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by tcj_phx
2526 days ago
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> That, after all, is how we’ve ended up with anti vaxxers, a resurgence in largely cured infectious diseases, and many other medical and social ailments of our modern age (politics anyone?) Medicine is great when it works, but sometimes it causes the diseases they supposedly treat. Psychiatry is a case study in ideological capture resulting in iatrogenic illness. My girlfriend was misdiagnosed, but since they use the courts to force her to take the drugs that actually make people suicidal (common result of anti-psychotics) and die of liver failure (my aunt's friend), there's no way for her to escape. The tragedy of Psychiatry is that the physiology of the conditions are largely understood, but this understanding didn't reach the practitioners working with patients. People are drawn to "alternative medicine" when their mainstream medicine practitioners shrug their shoulders. In the United States, standard insurance-based medicine is a wealth-transfer operation: it's fantastically expensive approach to rendering needed services. |
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I agree that people are drawn to alternative medicine when they can’t get answers from doctors. And I am a vocal advocate both inside and outside of medicine for the failings of the system. For example, if I turn up to the GPS office and sit in a room of sick kids with paint peeling off the walls to be seen by a disinterested doctor for 15 minutes who sends me away without giving me a deifinitive answer to my questions/concerns; then later go to an alt-Med quack with a water fountain in the waiting room, incense burning and she spends 45 minutes with me listening to my problems, who am I going to come back to, especially if I derive benefit (there are studies showing that practitioner engagement and active listening are for many common ‘modern’ presentations highly effective)
Part of this is the modern world has produced people who are so healthy and generally well off compared to our forebears that the moment they develop an ache or pain they fear the sky is falling and demand an answer.
And medicine doesn’t have answers, or maybe not the answer these people want, because most of these things are just the process of growing old in and of itself - people are externalising their existential angst on a system that was designed to treat sick people, not the walking well.
For example, of the 17 patients I treated in the emergency department on my last 2 shifts, 9 of them should have never even turned up to the department. They had nothing wrong with them, or nothing that staying at home, resting and using some common sense wouldn’t have fixed. Yet there they are demanding answers to questions that our forebears would have considered part of life; and which in any regard we can’t fix anyway.
I don’t work in the US but the system there is so fucked that I wonder how long until it contributes to a broader breakdown in society; healthcare is a basic human right and you’re right the wealth transfer aspect of it is disenhartening and concerning.