Books

A New Model For Health And Disease – Page 23

THE NECESSITY OF A MODEL
"The myths of Hygieia andAsclepius symbolize the never-ending oscillation between two different points of view in medicine. For the worshippers of Hygieia, health is the natural order of things, a positive attribute to which men are entitled if they govern their lives wisely. According to them, the most important function of medicine is to discover and teach the natural laws which will ensure a healthy mind in a healthy body. More skeptical, or wiser in the ways of the world, the followers of Asclepius believe that the chief role of the physician is to treat disease, to restore health by correcting any imperfections caused by the accidents of birth or life."
Rene Dubos1
As far as I know, no serious attempt has been made by anybody in the medical field to present in a comprehensive way a theoretical model of the human body and the way it functions in health and disease. Perhaps the reason is that the human being is so infinitely subtle and complex in its structure and mode of functioning that any attempt to provide a complete model would not only be frustrating but almost impossible. A host of uncertainties looms before us when we consider the fact that the whole organism is much more than a mere composite of its cells, tissues and organs. The seemingly countless and indefinable variables in such a system would seem to frustrate our best efforts to achieve total understanding. Yet established medicine has pretended, or at least has given the impression to the outside world, that it has always acted under the premise of knowing everything about the human organism.
It is for this reason that Henry Simmons ironically states, "We physicians were the experts. The public had little to do or little need to participate in setting medical priorities or making medical decisions; we would look out for their interests; we knew what was best for them."2