Are there any effective and affordable forms of health care left?
Is there good reason to allow people to be free to speak what they believe about their own health? If we don't implement totalitarian management of human beings, will humans be able to get effective and affordable treatments of their disease/illness? Rather than stack every example of quackery/medical care on one table and try to advance the medical literature where even professionals cannot all agree, I'd like to have some fun just talking about some of the less-believed medical "cures" that have been used by some, and that have some followers still alive.
Here is one of the topics that has suffered from general suppression by "mainstream" medicine: Ge-132, Germanium Sesquioxide. I once worked for a company that chemically prepared this for sale to alternative health care pill-pushers. I still have a bottle of it sitting among a thousand other bottles of quack medicines I use sometimes. I haven't been to the doctor for treatment of an actual illness since 1975. The last time I went for a check-up, two years ago, the doctors--two of them---were wondering what I was doing, what I was eating and such. "You're on track to live to be a hundred." "We don't see many patients as healthy as you are, even when they're forty years younger."
My wife who is a nurse was saying I'm a hypochondriac because I wanted her to fuss over me and she was just coming home tired of caring. . . . .
Is there good reason to allow people to be free to speak what they believe about their own health? If we don't implement totalitarian management of human beings, will humans be able to get effective and affordable treatments of their disease/illness? Rather than stack every example of quackery/medical care on one table and try to advance the medical literature where even professionals cannot all agree, I'd like to have some fun just talking about some of the less-believed medical "cures" that have been used by some, and that have some followers still alive.
Here is one of the topics that has suffered from general suppression by "mainstream" medicine: Ge-132, Germanium Sesquioxide. I once worked for a company that chemically prepared this for sale to alternative health care pill-pushers. I still have a bottle of it sitting among a thousand other bottles of quack medicines I use sometimes. I haven't been to the doctor for treatment of an actual illness since 1975. The last time I went for a check-up, two years ago, the doctors--two of them---were wondering what I was doing, what I was eating and such. "You're on track to live to be a hundred." "We don't see many patients as healthy as you are, even when they're forty years younger."
My wife who is a nurse was saying I'm a hypochondriac because I wanted her to fuss over me and she was just coming home tired of caring. . . . .