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Does Medicine Deserve Your Faith?
By Robert Morley
October 2006
What the medical industry doesn’t want
you to know
Medical health providers tell us that people with
more health-care options live longer, healthier lives. Drug companies
claim that pharmaceuticals can do wonders for people—calm
your children, end your depression, lower your cholesterol.
Is it true?
If the people manning the hospitals and doling
out the drugs are right, where are all the healthy medicated customers?
Americans pay an estimated 2 times more per person
than people in the country with the next-most-expensive health
care. Why, then, do studies show that Americans have worse health
and lower life expectancies than those in many other industrialized
nations like Greece, Spain, Austria, France and Germany?
That is the paradox of modern medicine in the
United States: General health continues to deteriorate, even as
Americans spend more money than ever before to become healthy.
Still, people’s faith in the medical system
remains steadfast.
Soaring Medical Costs
Recent government studies show that, given soaring
medical costs, within a decade Americans will be spending an unbelievable
one fifth of all their dollars on health care. Analysts see “no
end to increases in the cost of going to the doctor and taking
medicine” (Associated Press, February 21). In fact, the
cost of medical care is projected to rise 7.2 percent each year—a
rate far above the government’s official inflation readings.
Already Americans spend more than 16 percent of
the nation’s gross domestic product on health care. In 2004
alone, that was $2 trillion. If the estimates are correct, by
2030 America will be spending a third of its national output on
medical care—by mid-century, the proportion will have risen
to 46 percent.
Such exorbitant health spending is obviously unsustainable.
At those levels, just providing health services for the nation’s
elderly, disabled and poor would require massive tax increases—probably
on the order of doubling them—or vast reductions in services.
Even at current expenditure levels, many American
companies are in crisis situations. At General Motors Corp., for
example, leaders cite skyrocketing health-care costs, which add
approximately $1,500 to the price of each vehicle, as a major
reason they are in such financial trouble. The American auto industry
spends more money on health care than on steel.
Individuals also feel the pain of health-care
costs. A survey published by Harvard Medical and Law School estimated
that in 2005 almost 700,000 bankruptcies—half the total
number that occurred that year—were filed because of costs
relating to illnesses. Even people with health insurance are struggling
to pay medical costs: A 2005 Commonwealth Fund report found that
of the 77 million Americans straining to pay their medical debts,
almost two thirds have some form of health insurance.
But is all the money Americans throw into health
care producing the improved health they yearn for?
Despite all the new drugs and treatments, degenerative
illnesses are at epidemic levels. Cancer, heart disease and stroke
kill 1.4 million Americans per year. The American Legacy Foundation
largely blames poor lifestyles choices, pointing out that, in
2000, 81 million Americans were smokers, obese, or both. In 2004
alone, an estimated 1.37 million—3,748 people a day—were
diagnosed with cancer. (Consequently, cancer drug sales are soaring.
America’s second-largest biotechnology company, Genentech,
reported that during the first quarter of this year sales of its
cancer drugs Avastin, Herceptin and Tarceva rose 96, 123 and 94
percent respectively.)
Among young adults, a segment of the population
usually thought of as being healthy, sharp increases in many illnesses
have been noted. Even our children are becoming unhealthy. One
third of U.S. children are either overweight or obese; one in
four children between ages 5 and 10 show early signs of heart
disease. Type-2 diabetes, a condition normally only found in adults,
is on the rise in children.
These massive health crises continue to grow even
as use of drugs and medical treatments expands. That does not
necessarily mean modern medicine causes the problems—but
it certainly is not solving them, and often exacerbates them.
Medical Facts and Consensus Absent
In 19th-century Europe, if you had the misfortune
to become ill, chances are you would have had one of the most
common treatments of the day: having your blood sucked out by
leeches. Leech-bloodletting treatment, a practice whose roots
go back 2,500 years to ancient Egypt, was used to treat everything
from headaches to mental illnesses. Leeches were used to supposedly
cure obesity, hemorrhoids, laryngitis, and even eye disorders.
Bloodletting was so universally accepted that France imported
over 33 million leeches in 1827.
Later, when medical practitioners actually tested
the practice of leech-bloodletting, they found that it did absolutely
no good and actually harmed people.
Today, most patients would expect medicine to
be based upon hard scientific evidence. Yet, almost 200 years
later, medicine is a cauldron filled to the brim with popular
treatments that have been debunked by evidence. “The problem
is that we don’t know what we are doing,” says Dr.
David Eddy, a heart surgeon-turned-mathematician and health-care
economist who is confronting and exposing the oft non-science-based
medical industry (Business Week, May 29). What is required is
an “evidence-based medicine” revolution, he says.
