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Why
Our Healthcare System Isn't Healthy |
by:
Deb
Bromley |
Most
people are well aware that an estimated
45 million Americans currently do not have
healthcare, but is the crisis simply the
lack of health insurance or even the cost
of health insurance? Is there a bigger underlying
problem at the root of our healthcare system?
Although the U.S. claims to have the most
advanced medicine in the world, government
health statistics and peer-reviewed journals
are painting a different picture -- that
allopathic medicine often causes more harm
than good.
People in general have always felt they
could trust doctors and the medical profession,
but according to the Journal of the American
Medical Association in July 2000, iatrogenic
death, also known as death from physician
error or death from medical treatment, was
the third leading cause of death in America
and rising, responsible for at least 250,000
deaths per year. Those statistics are considered
conservative by many, as the reported numbers
only include in-hospital deaths, not injury
or disability, and do not include external
iatrogenic deaths such as those resulting
from nursing home and other private facility
treatments, and adverse effects of prescriptions.
One recent study estimated the total unnecessary
deaths from iatrogenic causes at approximately
800,000 per year at a cost of $282 billion
per year, which would make death from American
medicine the leading cause of death in our
country.
Currently, at least 2 out of 3 Americans
use medications, 32 million Americans are
taking three or more medications daily,
and commercials and advertisements for pharmaceutical
drugs have saturated the marketplace. Although
our population is aging, exorbitantly expensive
drugs are being marketed and dispensed to
younger and younger patients, including
many children who years ago would never
have been given or needed medication, for
everything from ADHD to asthma to bipolar
disease and diabetes. Clearly, the state
of health in this country is not improving
even though there are an increasing number
of medications and treatments. Between 2003
and 2010, the number of prescriptions are
expected to increase substantially by 47%.
In recent years, numerous drugs previously
deemed safe by the FDA have been recalled
because of their toxicity, after the original
drug approvals were actually funded by the
invested pharmaceutical companies themselves.
According to the media, thanks to advances
in U.S. drugs and medical procedures, Americans
are living longer statistically, but they
are living longer sicker, with a lower quality
of life, and often dependent on multiple
expensive synthetic medications that do
not cure or address the underlying causes,
but only suppress symptoms, often with a
plethora of dangerous side effects to the
tune of billions of dollars for the drug
industry. Considering that the U.S. is supposed
to have the most advanced technology in
the world and the best health care system,
it is at odds that we spend the most on
healthcare, yet are the most obese and most
afflicted with illness outside of the AIDS
epidemic in some third world countries.
Unless you have an acute emergency that
requires emergency room care, being admitted
to a hospital environment may also be more
dangerous to your health than staying out.
In 2003, epidemiologists reported in the
New England Journal of Medicine that hospital-acquired
infections have risen steadily in recent
decades, with blood and tissue infections
known as sepsis almost tripling from 1979
to 2000. Nearly two million patients in
the U.S. get an infection while in the hospital
each year, and of those patients over 90,000
die per year, up dramatically from just
13,300 in 1992. Statistics show that approximately
56% of the population has been unnecessarily
treated, or mistreated, by the medical industry.
Additionally, as a result of the overuse
of pharmaceutical drugs and antibiotics
in our bodies and environment, our immune
systems have become significantly weakened,
allowing antibiotic-resistant strains of
disease-causing bacteria to proliferate,
leaving us more susceptible to further disease.
Not surprisingly, incidences of diseases
have been growing at epidemic levels according
to the CDC. Now diseases once thought conquered,
such as tuberculosis, gonorrhea, malaria,
and childhood ear infections are much harder
to successfully treat than they were decades
ago. Drugs do not cure. They only suppress
the symptoms that your body needs to express,
while they ignore the underlying root cause.
Side effects of synthetic and chemical drugs,
which even if they are partly derived from
nature have been perverted to make them
patentable and profitable, are not healthy
or natural, and usually cause more harm
than any perceived benefit of the medication.
Where "physician errors" are concerned,
these may not be entirely the fault of the
doctors, as they are forced to operate within
the constraints of their profession or risk
losing their license, but doctors have become
pawns and spokesmen for the drug companies,
and the best interest of the patient has
become secondary. In the name of profit,
physicians are also under great pressure
from hospitals to service patients as quickly
as possible, like an assembly line, increasing
the likelihood of error.
In conclusion, increases in healthcare costs
are not just the result of frivolous law
suits, but are primarily the result of a
profit-oriented industry that encourages
practices that lead to unnecessary and harmful
procedures being performed, lethal adverse
drug reactions, infections, expensive legitimate
lawsuits, in-hospital and physician errors,
antibiotic resistance due to overprescribing
of antibiotics and drugs, and the hundreds
of thousands of subsequent unnecessary deaths
and injuries. Many people do not realize
that there are healthier natural options,
and anything unnatural or invasive we are
exposed to is likely to cause either immediate
or cumulative damage over time.
For more information on how to help your
body heal itself naturally without chemicals,
information on drug side effects, and harmful
disease-causing chemicals in the foods you
eat and your environment and how to avoid
them, please visit the NatureGem web site
at http://www.naturegem.com
About the author:
Deb Bromley is a science and technology
researcher and the President of NatureGem
Nontoxic Living, an organization devoted
to promoting awareness of toxins in our
food and environment that can cause disease,
and providing access to nutrition information,
natural remedies, and alternative health
resources. Please visit http://www.naturegem.comfor
more information.
Circulated by Bandoni
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