20 January 2012

Doctors Threaten Strike; Others want us all to be guinea pigs

Supports Chapter One: Trick to Treat

Two pieces of news hit my computer almost simultaneously this week. One was good and one was bad. But together they illustrate what is wrong with medicine today.

The good news is that doctors, unsatisfied with a new pensions proposal by the British government are threatening to go on strike.[1]

The bad news is that a couple of very scary doctors in Oxford suggest that we healthy people should be forced to risk serious, possible fatal, illness by being injected with cocktails of bacterial and viral debris in the search for more effective vaccines.[2]

Doctors strike – and death rates fall


Doctors don’t often go on strike, but it has happened sufficiently often for a disturbing trend to be noticed. During the rare times that they have gone on strike – in several countries – the death rate has always gone down.

In 2000, Israeli doctors employed in public hospitals pursued a course of industrial action. This included the cancellation of outpatient clinics and the postponement of all routine surgery. And this limited strike action had some unusual consequences. Throughout Israel, while the doctors were on strike, death rates fell. The coastal city of Netanya has only one hospital whose staff members had a ‘no strike’ clause in their contracts. As a result, doctors in Netanya continued to work normally – and death rates remained stubbornly the same, failing to reflect the reduction that was shown in almost all of the rest of the country.[3]

And it wasn’t the first time; doctors in Israel had gone on strike in 1973, and reduced their total daily patient contacts from 65,000 to just 7,000. The strike lasted a month and during that time the death rate, according to the Jerusalem Burial Society, dropped by half.

It doesn’t just happen in Israel. The 1960s saw physicians in Canada go on strike and the mortality rate dropped. In 1976, in Bogota, Colombia, doctors refused to treat all but emergency cases for a period of 52 days, and in that time the death rate fell by 35%.[4] In the same year the death rate dropped 18% during a ‘slow-down’ by doctors in Los Angeles. After the strike, deaths rates jumped to 3% above normal for more than five weeks as the Los Angeles doctors caught up on their paperwork.[5]

And it is a standing joke among cardiologists that death rates fall during their conferences because fewer of them are attempting to cure moribund patients by doing dangerous surgery. Their treatment can be worse than the disease.

It may come as no surprise, therefore, that a major report by Australian medical researchers posed the question ‘WILL MORE DOCTORS INCREASE OR DECREASE DEATH RATES?’ The report, written by scientists at the Centre for Health Program Evaluation, hypothesized that an increase in death rates in that country was caused by an increase in the number of doctors. Although the report was concerned only with the situation in Australia, there is strong evidence to suggest that this question also needs to be addressed in many other developed countries including Britain and the US.

You may think that the question and hypothesis are outrageous. After all, Primum non nocere, ‘First, do no harm’, is a central tenet guiding medical practice, and most doctors treat this tenet very seriously. Yet the reality is that, with the state of healthcare as it is, our continual calls for more doctors, and expansion of the NHS and our dependence on it, may actually be increasing rather than decreasing illness in our lives. With the world’s highest concentration of doctors – one for every 500 people – you might expect that the US would be the healthiest country. Far from it; data from a health survey of the top thirteen wealthiest industrialized countries were published in the summer of 2000. The US came twelfth.[6]

One reason why medical care may increase death rates is the large number of adverse events associated with it. The Australian report mentions a 1995 study of 14,000 hospital admissions. Of those admitted almost 17% suffered an adverse event. One in seven adverse events resulted in a permanent disability and one in 20 of the individuals affected died.[7]

Even that may be an under-assessment. Research on under-reporting of serious adverse drug reactions in the United States and Canada suggests that formal reporting rates may be as low as 1.5% of the real total. US estimates place adverse drug reactions as the fifth most common cause of death after heart disease, cancer, stroke and pulmonary disease.[8] These figures are not always easy to acquire. It is well known that doctors and hospital consultants are notoriously bad at reporting drug side effects. Although there is a new national reporting system in the UK designed to flag potentially dangerous drugs and remedies, pharmacists said they tend not to report a side effect if patients have been harmed; they are more likely to report only those incidents where a protocol has been broken.[9] They fear that they will be blamed for any side effect, and so feel it is not worth running the risk. Why might they act in this way? It seems that they are ashamed to admit to their patients that they were wrong.[10]

