows
that specific dietary changes can virtually cure allergy, given adequate time
and attention. He may offer ideas about homeopathic remedies, herbs, and
nutrients - all targeted at restoring the proper balance to your immune system
which has fallen out of whack due to changes inside your body and in your
world. If he recommends any medications, he'll emphasize that they are only to
be used temporarily and as needed.
The M.D. will be providing the medical industry with yet another
life-long customer. The N.D. is striving to make you well again and working to
help you avoid lifelong dependency on prescriptions. Interventions recommended
to balance your immune function - the kind that will be recommended by the N.D.
for allergies - will promote your health in many other ways, while the M.D.'s
approach will only address the mucus in your sinuses and nose.
There are more and more M.D's who practice medicine differently, with an
understanding of how to use diet, stress modification, and other natural
methods to balance physiology and address chronic conditions at their root. If
you've found a doctor like this, consider yourself lucky; if you haven't, maybe
a little doctor shopping is in order. The most successful doctors must have a
clear understanding of the Liver which is known as the chemistry set and Brain
or Mind which is known as the command center. These two areas of the human body
in most cases can solve many dysfunctions that can go wrong.
Fund Raising
Cancer and many other forms of research over the past 40 years have
raised over 900 billion dollars and we are no closer to a cure for any
condition than we were 40 years ago. In fact many pathologists claim we get
further away from the cures every year. The reason for this is all the fund
raising does not go to find a cure for disease. To find a cure you need to
discover the cause of the disease. All fund raising for every disease goes
toward the research to produce another drug for the disease. We now have over
80 drugs for cancer and our success rate of treatment is only 3%. This may seem
confusing to many because most doctors tell you that you have a 30% chance or
better in the cure or remission of the treatment. What they fail to tell you is
that you also have a 27% chance of the cancer returning within five years or
less. The problem with the return of the cancer is it comes back with a punch
usually twice as aggressive which lessens the time to fight it. But the 3% that
do go into remission add up to 30,000 out of one million plus success stories
yearly.
Medicine
We never want to forget the brilliant scientists and chemists that have
invented some of the most amazing emergency drugs that saved millions of
people. Let's also not forget those incredible surgeons that have performed the
most unbelievable life-saving surgeries. Emergency medicine and surgeries are
in a category of their own, separate from the daily prescribed
medications.
The only way we will ever advance in medicine is when we take the word
"business" out of the equation. Medicine needs to spend their profits in
discovering what causes disease and look for preventions and cures. Taking a
medication for a lifetime is not a cure, only a control. Taking a medication
for a lifetime will only lead to side effects and altered genetics. Taking a
medication for a lifetime will increase the already 400,000 deaths a year from
side effects to even a higher number. We need to know why we get diseases and
how to cure and prevent them. We already know that many of these diseases can
be cured by alternative methods. It's about time for the Western world to get
on the band wagon before some other country like Canada or Germany brings forth
the cure to some of these serious diseases. It is time for the drug industry to
communicate with the food industry and come to terms that they are dealing with
human beings like themselves and their families. Humans are not a set of tires
to keep kicking around before they rebel. Every year tens of thousands of
medical doctors convert to integrated medicine. This should be a subtle hint
that the people of the world are not getting the results that they need using
Western medicine and it is time for a change. I hope it doesn't take the loved
one of a top official of one of the drug companies to get deathly ill before
they start looking for a cure. If Western medicine places even a small amount
of energy toward the information listed above they will see amazing things
coming their way from the Eastern world of medicine. Eastern medicine is here
to stay and will continue to grow at an average of 22% a year. It is only a
matter of time.
Doctors
Remember doctors are only human and they are trying their best to relay
information that is passed down from the AMA, FDA, CDC, WHO, the drug industry
plus the selective schools and training they have had and continue having.
Their job is difficult and frustrating at times. Do everything in your power to
research and help them help you get the health you want and deserve. One way
you can help your doctors help you is by suggesting special blood tests that
they don't know about. They will learn and also respect you for your motivation
in the research for quality health. These tests will be discussed in the
upcoming News Letters. No one needs to suffer or be sick and there is always an
answer to all dis-ease.
Understanding what a Health Consultation should consist of will help you find the right practitioner. |