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The
Growing War Between Modern Medicine and the Public
by
Bill Sardi
by Bill Sardi
DIGG THIS
Everybody is
talking about health-care reform, but true reform is clearly out
of the question. Like the banks and the automobile manufacturers,
the health-care system should be allowed to collapse without a government
bailout. But the federal government has been bailing out the failed
health-care industry all along.
Tom Daschle,
the newly appointed health policy adviser to President-elect Barack
Obama, and soon to be Health and Human Services secretary, says
the U.S. health-care system is in need of a major overhaul, and
most agree, but it appears the government will continue to expand
insurance coverage for a broken health-care system, paying for more
unproven and even disproven treatments.
Moreover, government
intends to expand health insurance coverage for millions of Americans,
which will surely increase demand for services at a time when there
is a shortage of primary care doctors.
Won’t expanded
coverage ($2500 per uninsured American) prompt many families to
drop their existing insurance plans and attempt to qualify for the
new government plan, thus causing the whole program to implode with
burgeoning costs? Furthermore, the federal government estimates
about 40 million Americans are uninsured, but this figure is likely
to grow by millions in the current economic downturn. How does government
intend to rein in health-care costs and at the same time increase
utilization?
Job creation
is now paramount in the incoming Administration. Long term, planners
are counting on the Baby Boomers getting older and sicker, thus
creating new jobs in the health-care arena. Americans had better
get sick on time, and develop chronic diseases that require more
and more health care, so more Americans can be employed as nurses,
nurse’s aides, home health aides, etc.
How does a
nation significantly reduce health-care costs and yet plan on increased
employment in the health-care industry? This is the moral crux for
American medicine. Should Americans become healthier and need less
health care, there will be fewer jobs. Maybe this is why modern
medicine drags its feet when it comes to preventive medicine.
According to
the Bureau of Labor Statistics, among all occupations in the economy,
health-care occupations are expected to make up 7 of the 20 fastest
growing occupations, the largest proportion of any occupational
group. These health-care occupations, in addition to exhibiting
high growth rates, will add nearly 750,000 new jobs between 2006
and 2016, according to government projections. More than 3 out of
every 10 new jobs created in the U.S. economy are predicted to be
in either the health-care and social assistance or public and private
educational services sectors. What if these jobs never materialize?
The federal
government will soon be unable to meet its obligations to provide
health care for retirees. The Medicare program will default on $62
trillion of care it promised to deliver to aging Baby Boomers, beginning
in 2012. The only foreseeable way out of this problem is to reduce
demand for care by prolonging the health span (years of healthy,
unimpaired, unmedicated life) before age-related diseases set in.
A delay of 7 years before the onset of age-related disease would
save the Medicare program from bankruptcy.
The increased
life expectancy of Americans has largely been achieved over the
past century by reductions in childhood mortality. Now the focus
is on reduction of mortality rates among senior Americans, adding
more healthy years to the end of life.
The prospect
for an anti-aging pill that can slow aging is not a pipe dream.
A few years ago the Rand Corporation think-tank, addressing future
technologies that may impact Medicare, added an "anti-aging"
pill to the future Medicare budget. Health planners know such a
technology may soon become a reality.
These pills
could stave off the onset of disease, even quell infections without
conventional antibiotics, and may actually prevent many diseases
rather than a pill for every different disease. Such a pill may
not emanate from a pharmaceutical laboratory. It may come from nature.
A growing body
of scientific evidence which shows that dietary supplementation
with vitamin D, fish oil, and molecules found in red wine (resveratrol,
quercetin, ferulic acid, etc.) and bran (whole grains), may reduce
the need for medical care altogether. Dr. Bruce Ames of the University
of California at Berkeley suggests the higher prevalence of disease
among the poor emanates from undernutrition, a problem that could
be remedied with an inexpensive multivitamin.
There is concern
that with a poor economy and growing unemployment, more Americans
will choose cheap, less nutrient-dense foods, which may increase
the incidence of disease. This would increase the need for food
fortification and dietary supplementation.
Europeans visiting
America are shocked to see so many overweight Americans. Never do
Americans realize, unlike other nations, they are being intentionally
bred to overeat. The medical profession does little to stop this,
treating all dietary-related diseases as if they are drug deficiencies.
Processed foods
are adulterated with taste stimulants and other ingredients that
create more hunger by raising insulin resistance. Insulin that can’t
enter cells to produce energy, disengages satiation. This is one
way food producers increase their sales, by getting Americans to
eat more food.
