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Before You Take That Pill





not to nitpick on an otherwise excellent post, but i think new zealand is the only other country in the world that permits DTC marketing of drugs. i could be wrong on this so check me out.
and while i certainly agree that is possible to get all the vitamins and nutrients you need by eating fresh whole foods, we have to remember that most of our food is hardly fresh or whole. granny smith apples, even organic, flown over from,, of all places, new zealand, and sitting in your grocer’s produce section for another week before you buy them, are not going to have the same nutrient content of that apple eaten right off the tree.
i spent two weeks in puglia in august and i’d say that most of the food consumed there came from 10 minutes away. everyone had some kind of garden and i saw women picking the ingredients for that evening’s dinner right before cooking time. the families made their own tomato sauce for the year with sun ripened tomatoes from their garden. one woman told me she would be making 800 jars that weekend!
their soil was naturally rich in iron; all their produce was “organic” even though the USDA hadn’t certified it as such. anything leftover went into the compost heap.
eat like an italian peasant and you’ll certainly not want for any nutrients.
YES!!!! I couldn’t agree more. As a psychiatrist I often want to scream at my patients “You are NOT sick. Being a little anxious or occasionally depressed from time to time is NORMAL. Its called LIFE. Stop taking so much c–p!!!” We have been brainwashed to think that every little deviation from “normal” needs a medication or supplement. That’s absurd and the cure has become the disease.
Another point is that with the DTC advertising we now have billions being spent making suggestions to people that they are ill, or about to become ill. Given how suggestible humans are that has to be increasing the rate of illness.
Thank you for this post.
The current excessive consumption of “meds” will go down in American medical history as a monumental medical tragedy.
Thanks for your efforts,Doug,to stop the madness.
Dr. Rick Lippin
Great blog post! My psychiatrist is a lot like Joseph the commenter above, except I am a patient who does not want to be on excessive meds so he and I are in total agreement. My psychiatrist keeps telling me that I am “normal”, fine, OK etc. It really helps to have emotional support when getting through a tough period instead of medication.
At one point my BP was borderline high and luckily my internist GP recommended I buy an automatic BP cuff and make lifestyle changes in an effort to drop my BP myself. That worked for me and my BP is low now.
I don’t know what to think about supplements. As a 58 year old white female, both my gyn and GP have been telling me for at least 10 years to take calcium citrate. First I was told to take 1,000mg, then 1,200mg and now was told to take 1,500-2,000 mg. I gag when I swallow these then feel nauseous after taking them so at best I end up taking 4 a day which is 1,000mg. I am luckily in the non-osteopenia category, but I am certainly perplexed about this.
I forgot to add that you merited a blog posting on Shrink Rap:
http://psychiatrist-blog.blogspot.com/
What comes to mind for me regarding these issues is the great diversity of conditions under which homo sapiens lives and thrives, currently and historically, without all these pharmaceuticals and allopathic medicine. For example, Inuits thrive on a diet of almost exclusively animal products. Desert nomads thrive on much less water than we are told we need. We are here now because our species survived over the millenia without modern medical interventions. Granted, parasites and natural pathogens may have reduced their life spans and decreased their quality of life, and it’s good that we can now control and mitigate plagues and malaria and cholera and so on. But people have always exploited whatever natural remedies were available in their environments, and we are here because they were successful at it.
Another thought is that evidence indicates that we are all being exposed to some level of pharmaceuticals whether we want to be or not, because of their presence in our water supplies. People flush unneeded drugs or excrete them into the sewage system and these chemicals can’t be removed by sewage treatments. They have, by design, biological effects on all the organisms using that water, with totally unknown but probably undesirable consequences. Studies that have been done on municipal water supplies have detected pretty substantial levels of different drugs in the common water supply. This troubles me.
Native Americans and small pox? Inuits and chronic middle ear disease with its complications of mastoiditis and meningitis? Unfortunately, there are very few untouched ecological niches left in this world. Polio from Sudan showed up in Indonesia when some pilgrims from those areas met in Mecca.
My son is going to South Africa to work in HIV clinics there. I will pass your words of wisdom on to him.
Found this post very useful, thanks