According to Business Week, “Even today,
with a high-tech health-care system that costs the nation $2 trillion
a year, there is little or no evidence that many widely used treatments
and procedures actually work ….” Most people would
probably be shocked if they knew how many treatments have no scientific
proof that they actually help patients. “We don’t
have the evidence [that treatments work] and we are not investing
very much in getting the evidence,” says the executive vice
president of the Commonwealth Fund, Dr. Stephen C. Schoenbaum.
Dr. Nelda Wray, research chief at the U.S. Department of Veterans
Affairs, worries that “the majority of surgery we do for
symptom relief is only effective because of the placebo effect—with
significant potential of harming the patient” (Forbes.com,
Oct. 27, 2003).
Despite the evidence, much of the medical establishment
is either ignorant and apathetic, or it willfully refuses to accept
that its guesswork has been shot down.
According to Dr. Eddy, who has spent much of his
controversial career proving that the practice of medicine is
more conjectural than scientific, only 15 percent of physicians’
decisions are supported by solid evidence. Other doctors and health-care-quality
experts who have endorsed Eddy’s work say the percentage
of medical treatments that have been proven effective is shockingly
low, citing figures between 20 to 25 percent.
Stated another way, you must take the benefits
of 75 to 80 percent of any medications, surgeries or treatments
your doctor recommends on faith alone, because there is no solid
proof showing their effectiveness. In fact, most drugs have negative
side effects, so the treatments being prescribed may actually
harm you in another way—and possibly even more seriously.
Dr. Eddy has exposed many of medicine’s
sacred doctrines to be false. For example, he traced the common
practice of preventing women from giving birth vaginally if they
have had a previous cesarean to the recommendation of just one
doctor. He proved that most doctors were mostly oblivious about
the success rates of various procedures, such as surgery for enlarged
prostates. Against many doctors’ objections, Eddy also proved
that the annual chest X-ray that many doctors make significant
money from actually shows nothing helpful.
One of the problems with today’s medical
practice is that doctors decide how to treat patients based upon
inherited traditions, using their best human judgment as opposed
to proof, says Eddy. His work shows that medical establishment
rules and judgments are not necessarily right and that medicine
makes “decisions with an entirely different method from
what we would call rational” (Business Week, op. cit.).
To prove how “woefully outmatched”
doctor judgment is “by the complexities of medicine,”
and to show how many cherished beliefs are uncertain, Eddy conducted
public surveys and lectures at medical society meetings. At these
seminars, Eddy would commonly ask doctors to think of a representative
patient with an illness and a typical treatment. He would then
ask the doctors to write down the outcome of the treatment.
At one urologist society gathering, doctors were
asked what the odds were that a man after having corrective surgery
would be able to urinate normally. Amazingly there was no agreement
among the doctors’ predictions. Even though “[a]ll
the doctors were trying to estimate the same thing … they
all gave different numbers,” and there wasn’t even
any clear trend, with predictions of success ranging from zero
to 100 percent (ibid.).
Unfortunately, as Eddy points out, that kind of
doctor confusion is typical. “A lot of things we absolutely
believe at the moment based on our intuition are ultimately absolutely
wrong,” said Dr. Paul Wallace of the Care Management Institute
(ibid.).
Professional preference and tradition as the prescription
of the day is all too common for the medical establishment. In
fact, “Your chances of undergoing a particular operation
can vary vastly from one zip code to another, fluctuating by as
much as tenfold” (Forbes.com, op. cit.). Dr. Gary Kirsh
at the Urology Group in Cincinnati says, “Because there
are no definitive answers, you are at the whim of where you are
and who you talk to” (Business Week, op. cit.). Kirsh readily
admits that he performs many brachytherapies—implanting
small radioactive rods directly into cancer in an effort to kill
the cells. But, he says, “[I]f you drive 1 _ hours down
the road to Indianapolis, there is almost no brachytherapy.”
If you were to seek treatment in Loma Linda, California, where
in 1990 the first proton beam machine was installed, the odds
are you will be treated with proton beam therapy. Go to a surgeon
and he will probably recommend surgery, go to a chemotherapist
and you will likely get chemotherapy treatment.
Which of these procedures works best? Clearly
these doctors have no idea.
Why No Hard Evidence?
With the many advances in science and technology,
one may wonder why so many treatments are not based on proven
facts.
One reason is that generating information is time-consuming
and expensive. Clinical trials can take years and cost multiple
millions of dollars. Additionally, by the time results are found,
science and medical industries may have already moved on, making
the study less relevant, and few organizations are motivated to
fund studies that draw little attention. Explaining why hospitals
implement new technologies before they have been fully proven,
Giridhar Venkatraman, director of surgical services with consulting
firm Sg2, says, “By the time research has validated the
outcomes, it’s often too late to implement it and get the
return on investment” (Modern Healthcare, February 13).
