| Modern medicine is going through a civil war which is being
fought over the central principles of the Hippocratic Oath: "Above
all, do no harm." Rather like the American Civil War, what
is at stake here is the basic human right to one’s physical
liberty and the freedom to chose one’s destiny. A civil war
is rather like a family row writ large. In medicine it is the family
of doctors and the row is over money and power – what else?
Physicians who long ago sold out to Big Pharma’s corporate
interests are at war with colleagues determined to free medical
practice from this corporate corruption in research, regulatory
systems, and clinical practice and insisting on the patient’s
right not to be harmed.
Dr. Dean, a medical doctor, naturopath and researcher, brought
together in this book the evidence that modern medicine has become,
in its standard version, a death engine, not a profession dedicated
to healing the sick. What makes this book so astonishing is that
its sources all come from mainstream medical research. The question
of whether modern medical practice might possibly do more harm than
good arose formally in the mid-1990’s when the University
of Toronto’s Professor Bruce Pomeranz began an investigation
with the help of the data bases of the FDA. Its results were so
disturbing that a great deal of further research was undertaken,
involving the leading medical teaching institutions of the world.
This development is traced in this book within the context of its
much older historical roots. It is divided into chapters that trace
death to the patient by doctors, drug companies, the health care
bureaucracy, the media and the propaganda machine serving interests
unrelated to the patient’s needs, by drugs and unnecessary
medical procedures, by tainted science, the cancer establishment,
environmental chemicals, toxic foods such as especially refined
sugar, addictions, mechanisms of denial, and by lifestyle choices
that mostly aren’t choices but based on wholesale corporate
fraud.
This book is a wake-up call for health professionals and patients
alike, and although this is a deeply disturbing excursion into the
darkest (and most prevalent) aspects of modern, standard medicine,
it is also profoundly hopeful and helpful. It provides resources
both for those who want to know what to do to prevent disasters
for themselves and their families as well as for those who have
the energy and motivation to become politically involved. It is
not a book for those who wish to remain undisturbed and prefer to
maintain the myth that "my doctor must know best."
This book appeared at a crucial moment in the history of medicine.
It is supported by and describes a movement in medicine that is
nothing less than a fundamental soul-searching and recognition of
its crimes against humanity. As this book went to press, in March
of this year, the UK government published a damning report (often
far stronger in its use of words than Dr. Dean’s book!) entitled
"The Influence of the Pharmaceutical Industry" which outlined
the disastrous consequences for public health and the integrity
of medical science stemming from trust placed in modern drugs and
corporate-sponsored research. In May PLoS Medicine (Public Library
of Science - Medicine) ran an article by the former editor of the
British Medical Journal entitled "Medical Journals are an Extension
of the Marketing Arm of Pharmaceutical Companies". PloS is
the only medical journal that refuses to run ads and is freely available
online; it was founded a few years ago by some 50,000 disillusioned
American medical students who wish to bring medicine back to its
Hippocratic principles. The leading medical journals, such as the
CMAJ, JAMA, The Lancet, publicly discuss now the problems outlined
in Dr. Dean’s book. Late last year, the editors of the world’s
medical journals laid down new ethical principles for research and
study reporting. Some medical schools, such as Macmaster and McGill
in Canada have re-structured their teaching programs, starting this
year, in order to renovate medicine and combat the profit principle,
which in medicine is nothing less than death to the patient.
This important book is a report from the current civil war in medicine
and highly recommended, especially to readers looking for evidence
for their political, legal and personal battles. Activists will
get the leads they need. Patients will find the resources they are
hoping for. Doctors whose conscience is still in tact will find
support for their own practices. Journalists stand in need of this
book so they do not simply print pharmaceutical press releases as
fact. Medical historians will find a wealth of useful sources and
interpretations.
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Helke Ferrie is a Canadian medical science writer who specializes
on the politics of medicine; she runs Kos Publishing Inc, a company
dedicated to books on nutritional and environmental medicine by
doctors and health practitioners. Visit www.kospublishing.com.
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