Needed: A New Medical Breakthrough
by
Paul Hein
by Paul Hein
DIGG THIS
If you are
of a certain age, you may be taking a number of prescription drugs.
If so, you spend time waiting at the drug store for your prescriptions
to be filled. (And will be spending more time there, now that Uncle
has decided to pick up at least a portion of the tab for drugs!)
The next time you’re so occupied, notice the large number of non-prescription
supplements offered for sale. Vitamins, minerals, herbs – you name
it. There are dozens – maybe hundreds – of do-it-yourself remedies.
Or check out
"alternative medicine" on the Internet. Tens of thousands
of web pages devoted to treatments that are not likely to be ordered
by your family doctor. Is there some significance to this? In my
opinion, the significance is that people are dissatisfied with orthodox
medicine, and seek treatments that are cheaper and, hopefully, better.
This, of course, opens the door for quackery of all types, but it
would be irresponsible to tar all alternative medical practices
with that brush.
Consider drugs.
They are a mainstay of modern medicine. Physicians, especially in
non-surgical specialties, prescribe them frequently. Indeed, it
might be said that prescribing drugs is the heart of many medical
practices. Doctors learn about new drugs from drug salesmen – the
so-called "detail men" – and from articles in medical
journals. Naturally, it is to these drugs that physicians turn when
the patient’s illness would seem to indicate treatment by such drugs.
Drug companies have even begun advertising directly to patients,
who, I suppose, are expected to request that their doctor prescribe
this new and wonderful pill!
Do physicians
ever advise their patients to take substances that are NOT drugs?
Well, perhaps vitamins, or mineral supplements. And, of course,
food and water. But other, non-prescription remedies? Rarely, if
ever. Why not? Probably because they’ve never heard of them. When
I was practicing medicine, I prescribed eye drops to lower ocular
pressure in people with glaucoma, or who were apt to develop it.
If a patient whose pressure was difficult to control appeared with
a remarkably improved pressure, and attributed it to a tea that
she had brewed from dandelion greens from her back yard, I would
have been intrigued, but not apt to recommend it to other patients.
Why not? Well,
for one thing, I wouldn’t know exactly what the patient was putting
into his/her body, upon my recommendation. And, surprise!, malpractice
concerns rear their ugly head. Malpractice is defined as deviation
from the standard of care in the community; and I assure you, dandelion
tea is NOT the standard of care for the treatment of glaucoma! And
besides, doesn’t the very idea of sipping a tea made out of garden
weeds seem ridiculous?
That’s what
I thought when I learned of the Budwig diet, popularized in Germany
some years ago. It has been used – with reported success – in treating
cancer, but how can it possibly be of benefit, since it consists
of a mixture of cottage cheese and flax oil! Laughable! Cancer is
a terribly serious disease. Are you going to cure it with a few
dollars worth of stuff from the grocery and the health-food store?
Ridiculous!
But then I
stopped laughing and started thinking. Yes, cancer is a terribly
serious disease. But are you going to cure it with horribly expensive
and sickening chemicals created in a lab? If that were possible,
cancer wouldn’t be the scourge that it is. And why do people get
cancer in the first place? Is it because of a lack of some sophisticated
artificial molecules in their diet? Of course not. If a lack of
these elaborate chemicals doesn’t cause cancer, how can ingesting
them cure it? I realize that this is not a scientific analysis,
by a long shot, but if cancer can be thought of as caused by some
defect in our biochemistry or metabolism – some lack of a vital
nutrient, for example – then treating it should consist in supplying
that nutrient, not bombarding the body with toxic substances.
And it dawned
on me that simple substances can cure, or prevent, serious diseases
– and, in fact, do so every day. Scurvy, if untreated, is invariably
fatal. A cure can be achieved with fruit juice! Beri-beri is also
fatal in a high percentage of cases. A simple change in diet is
curative; no complex artificial chemicals required. Rickets can
cause severe deformity and crippling in children: sunlight will
prevent and treat it!
And the lady
who successfully treated her glaucoma with dandelion tea? I made
her up. But the scenario is not altogether implausible. In the late
18th century, Dr. Wm Withering, one of Britain’s most
esteemed physicians, was confronted by a patient with severe heart
failure, to whom he had little to offer. His death was expected.
However, the fellow decided to try the 18th century equivalent
of alternative medicine: he found a gypsy healer who brewed him
some tea, and he improved remarkably. Withering was intrigued, and
finally tracked down the gypsy and learned her secret. Her remedy
was a concoction based upon the purple foxglove, digitalis purpura.
Withering incorporated it into his practice, and revolutionized
the treatment of heart failure. The active ingredient of foxglove
– digitalis – is still used today.
What medicine
needs today is more Witherings! Of course, in his day, malpractice
wasn’t a problem, and powerful drug companies didn’t produce sophisticated
chemical concoctions touted to treat and cure. Nor did the government
dictate what was, or wasn’t, the practice of medicine, which it
then regulated.
The Budwig
diet, or apricot kernels, or other alternative treatments, may not
cure cancer. Do conventional, orthodox, drug treatments cure it?
I think if I were diagnosed with cancer, I’d prefer cottage cheese
and flax oil to expensive drugs that would sicken and impoverish
me! At least I’d like to be free to choose, without being regarded
as a crackpot.
November
3, 2006
Dr.
Hein [send
him mail] is a retired ophthalmologist in St. Louis,
and the author of All
Work & No Pay.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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