In America, the Journal of the American Medical
Association reported in July 2005 that nearly a third of all clinical
research produces conclusions that are later refuted and rejected.
Additionally, many doctors don’t even have an efficient
way of accessing the information. “Most patients assume
that their doctors know what research has been done, and if they
realized what a tortuous maze it is to get the research to the
point of clinicians making the decisions, they would probably
be horrified,” says Chris del Mar, dean of Bond University’s
Faculty of Health Science and Medicine in Australia (Weekend Australian,
June 3).
Del Mar also says that the time required to search
for evidence, knowing the right questions to ask, then determining
how reliable the answers are, plus understanding how they apply
to the patient, are all big barriers for busy doctors trying to
help as many people as possible.
Conflicts of Interest
While there are some arguably legitimate factors
involved, there is another, more insidious side to why so many
unproven treatments and procedures are performed: greed. It seems
to exist at all levels within the health-care system. Doctors,
drug manufacturers, medical device makers, hospitals (and even
governmental regulators) all have one thing in common: “enormous
financial incentives to provide more and more care,” even
without proof that the care is the most effective—or even
that it helps at all (Business Week, op. cit.).
Part of the problem is that many doctors hold
both professional and financial interests in the treatments they
offer. This may explain why some doctors are reluctant to change
their ways, even when common medical practices are proved faulty.
Some even lobby Congress to squash funding for studies that may
prove their professional beliefs and treatments to be in error.
As a result, Congress sometimes slashes funding or halts government-financed
research on controversial issues. Dr. Joe Thompson, health adviser
to Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee, says the federal government
Agency for Health Care Policy and Research “often”
has its budget targeted by self-interest groups (ibid.).
“There is no question that the economic
interests of the physician enter into the decision” process,
says Dr. Kirsh (ibid.). Doctors often get paid based upon the
number of patients they see. “I can see three patients with
acute needs every 15 minutes,” says Texan doctor Melissa
Gerdes, who says she is doing her best to make herself available
to more clients (New York Times, June 24). Surgeons too are paid
according to the number of people they operate on. If a surgeon
recommends waiting or other alternatives as opposed to cutting,
his take-home pay drops.
“Conflict of interest is hard to rule out,”
especially when “[y]ou get paid for operating and not paid
for not operating,” says Dr. Jack Paradise, a professor
of pediatrics and otolaryngology at the Pittsburgh School of Medicine
and Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh.
But there is an even greater conflict of interest
relating to pharmaceutical and medical device manufacturers.
Pharmaceutical companies are known for spending
billions wooing doctors with free samples, lavish gifts, and trips
under the guise of promoting better products or furthering education.
Last year, the pharmaceutical industry spent $60 billion on drug
promotion, which Reuters reports was nearly double what it spent
on research and development (June 26). Dollars put toward marketing
to physicians jumped 81 percent—from $12.1 billion to $22
billion—between 1999 and 2003. Free samples accounted for
$16 billion of that, while much of the rest was spent on the doctors
themselves (Christian Science Monitor, Dec. 28, 2005). The concern
is that doctors may become reliant upon contributions from these
medical companies or feel obligated to recommend their products.
Although doctors on the whole don’t seem
worried about potential conflicts of interest, the American Medical
Student’s Association disagrees, saying that all medical
students and doctors alike should just say “no” to
all personal gifts. It gets down to trust, they say: “By
accepting gifts, we are taking in biases that are going to affect
patient care” (ibid.). Critics also say doctors should not
place so much trust in medical company claims and should use independent
sources of information that are not linked to the companies producing
the treatments.
The fact is, pharmaceutical and medical device
manufacturers are, first and foremost, businesses. As such, their
first loyalty is to their shareholders, not necessarily to the
people using their products. With financial considerations trumping
medical considerations, these companies’ methods of pushing
their products promote the overuse of unneeded and/or less effective
treatments. Since the primary source of income for these companies
is sales, there is a huge pull for them to “turn ordinary
conditions, like jittery legs [or temper tantrums], into ‘diseases’
that need treatment,” so as to boost profit and shareholder
returns (Business Week, op. cit.; see “Has a Disease For
Your Problems Been Marketed Yet?” page 27).
In one case, after pleading guilty to illegally
marketing its epilepsy drug Neurontin, a subsidiary of drug company
Pfizer was ordered to pay $430 million. The company was aggressively
pushing the drug for conditions like bipolar disorder, back pain
and headache—conditions there was either little or no evidence
it helped. While the company enriched itself with billion-dollar
sales built upon massive marketing campaigns—which included
trips and compensation for doctors—lawsuits allege that
patients were experiencing suicidal thoughts, convulsions and
tumors.
This type of behavior is why the Food and Drug
Administration (fda) is supposed to act as a watchdog over the
marketing practices of medical companies. Yet evidence shows that
the fda itself also has conflicts of interests that make it largely
ineffective in its purpose.
