After I got into a warm discussion with some other members of the speech and debate club in high school, I started doing a little research into the field of medicine and its errors.
Long story short: doctors are not the experts most people (including many of them) believe them to be, our system of medicine is really screwed up, and it’s not even obvious that we derive a net benefit from medical intervention considered overall.
(It’s pretty obvious that some specific interventions are extremely important, but they’re quite basic and do not make up the majority of all interventions.)
A counterexample of my being right? Or a counterexample relating to medicine?
As in, “I have never encountered a doctor that actually understood the limits of his knowledge and how to appropriately use it, nor a clinical practice that wasn’t basically the blind leading the blind.”
Okay. I was unsure if your statement was meant to be a personal insult or a comment about medicine—your comments have cleared that up for me.
If I may offer a suggestion:
Access NewsBank from your local library, go to the “search America’s newspapers” option, and do some searching for the phrase “nasal radium”. There will be lots of duplication. You may find it useful to only search for articles written between 1990 and 1995, just to get a basic understanding of what it was.
Then realize that the vast majority of surgical treatments where introduced in pretty much the same way, and had the same amount of pre-testing, as nasal radium.
After I got into a warm discussion with some other members of the speech and debate club in high school, I started doing a little research into the field of medicine and its errors.
Long story short: doctors are not the experts most people (including many of them) believe them to be, our system of medicine is really screwed up, and it’s not even obvious that we derive a net benefit from medical intervention considered overall.
(It’s pretty obvious that some specific interventions are extremely important, but they’re quite basic and do not make up the majority of all interventions.)
I was about to lecture you on how wrong you are, until I realized I’ve never encountered a counterexample.
Please note that I do not rule out the possibility that we derive a net benefit. It’s just that it isn’t obvious that we do.
A counterexample of my being right? Or a counterexample relating to medicine?
As in, “I have never encountered a doctor that actually understood the limits of his knowledge and how to appropriately use it, nor a clinical practice that wasn’t basically the blind leading the blind.”
Okay. I was unsure if your statement was meant to be a personal insult or a comment about medicine—your comments have cleared that up for me.
If I may offer a suggestion:
Access NewsBank from your local library, go to the “search America’s newspapers” option, and do some searching for the phrase “nasal radium”. There will be lots of duplication. You may find it useful to only search for articles written between 1990 and 1995, just to get a basic understanding of what it was.
Then realize that the vast majority of surgical treatments where introduced in pretty much the same way, and had the same amount of pre-testing, as nasal radium.