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by boringuser2
1049 days ago
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1. You're pre-supposing that intervention in these cases is both common enough to affect things on a sociological level, and necessary enough to also contribute to the effect. I suspect given that the rarity of many serious ailments until much later in life simply no intervention would suffice in any reasonable epidemiological sense. 2. Your hypothesis presupposes that serious medical care is commonly necessary enough to significantly improve public health. I know of young people that have been harmed by medical science, and not many come to mind whom I would consider having been in absolute need of medical intervention. Given that medicine often harms patients demonstrably, with mistakes and opiates contributing majorly to human fatalities, it occurs to me that I can more commonly produce anecdotes where medication or medicine harmed rather than helped where it would have been absolutely necessary. |
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Of course more things go wrong as people get older but accident or illness can happen at any age and without intervention in the overwhelming majority of cases in which we intervene the outlook isn't great and many people have 40 or more years left when they need help.
Just as a singular for instance people become diabetic. No intervention means they die soon.
People break their bones. No intervention means people experience weeks to months of screaming agony and are far more likely to experience ongoing pain and permanent decrease.
People get pre-cancerous growths or trivially treatable early cancers. No intervention means they die decades early.
People get a bad chest infection and their lungs start to fill up with fluid. Non-intervention means someone who could have lived to 80 dies at 40.
People break their hip in their 50s with decades of life back. What is the chance of walking by just lying abed and drinking tea. It's negligible because certain kinds of breaks don't actually get fixed without surgery.
Here is some data on hospital admissions and emergency department visits per 1000 by age. You will note that even among the relatively young visits are not particularly uncommon. Young people are less likely to have something go wrong with their body but more likely to have something go wrong with their judgement and have an accident.
These people aren't all morons marching in lockstep to get snake oil they are going to the emergency room because they did something stupid and broke their legs or 1000 different other legitimate interventions.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8133481/
Here is the mayo clinic talking about what they do with a broken leg.
https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/broken-leg/di...
The truly strange thing is that the word epidemiological is in your vocabulary and not only do you know absolutely nothing about the world around you but you are aggressive in your ignorance. Defending the complete fantasy you have erected with vigor if not ability.
It's like talking with a true believer about the "theory" of evolution