In 1992, the drug industry negotiated a deal with
the fda: In exchange for a faster review process of new drugs,
the drug companies would pay user fees to the fda. These fees
now pay more than half the salaries of the review staff! Also,
most fda employees either used to work for drug companies or plan
to in the future. This is known as “revolving door”
access. Moreover, many of the fda employees have financial ties
to the pharmaceutical industry.
On top of that, fda advisory committees, according
to a USA Today study published Sept. 25, 2000, are not truly independent.
The experts on these committees advise the fda on whether to approve
a drug, what warning labels are appropriate, and how evaluations
should be designed. The study found that 54 percent of the time,
the experts either owned stock in the company that produced the
drug under evaluation, or they had received consulting fees or
research grants from it.
The Nov. 18, 2004, Washington Post noted that
the fda’s apparently-lenient treatment toward drug companies
raised the question of whether “the agency is focusing more
on bolstering the pharmaceutical industry than protecting public
health.”
Hospitals too are loaded with conflicts of interest
that result in the wide use of unproven treatments. Like medical
companies, hospitals are businesses that seek to maximize their
revenues. The more patients they treat, the greater their cash
flow. This doesn’t necessarily mean that financial considerations
are put ahead of patient care, but studies show that there are
huge variations between treatments at different hospitals.
Consider: A 2006 report from researchers at the
Center for the Evaluative Clinical Sciences at Dartmouth Medical
School studied 306 hospital referral regions to compare treatments
of patients during their last six months of life, and the results
were “striking.” For example, the average number of
days chronically ill patients stayed in hospitals varied between
6.5 and 19.4 per region. The number of doctor visits received
by dying patients ranged between 15.7 and 50 per region. Why the
huge discrepancy? Are people in diverse parts of the country so
biologically different that the treatments they are receiving
in hospitals should vary so much?
The reason behind the discrepancies is economics.
Dr. Thompson says hospitals spend huge amounts of money developing
new technology, and they want a return on their investment. New
operation rooms for surgery, or new radiation equipment, according
to Business Week, “are profit centers for hospitals ….
Once a hospital installs a shiny new catheter lab [for example],
it has a powerful incentive to refer more patients for the procedure”
(op. cit.).
Combine that with Americans always demanding to
be treated immediately, and you have the prime conditions for
“overuse and inappropriate use,” says Thompson. “There
is a massive amount of spending on things that really don’t
help patients, and often put them at greater risk. Everyone that’s
informed on the topic knows it, but it is such a scary thing to
discuss that people are not willing to talk about it openly,”
says the head of health care at one of America’s largest
corporations, who didn’t want to be attributed (ibid.).
Scary indeed.
Misplaced Faith
In Luke 18, Jesus Christ uses the parable of the
widow and the unjust judge to show that people should continually
ask God for their needs. Then, to a group of self-trusting people
who thought they had all the answers, Christ asked a lightning-bolt
question: “Nevertheless when the Son of man cometh, shall
he find faith on the earth?”
Yes, when Jesus Christ returns at His Second Coming,
will He find faith?
There is indeed abundant faith on the Earth today—but
not the type Christ was hoping to find. Today’s faith is
largely in modern medicine to solve and heal all our ills.
Look at the facts, and you must acknowledge the
general role of faith in modern medicine—faith not in God,
but in a rickety system of flawed diagnosis and guesswork treatment
whose effectiveness is corroded by greed.
While this may come as a shock to some, it shouldn’t.
Particularly considering the trillions of dollars involved, how
could this oversized giant of an industry remain immune from the
cancerous ravages of human nature? Endemic problems plague every
other aspect of human endeavor—international relations,
government, business and finance, education, social work, even
religion. Why then should people believe—despite overwhelming
evidence to the contrary—that modern medicine deserves our
faith?
Such faith is woefully misplaced.
But if modern medicine can’t be relied upon
to fix society’s health problems, who or what can be?
There is only one Being who has all the answers,
the Being who designed and created man in the first place. It
is He who created the physical laws by which our bodies function
correctly—laws we should do our utmost to abide by. Following
these physical laws does not merely treat the effects of disease
and sickness—it eliminates the causes. These laws include
regulating what and how much we eat and drink, upholding cleanliness
and hygiene, getting plenty of sunshine and fresh air, sufficiently
and properly exercising, sleeping and resting the right amounts,
avoiding bodily injury, and maintaining a positive mental attitude.
In addition, only God has the power to heal
you—and in His Word, He has spelled out iron-clad promises
to heal those who satisfy certain basic conditions. Herbert W.
Armstrong expounded upon these in his booklet The Plain Truth
About Healing, which we offer to you free upon request.
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