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Top Ten Reasons to Avoid Your Doctor
By Dr. Mercola
I've long said that the best strategy for achieving health is avoiding a
visit to your doctor in the first place. Why? Because in many cases you will
simply leave the office with a prescription or two, which will rarely solve your
health problem. Most doctor visits result in "solutions" that only suppress your
symptoms, often causing other side effects and problems.
Rather than advise patients about the true underlying conditions and real
solutions that lead to health, they are left putting toxic Band-Aids on gaping
wounds. As shown in the slideshow above, and as I detail in depth below, there
are actually many reasons why avoiding your doctor may be in the best
interest of your health …
1. Annual Pap Smears
Many physicians still advise women to receive yearly pap smears, but the newest
guidelines from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force specifically recommend
against this. The new recommendations call for women to undergo PAP screening
only once every three years, beginning at age 21 and ending around age 65.
When testing is more frequent, or started before age 21, there's a chance of
detecting human papillomavirus (HPV), and associatedlesions, more frequently. If
a physician detects such lesions, they will assume they are "pre-cancerous" and
treat them accordingly. However, most HPV infections and associated low grade
squamous intra-epithelial lesions clear up on their own without treatment,1 while the treatment
itself can lead to cervical incompetence and/or miscarriage in the future. Since
most cases of HPV clear up on their own, this is a case where the treatment may
do more harm than good.
That said, PAP smears (which screen for cervical cancer typically associated
with HPV) are one of the best tools for preventing cervical cancer deaths – but
getting one every year is likely unnecessary.
Evidence shows that screening women for cervical cancer more frequently than
every three years does not detect more cancer. Women who have not been exposed
to HPV are not at risk for cervical cancer. Further, even if you are exposed and
the infection does not clear up on its own (which is not common), it can take 10
years before it progresses to cancer. Cervical cancers are very slow growing,
which is why less frequent PAP screens are still effective.
Despite the new PAP screen guidelines, most physicians continue to recommend
annual PAP screening to their patients, mostly because they (and their patients)
are in the habit of doing so. Some physicians also fear their patients will not
come in for annual exams and other screening if the PAP is not required every
year.
There is also a good deal of evidence that the revised PAP guidelines are
part of a plan to rescue Gardasil (HPV) vaccine sales,
which are embarrassingly low. The HPV vaccine is a heavily promoted and very
expensive vaccine, but it has been a flop, with less than 27 percent of women
opting to receive it, and reports of serious adverse effects continuing to pour
in.
2. Mammograms
Only about 1 in 8 women whose breast cancer was identified during a routine
mammogram actually had their lives "saved" by the screening, a recent analysis
estimated2 – and this does not
accurately account for how many women will fall victim to mammogram-induced
breast cancer.
Using breast cancer data from The National Cancer Institute and The Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention, researchers calculated a 50-year-old woman's
likelihood of developing breast cancer in the next 10 years, the odds the cancer
would be detected by mammography, and her risk of dying from the cancer over 20
years.
They found that a mammogram has, at best, only a 13 percent probability of
saving her life, and that the probability may actually be as low as 3 percent.
No matter what analyses they used, including considering women of different
ages, the probability of a mammogram saving a life remained below 25 percent.
Researchers concluded:
"Most women with screen-detected breast cancer have not had their life saved
by screening. They are instead either diagnosed early (with no effect on their
mortality) or overdiagnosed."
This bears repeating:
Mammograms often diagnose lesions or tumors that may never threaten a woman's
life. They also often result in false positives that lead to over-treatment,
i.e. misdiagnosed women often undergo unnecessary mastectomies, lumpectomies,
radiation treatments and chemotherapy, which can have a devastating effect on
both the quality and length of their lives. Plus, a mammogram uses ionizing
radiation, which in and of itself can either induce or contribute to the
development of breast cancer.
3. Cold and Flu
Think it's wise to go to a conventional physician for these? Think again.
Thanks to routine over-prescription of antibiotics, and the prescription of
inappropriate antibiotics, you're likely to walk away after being told to take a
drug you don't actually need.
Antibiotics do NOT work against viruses, hence they are useless against colds and flu's. Unfortunately
antibiotics are vastly over-prescribed for this purpose. If you have a cold or
flu, remember that unless you have a serious secondary bacterial pneumonia, an
antibiotic will likely do far more harm than good, because whenever you use an
antibiotic, you're increasing your susceptibility to developing infections with
resistance to that antibiotic -- and you can become the carrier of this
resistant bug, and can spread it to others.
The first thing you want to do when you feel yourself coming down with a cold
or flu is to avoid ALL sugars, artificial sweeteners, and processed foods. Sugar
is particularly damaging to your immune system -- which needs to be ramped up,
not suppressed, in order to combat an emerging infection. This includes fructose
from fruit juice, and all types of grains (as they break down into sugar
(glucose) in your body).