The government
is complicit in spawning the diabesity epidemic by subsidizing the
production of non-nutrient-dense foods and high-fructose corn syrup,
and promoting a "food pyramid" that suggests Americans
consume more food, not less (17–23 servings a day), and many servings
of meat, processed gains and dairy products which foster obesity.
It is obvious
that modern medicine is an industry that wants more, not less, disease
to treat. Patients are aware that doctors aren’t interested in disease
prevention. Conventional medicine is quick to dismiss any truly
preventive therapies as unproven and requiring more study. A current
hidden agenda is to publish pseudo-science in medical journals so
nutritional approaches to disease prevention can be dismissed as
not being "evidence based."
Yet, by comparison,
there are very few treatments in modern medicine that are truly
"evidence based."
For example,
statin anti-cholesterol drugs are approved by the FDA even though
they don’t reduce mortality rates and prevent a non-mortal heart
attack in less than 1 in 100 healthy adults.
Add flu shots
to the list of disproven therapies. They have not been shown to
reduce mortality from flu-related illness among high-risk groups
(young children and older adults.) The cervical cancer vaccine has
not saved one life, and may never do so, and may produce nothing
more than side effects (9,749 adverse reactions and 21 reported
deaths related to this vaccine in the last two years).
There are no
proven cures for cancer, and radiation and chemotherapy cannot even
penetrate solid tumors, which represent 7090% of cancers,
but patients are never told this. There is no way chemotherapy can
work because tumor resistance is inevitable and it destroys the
immune system. A published study shows chemotherapy only contributes
to the 5-year survival of cancer patients 2.3% of the time. (Would
you return to an automobile repair shop that only fixed your car
less than 3% of the time?) Chemotherapy is approved by the FDA if
it temporarily shrinks a tumor by 50%, not if it prolongs survival.
Who can blame cancer patients for searching for unproven alternatives?
Chemo and radiation therapy have been disproven.
It has been
said that the only technologies that have been validated in modern
medicine are the repair of bone fractures, the repair of teeth,
and the removal and replacement of cloudy cataracts with clear lens
implants.
It’s no wonder
a whopping 38% of American adults (12% of children) have opted for
alternative medicine, says a newly released study conducted by the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's National Center for
Health Statistics. Where else can the public turn? But this statistic
is thrown out as if it is evidence of a mindless public that elects
to choose unproven therapies over FDA-approved drugs and devices.
Yet studies show the most educated citizens utilize alternative
medicine. Americans elect to choose alternatives because conventional
medicine is ineffective, even hazardous, and is simply beyond affordability.
Many patients
are belittled when they tell their doctors they are taking dietary
supplements in lieu of problematic prescription drugs. Under the
guise that dietary supplements may interfere with prescription drugs
(actually, it’s the other way around), the National Institutes of
Health has conjured up a program to encourage patients to "confess"
to their doctors that they are taking dietary supplements. The vitamin
pill inquisition is underway.
Modern medicine
realizes it has lost market share to alternative medicines. Americans
are increasingly distrustful of prescription medicines, reading
daily news reports of people dying needlessly from side effects
from FDA-approved drugs. According to a Harris Poll (2005), 35%
of Americans who were prescribed drugs didn’t take them because
they wanted to save money and another 28% left their drugs on the
medicine shelf because of "frightening side effects."
More
Americans are going to have to find ways to stay healthy outside
of running to the doctor for everything that ails them. The health-care
system, and the insurance system, won’t be there for them. An unorganized
self-care revolution is now in progress, which proceeds largely
without doctor guidance or cooperation. More Americans are shunning
problematic and overpriced prescription medications for vitamin
and herbal supplements. The National
Health Federation is leading that effort.
It is becoming
increasingly clear that conventional medicine is working at odds
against the public welfare. Yet, with the realization that American
medicine is a broken system, Americans inexplicably return to the
doctor’s office for more of the same. Those Americans who don’t
learn self-care are going to suffer the most in this ongoing collapse
of modern health care.
December
13, 2008
Bill
Sardi [send
him mail] is a frequent writer on health and political
topics. His health writings can be found at www.naturalhealthlibrarian.com.
He is the author of You
Don’t Have To Be Afraid Of Cancer Anymore.
Copyright
© 2008 Bill Sardi Word of Knowledge Agency, San Dimas, California.
This article has been written exclusively for www.LewRockwell.com
and other parties who wish to refer to it should request permission
to link rather than posting at other URLs.
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