In modern society there is an increasing tendency, typified by the human rights movement, to shame governments, professions and individuals into complying with a particular organization’s ideas for social change. Shame is hard to deal with. It engenders embarrassment and guilt; it makes professionals feel flawed. It is, perhaps, no surprise that they fall back on silence. Shame is probably the major reason why most doctors don’t report adverse drug effects or change their views on the usefulness and harm of drugs.

A second possibility, which the Australian researchers call ‘the dependency hypothesis’, is the idea that the more doctors are available, the more dependent on them people become to maintain their health. This leads patients to adopt an exaggerated confidence in the effectiveness of medical care and its ability to offset the harmful effects of their own self-neglect. But that is not a healthy attitude because getting involved with the medical profession can be decidedly dangerous. In 1999, doctors in the US were recognized as the third leading cause of death.[6] Four years later another review had elevated them into first place.[11] The number of Americans killed by FDA-approved pharmaceuticals is equivalent to dropping a nuclear bomb on a major US city every year.

We in Britain are not immune to this trend. On 13 August 2004, an astonishing article appeared on the front page of The Times. Based on an independent report published in the British Medical Journal, it confirmed that medical accidents and errors were directly blamed for the deaths of 40,000 Britons per year. This made them officially Britain’s fourth-biggest killer. But the report went on to state that less than a third of an estimated 900,000 medical mistakes are properly reported each year. The figure also excluded errors committed in primary care such as in GPs’ surgeries.

The following year came a Parliamentary Public Accounts Committee Report, A Safer Place for Patients: Learning to Improve Patient Safety. It stated that some 22% of medical mistakes that lead to a serious reaction or even death go unreported in the UK. This is because, while you may read ‘the patient died from complications of surgery’, the truth is often ‘the surgeon killed the patient’. Only one in four hospitals owns up to the patient (or relatives) when something goes wrong; the rest blame it on the disease itself; while just one in 25 drug reactions is ever reported. This massive under-reporting of mistakes is an acknowledged problem. It is usually because of fears of litigation.

Government officials were shocked to hear that nobody knows how many of the reported blunders end in the death of the patient. But based on the known, reported accidents, one in 10 people admitted to a hospital in Britain every year will suffer an incident that will harm them, said Tory MP Edward Leigh, chairman of the Commons Public Accounts Committee. These included 974,000 medical ‘accidents’.[12] This is a conservative estimate; government officials accept the figure is more likely to be 1,190,000. We should then add 300,000 hospital-acquired infections, and 250,000 serious adverse reactions to a prescription drug, a figure which is again a very conservative estimate as it is based only on reported reactions – a truer figure may be closer to 1,200,000 every year, according to officials. This means that some 2,690,000 people, or 4.5% of the entire population, could be harmed by medical mishaps every year. ‘The numbers of blunders could have been halved if staff had learned from earlier errors,’ the report said. Edward Leigh added: ‘No public health system should tolerate a failure to learn from previous experience on this scale.’

The lapses cost the NHS (actually, you and me, the taxpayers, of course) an estimated £2 billion in extra bed days and £540 million in litigation and compensation.

All of this may be why the late Dr Robert Mendelsohn, a physician himself, wrote: ‘Doctors in general should be treated with about the same degree of trust as used car salesmen.’[13]

So, we in the UK must be grateful if the doctors carry out their threat to go on strike. Not only will the country save money by not paying their salaries while they aren't working, it will reduce the likelihood that they will kill or seriously hurt us.