Ideally, you must address nutrition, sleep, exercise and stress issues the
moment you first feel yourself getting a bug. Getting plenty of high quality
sleep will be crucial to your recovery. This is when immune-enhancing strategies
will be most effective. In addition, the research is quite clear that the higher
your vitamin D level, the lower your risk of contracting colds, flu, and other
respiratory tract infections. I strongly believe you could avoid colds and
influenza entirely by maintaining your vitamin D level in the optimal
range.
4. Cholesterol
Many doctors are unaware that a high-fat diet is NOT the cause of heart
disease. They are fooled into believing that total cholesterol is an accurate
predictor of heart disease. If you visit your physician and you have high
cholesterol, you're likely to be told two things:
- Take a statin cholesterol-lowering drug and
- Don't eat saturated fat.
While statin drugs do lower cholesterol very effectively, cholesterol is not
the culprit in heart disease. Plus a report by the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology claims that no study has ever proven that statins improve all-cause
mortality3 -- in other words, they
don't prolong your life any longer than if you'd not taken them at all. And
rather than improving your life, they actually contribute to a deterioration in
the quality of your life, destroying muscles and endangering liver, kidney and
even heart function. The best ways to optimize your cholesterol levels and your
heart health have to do with lifestyle measures, including eating
healthy minimally processed fats and avoid highly processed vegetable fats and
oils that are loaded with toxic omega-6 fats.
5. Depression
Once again, you're more likely to leave the doctor's office with a
prescription for a drug that could be more dangerous than the problem itself.
Every year, 230 million prescriptions for antidepressants are filled, making
them one of the most prescribed drugs in the United States. The psychiatric
industry itself is a $330 billion industry—not bad for an enterprise that offers
little in the way of cures.
Despite all of these prescriptions, more than one in 20 Americans are
depressed.4 Of those depressed
Americans, 80 percent say they have some level of functional impairment, and 27
percent say their condition makes it extremely difficult to do everyday tasks
like work, activities of daily living, and getting along with others.
The use of antidepressant drugs—medicine's answer for depression—doubled in
just one decade, from 13.3 million in 1996 to 27 million in 2005.
If these drugs are so extensively prescribed, then why are so many people
feeling so low?
Because they don't work at addressing the cause.
Research has confirmed that antidepressant drugs are no more effective than
sugar pills. Some studies have even found that sugar pills may produce BETTER
results than antidepressants! Personally, I believe the reason for this
astounding finding is that both pills work via the placebo effect, but the sugar
pills produce far fewer adverse effects.
Many people forget that antidepressants come with a slew of side effects,
some of which are deadly. Approximately 750,000 people attempt suicide each year
in the US, and about 30,000 of those succeed. Taking a drug that is unlikely to
relieve your symptoms and may actually increase your risk of killing yourself
certainly does not seem like a good choice. In addition, since most of the
treatment focus is on drugs, many safe and natural treatment options
that DO work -- like exercise, the Emotional Freedom Technique (EFT),
vitamin D, and proper nutrition -- are completely ignored.
6. High Blood Pressure
The definition of what constitutes high blood pressure expanded greatly in
2003, so that drug companies could sell drugs loaded with side effects to 45
million extra people. Because the Joint National Committee on Prevention,
Detection, Evaluation and Treatment of High Blood Pressure (rife with drug
industry conflicts of interest) decided that what were in actuality relatively
low blood pressure readings were a risk for heart disease, millions more over
the years, were suddenly labeled abnormal, and in need of "treatment" for a
condition that didn't exist in medical literature until that panel met.
Uncontrolled high blood pressure is a very serious health concern that can
lead to heart disease and increase your risk of having a stroke. The good news
though is that following a healthy nutrition plan, along with exercising and
implementing effective stress reduction techniques will normalize blood pressure
in most people.
7. PSA Tests for Prostate Cancer
These tests actually reveal very little, and an irrelevant positive result
will likely lead to a biopsy that comes with infection risk. The
prostate-specific antigen test (PSA test), analyzes your blood for
prostate-specific antigen (PSA), a substance produced by your prostate gland.
When higher-than-normal levels of PSA are detected, it is believed that cancer
is present. However, PSA screening barely has any impact on mortality rates from
prostate cancer. As a result, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force will soon
recommend that men not get screened for prostate cancer.
Today, many experts agree that PSA testing is unreliable at best and useless
at worst for accurately diagnosing prostate cancer. Many also agree that routine
PSA blood tests often lead to over-diagnosis of prostate cancer, resulting in
unnecessary treatments. Similar to mammograms, the PSA screen has become little
more than an up-sell technique. The false positive rate is high, and the bulk of
the harm is a result of subsequent unnecessary treatments.
Diet is actually a factor that can greatly impact your prostate health and
help prevent enlarged prostate and prostate cancer, but many physicians fail to
address this.
