In my last post (A Brave Journey – a Patient of Dr. Gonzalez’s) I asked:
When I tell people of successes such as Montye’s they often respond with something to the effect of: if the treatment is successful, why isn’t it a standard treatment? Why don’t more doctors recommend it? I don’t know. My best guess is that much of our society (and our world population for that matter) have become automatons, blindly following the prescribed industry “treatments” that not only don’t work but also hasten the patient’s demise.
The next day, Ryan, my husband, brings the Atlantic Magazine article by David H. Freedman to my attention: “Lies, Damned Lies, and Medical Science.” According to this article, my poorly worded attempt to understand the damage inflicted on people by many standard western medical treatments is partially correct. Patients and doctors do blindly follow the prescribed industry treatments, but only the patients seem to be automatons. The medical researchers and doctors seem to know the truth about many medical interventions but still implement useless if not harmful treatments. Most of them know that the medical research and “discoveries” are driven by the need for research dollars and the desire to perpetuate one’s career. Even though very many of the “discoveries” have been disproven, doctors still implement the unfounded protocols knowing that the protocols don’t work or can cause harm.
Dr. John Ioannidis, about whom the Atlantic Magazine article is written, seems to be trustworthy in comparison to typical medical researchers because he does not seem to be tied to any medical industry funding. Who would fund a guy who spends his time proving that the latest treatments are bunk? Maybe he is a well hidden egomaniac. The article doesn’t seem to suggest this, although we can’t be sure. Or maybe the reporter and the doctor are two seekers of truth working to empower people and help them take control of their health.
I have included the entire article below, and here are a couple of highlights from the article that I have cherry picked to drive home my beliefs.
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How should we choose among these dueling, high-profile nutritional findings? Ioannidis suggests a simple approach: ignore them all.
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“Often the claims made by studies are so extravagant that you can immediately cross them out without needing to know much about the specific problems with the studies,” Ioannidis says. But of course it’s that very extravagance of claim (one large randomized controlled trial even proved that secret prayer by unknown parties can save the lives of heart-surgery patients, while another proved that secret prayer can harm them) that helps gets these findings into journals and then into our treatments and lifestyles, especially when the claim builds on impressive-sounding evidence. “Even when the evidence shows that a particular research idea is wrong, if you have thousands of scientists who have invested their careers in it, they’ll continue to publish papers on it,” he says. “It’s like an epidemic, in the sense that they’re infected with these wrong ideas, and they’re spreading it to other researchers through journals.”
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Nature, the grande dame of science journals, stated in a 2006 editorial, “Scientists understand that peer review per se provides only a minimal assurance of quality, and that the public conception of peer review as a stamp of authentication is far from the truth.”
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Ioannidis found that even when a research error is outed, it typically persists for years or even decades. He looked at three prominent health studies from the 1980s and 1990s that were each later soundly refuted, and discovered that researchers continued to cite the original results as correct more often than as flawed—in one case for at least 12 years after the results were discredited.
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That we’re not routinely made seriously ill by this shortfall, he argues, is due largely to the fact that most medical interventions and advice don’t address life-and-death situations, but rather aim to leave us marginally healthier or less unhealthy, so we usually neither gain nor risk all that much.
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Ioannidis initially thought the community might come out fighting. Instead, it seemed relieved, as if it had been guiltily waiting for someone to blow the whistle, and eager to hear more. David Gorski, a surgeon and researcher at Detroit’s Barbara Ann Karmanos Cancer Institute, noted in his prominent medical blog that when he presented Ioannidis’s paper on highly cited research at a professional meeting, “not a single one of my surgical colleagues was the least bit surprised or disturbed by its findings.”
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“When you look the papers up, you often find the drugs didn’t even work better than a placebo. And no one tested how they worked in combination with the other drugs,” she says. “Just taking the patient off everything can improve their health right away.” But not only is checking out the research another time-consuming task, patients often don’t even like it when they’re taken off their drugs, she explains; they find their prescriptions reassuring.
What am I going to do?
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Continue to eat a Nourishing Traditions and GAPS-based diet until my body tells me differently.
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Continue to seek alternative care when I need a tune-up.
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Seek treatment at a hospital if I am faced with an acute emergency.
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Continue to raise awareness about the health risks of processed food. Just wait until my next post! If people just prepared and ate real, unprocessed food the perceived need for all of the questionable medical interventions would greatly decrease.
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