A new medical threat proposed

But there are now other threats to our welfare. We justifiably do not trust doctors, and as a consequence, people are loath to allow themselves to be experimented on. Which is proving to be a problem for the doctors. As is clearly stated in their paper, Drs Susanne Sheehy and Joel Meyer believe that we should be forced, by law if necessary, to allow them to inject us with any material they like. Mandatory participation in vaccine trials, they suggest, is no different from requiring individuals to serve on jury duty, for instance, or to serve in the military.

They also believe that forcing people to take experimental vaccines, even when such vaccines come with obvious "inherent risks," is an individual's required duty to give back to society.

Perhaps the most disturbing element of the paper, though, is its suggestion that "increas[ing] the severity" of diseases will help to facilitate 'compulsory recruitment' into experimental vaccine trials. Deliberately creating more deadly strains of disease in order to scare people into vaccine programs, in other words, is apparently considered to be a valid approach by Sheehy and Meyer, whose passionate worship of vaccines have led them to such a preposterous notion.

Just how dangerous their ideas are is evidenced in what has happened in vaccine trials in the past. I'll just list a couple:
  1. In 2008, 21 homeless individuals in Poland died during an avian flu vaccine experiment.[14]
  2. And in the same year at least 14 Argentinean children died as part of an experimental vaccine trial conducted by British pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline [15]
With that track record it is no wonder that Drs Susanne Sheehy and Joel Meyer are having difficulty finding volunteers on which they can test dubious procedures. And have they forgotten that we have a perfectly adequate immune system – if only it is allowed to do its job. And vaccines damage that capability.

Let me make it quite clear. I am very wary of going anywhere near the sharp end of a hospital. And there is certainly no way I would agree to allow myself to participate in any medical trial.

The medical profession today all seem to think we 'patients' exist to provide them with a comfortable standard of life which we can never aspire to. Well, we don't! They are our servants; we pay their salaries. And there is a limit to how much we can afford. If they cannot live with that, so be it.

So, let the doctors strike, I say. We will almost certainly be better off without their ministrations, and we will save money.

References
1. Doctors threaten first strike in 40 years – over £48,000 pensions, The Independent, Thursday 19 January 2012. http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/health-and-families/health-news/doctors-threaten-first-strike-in-40-years--over-48000-pensions-6291595.html
2. Susanne Sheehy, BM BCh, MRCP, DTM&H, and Joel Meyer, BM BCh, MRCP. Should Participation in Vaccine Clinical Trials be Mandated? Virtual Mentor 2012; 14: 35-38.
3. Doctors’ strike in Israel may be good for health. BMJ 2000; 320:1561.
4. Horne, Ross. Health & Survival In The 21st Century. HarperCollins Publishers Pty Limited, Australia, 1997. Chapter 11.
5. Science News, 28 Oct 1978; 114: 293.
6. Starfield B. Is US health really the best in the world? JAMA 2000; 284: 483-485.
7. Wilson RM, et al. The Quality in Australian Health Care Study. Med J Aust 1995; 163: 458-471.
8. Motl S, et al. Proposal to improve MedWatch: decentralized, regional surveillance of adverse drug reactions. Am J Health Syst Pharm 2004; 61: 1840-1842.
9. Ashcroft DM, et al. Likelihood of reporting adverse events in community pharmacy: an experimental study. Qual Saf Health Care 2006; 15: 48-52.
10. Davidoff F. Shame: the elephant in the room. BMJ 2002; 324: 623-624.
11. http://www.garynull.com/documents/iatrogenic/deathbymedicine/deathbymedicine1.htm
12. House of Commons Committee of Public Accounts. A safer place for patients: learning to improve patient safety; Fifty-first Report of Session 2005-06. 12 June 2006
13. Mendelsohn RA. Confessions of a Medical Heretic. New York: McGraw-Hill Contemporary; 1979.
14. Homeless people die after bird flu vaccine trial in Poland. Daily Telegraph, 02 Jul 2008. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/poland/2235676/Homeless-people-die-after-bird-flu-vaccine-trial-in-Poland.html.
15. GSK fined after over vaccine trials; 14 babies reported dead. Buenos Aires Herald. http://www.buenosairesherald.com/article/88922/gsk-lab-fined-$1m-over-tests-that-killed-14--babies



11 comments:

Stan Bleszynski said...

