We now spend more on health care than ever before, and the medical
profession is apparently more scientific and better equipped than ever
before, so there is a savage irony in the fact that we have now reached
the point where, on balance, well-meaning doctors in general practice
and highly trained, well-equipped specialists working in hospitals do
more harm than good. The epidemic of iatrogenic disease which has always
scarred medical practice has been steadily getting worse and today most
of us would, most of the time, be better off without a medical
profession.
Most developed countries now spend around 8% of their
gross national products on health care (the Americans spend
considerably more – around 12-14%) but through a mixture of ignorance,
incompetence, prejudice, dishonesty, laziness, paternalism and misplaced
trust doctors are killing more people than they are saving and they are
causing more illness and more discomfort than they are alleviating.
Most
developed countries now spend around 1% of their annual income on
prescription drugs and doctors have more knowledge and greater access to
powerful treatments than ever before, but there has probably never been
another time in history when doctors have done more harm than they do
today.
It is true, of course, that doctors save thousands of
lives by, for example, prescribing life-saving drugs or by performing
essential life-saving surgery on accident victims.
But when the
medical profession, together with the pharmaceutical industry, claims
that it is the advances in medicine which are responsible for the fact
that life expectancy figures have risen in the last one hundred years or
so they are wrong. It is, for example, commonly claimed that modern
scientific medicine has led to improvements in life expectancy in most
developed countries from around 55 at the start of the century to over
70 today.
The evidence, however, does not support this claim...<<<Read More>>>...