You'll want to eat as much organic (preferably raw) food as possible, and
liberally include fresh herbs and spices, such as ginger. Make sure to limit
carbohydrates like sugar/fructose and grains as much as possible to maintain
optimal insulin levels, which will help reduce your cancer risk in general.
Highly processed or charcoaled meats, pasteurized dairy products, and synthetic
trans fats correlate with an increased risk for prostate cancer and should also
be avoided.
8. Inappropriate and Unwise Dietary Advice
Most doctors are clueless about what constitutes a healthy diet. As such,
they will recommend health catastrophes like artificial sweeteners, vegetable
oils in lieu of butter, and fat-free pasteurized dairy products. Most will also
neglect to tell you about the foods you could be eating more of to optimize your
health, like fermented vegetables, raw dairy products, healthy fats (like
saturated and animal-based omega-3s), grass-fed beef and more.
In addition, most are ignorant about the importance of how to cook your food
– most foods are best consumed when raw or only lightly cooked, and this
includes animal proteins like eggs and meat. A discussion about food
quality is essential to health (i.e. getting your meat from a small
local farmer instead of a confined animal feeding operation (CAFO)) but you will
almost never hear this from your family physician. Wondering how to truly eat
healthy? See my nutrition plan for a
comprehensive (and free) guide.
9. Prescription Drugs Might Kill You and They Don't Address the Cause of the
Problem
A drug prescription is usually a Band-Aid that gets nowhere near the root
cause of illness. And many drugs are dangerous. Last year an analysis of data
from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control CDC) revealed that deaths from properly prescribed
drugs now outnumber traffic fatalities in the United States! And when you
add in deaths attributable to other medical care modalities, like hospital
admissions and surgery, the modern medical system becomes the leading cause of
death and injury in the United States.
Authored in two parts by Gary Null, PhD, Carolyn Dean, MD ND, Martin Feldman,
MD, Debora Rasio, MD, and Dorothy Smith, PhD, the comprehensive Death by Medicine article
described in excruciating detail how everything from medical errors to adverse
drug reactions to unnecessary procedures caused more harm than good. That was in
2003. In 2010, an analysis in the New England Journal of Medicine found
that, despite efforts to improve patient safety in the past few years, the
health care system hasn't changed much at all.5
For one of many examples, the birth control pills Yaz and Yasmin, which have
been endorsed by a U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) advisory committee,
contain a drug called drospirenone that makes women who take it nearly seven
times more likely to develop thromboembolism. This is an obstruction of a blood
vessel that can lead to deep vein thrombosis, pulmonary embolism, stroke, heart
attack and death.
Why did the FDA approve this dangerous drug? It turns out that at least four
members of the advisory committee have either done work for the drugs'
manufacturers or licensees, or received research funding from them. According to
the Alliance for Natural Health:
"Each of those four panelists who received money from the pill's
manufacturer voted in favor of the pill. Interestingly, the committee's ruling
that the drug's benefit outweighs the risks was decided by a four-vote margin.
Ironically, while the FDA allowed voting by advisors with business connections
to drospirenone, the agency barred ... Sidney M. Wolfe, on the grounds that he
... had advised his readers not to take Yaz based on several years of
data."
10. Your Doctor Might Not Even Tell You the Truth
A U.S. telephone survey found that 79 percent of Americans trust their
doctor.6 But a recent survey of
1,900 physicians revealed that some are not always open or
honest with their patients The results were less than impressive, to put it
mildly:
- One-third of physicians did not completely agree with disclosing serious
medical errors to patients
- One-fifth did not completely agree that physicians should never tell a
patient something untrue
- Amazingly 40% believed that they should hide their financial relationships
with drug and device companies to patients
- Ten percent said they had told patients something untrue in the previous
year
When making health care decisions, you should certainly get your physicians'
advice -- that's what you're paying them for, after all. Hopefully you have
chosen a health care provider who has similar philosophies about health as you
do, and whose expertise you can trust. But remember that when making health care
decisions, you must be your own advocate; it's important to ask questions before
opting for tests, procedures or treatments, and it's your decision if you'd
rather opt for less medical intervention while choosing a more natural way of
healing your body.
Ultimately, the more you take responsibility for your own health -- in the
form of nurturing your body to prevent disease -- the less you need to rely on
the "disease care" that passes for health care in the United States. If you
carefully follow some basic health principles -- simple things like exercising,
eating whole foods, sleeping enough, getting sun exposure, reducing stress in
your life, and nurturing personal relationships -- you will drastically reduce
your need for conventional medical care, which in and of itself will reduce your
chances of suffering ill side effects.
But in the event you do need medical care, seek a health care practitioner
who will help you move toward complete wellness by helping you discover and
understand the hidden causes of your health challenges ... and create a
customized and comprehensive -- i.e. holistic -- treatment plan for
you.
References:
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