The last two sentences sum it up perfectly! Totally agree!

(more rant)

Governments and large corporations have established the systemic mechanism for transferring the wealth from the underpaid individuals and producers to the overpaid privileged collectives and various groups like doctors, pharmaceuticals, insurers and others that are supposed (in theory) to provide services but in fact suck life out of the rest of the economy. This must stop.

Here in Canada it cost me once 20$ to use the services of a totally private unlicensed doctor with two medical degrees, one Western and one traditional Chinese. The same, no not the same - a useless 15 minute visit to a hospital emergency doctor was invoiced at about 250$. Some interesting stats from Canada: average "private" GP bill to Ontario's public health system is ~300k$/y, while the average public sector salary is an outrageous 65k$/y. Average private sector wage that is heavily taxed and pays for all the privileged lifestyle and perks of the former two groups is paltry 35k$/y.

Shouldn't the people demand that the funding, privileges and concessions be taken away from the public sector and large corporations that do so little for them? The law of supply and demand would work much better had we gotten rid of the red tape and allowed it to work in the medical field. My plumber doesn't charge me 250$ for 15 minutes, he charges me 80$ per hour. Shouldn't we demand that the taxes be reduced and power returned to those who actually produce wealth and provide useful services as private individuals, subject to the law of supply and demand?

Stan (Heretic)

Anonymous said...

If these doctors are so concerned for our welfare and the merits of these vaccinations, why don't they do the honourable thing and test them out on themselves....or their family...or THEIR children?

Barry Groves said...

There was a time when doctors did test their ideas on themselves. These days, the pharmaceutical industry discourages such antisocial practices.

Doctors are the drugs industry's sales force. Wouldn't want to lose any of them, would they?

Barry

Anonymous said...

Go ahead and google "my chances of surviving a heart attack outside of a hospital"...How about your chances of surviving any variety of cancers. Almost every chronic illness has the potential to substantially decrease your lifespan. Modern Physicians preform risky procedures every day which will invariably produce morbidity and mortality. I belive that you are all missing the bigger picture. People live longer today than they did 50, 25 or even 10 years ago. Those number are a direct reflection of the "evil" practiced by todays physicians. Modern medicine has given the western world everything they have ever asked for! You want to eat cheeseburgers and lead sedentary lifestyles yet still maintain the lifespan of the japanese? Modern medicine has made that possible through research, technology, sweat and blood of highly trained physicians. We devote our lives to medicine and learning. We work nights, weekends and holidays. We spend more time at work than any two people with full time jobs combined. I earn my salary.

Stan Bleszynski said...

Anonymous wrote: " I earn my salary."

May be but I doubt it, in a general sense (not personally you). You (plural) draw salaries equal to multiple of average private sector wage but you still can't cure even a common cold!

You have been appropriating gigantic sums for cancer research, for decades, yet you still haven't even got a grip on it!

You refuse to prevent diabetes and atherosclerotic heart disease in spite of the glaring evidence from all the published low carb diet research hinting, no - begging you to look and use it!

I cured my angina pain 12 years ago using a high animal fat low carb diet ("Optimal Diet"). My medical doctor's advice at that time was "de-stress yourself". Yeah right. For me, that guy was totally useless! I regret having to support people like that with my taxes, who have to use government to pull money out of my pocket. I prefer if you supported yourself. Like myself.

Stan (Heretic)

Nightingale said...

I insist my doctors work in partnership with me. Those who want to boss me around are summarily fired. I reserve the right to disagree, and as I have a PPO insurance and live in the United States, I still have that right.

For instance, I love my oncologist dearly, but when he told me I needed to be on an aromatase inhibitor for 10 years after chemo for estrogen positive breast cancer, I politely declined. Three months later he asked me again to take the drug, but only for 5 years. Why now only 5 years? Because a new study (which I also read) showed that more women died from the drug than from recurrence of cancer if they stayed on it more than 5 years. I wonder what they will find out about this drug after the next study. The study also combined the outcomes of high-risk and low-risk patients; a big mistake. Had they separated the data, they would have found high-risk patients benefitting more from the drug, and low-risk patients like myself benefitting little, if at all.

It pays to do your homework.

Anonymous said...

Oh, I remember Polish vaccine case. It was in my home city ( now I live in the UK ). Very sad story.

Barry Groves said...

Hi Nightingale

Yes, doctor should act in partnership with their patients.

Unfortunately today, doctors are looking more and more towards wealth rather than health. And they see patients as a source of income. They seem to have lost the fact that the patient is paying them, which makes them - the doctors - the servants, not the masters.

Another unfortunate fact is that doctors today are not taught the 'art' of medicine - how to get their patients well again; these days they are taught how to push drugs and which drugs to push for different conditions.

Anonymous
We are all told that we live longer today than we did a century ago. But very little of that increase is down to medicine. Those statistics take total life expectancy into account and that includes infant mortality.

Neonatal and infant deaths were much higher a century ago and that fact brought overall figures down. If you managed to reach maturity, life expectancy was actually higher in the 19th century than it is today.

The reason that ovrall life expectancy has risen so much is not down to better medical care so much as the environment. Childhood mortality was reduced by better sanitation, clean water, slum clearances, and improved diet. All these, particularly diet, gave children higher resistance to infectious diseases, long before vaccination and antibiotics were introduced.

There is increasing evidence that vaccines do not improve health - but they do damage innate immunity.

Barry

Nightingale said...

Dr Groves, shockingly the health care practitioners that I have the most trouble fighting against have been in the "alternative" realm. I had a naturopath that just couldn't let me go. He kept saying I needed more treatments and more supplements.

He just got fired.

The MDs I consult with are more amenable to negotiation, especially when I start quoting studies.

But this kind of give and take is hard for the "civilians." But civilians are going to have to suck it up and fight back. I will say I sometimes feel for doctors, as now "best practice" and "evidence-based practice" groups are accusing doctors of malpractice if they don't tow the conventional line.

That's fascist medicine.

Barry Groves said...

Nightingale

Isn't the Internet great!

The reason I say that, is that I think more and more people are learning a wide range of topics and are questioning the sorts of treatment they are having to pay for.

This, in turn, means inevitably that practitioners are losing patients and revenue as people make their own decisions.

So we now have two attitudes from the medical professionals:

Firstly, there are the doctors who have a safe position within a government-sponsored institution, where they are secure and can treat patients as tools to keep them in well-paid, secure jobs.

Then there are the independents who must rely on a steady supply of patients for their livelihood. Their position is more precarious so, if they manage to snare a patient, they will get as much out of the relationship as possible, and as quickly as possible.

Behind all this is a culture of excessively-paid professionals - bankers are the obvious example, with lawyers close behind. Everyone is fighting for every buck they can get, while doing a little as possible - and many of them forget that they are actually our servants. They forget that WE PAY THEIR SALARIES. They are there for our use, NOT the other way around.

Barry

Anonymous said...

How can I consider myself in partnership with my doctor, when she insists on telling me to get my 'Cholesterol' down?
I asked her why cholesterol was 'bad'. She said 'It blocks your arteries and causes heart disease' I then asked why did she think there is so much cholesterol in an egg. She said 'I don't see what you mean.' I suggested that it was because all that cholesterol has to go towards making a chicken, she just thought I was joking! Sheesh!