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A New Model For Health And Disease – Page 27

[b:1z5y9j16]THE EXISTING SITUATION IN MEDICINE[/b:1z5y9j16]

Medical activities are divided into three separate branches that apparently have no real communication or feedback among themselves.
These three separate branches are:
1. Everyday medicine applied in the hospital and in general
practice.
2. Educational centers, universities and post-graduate stud-
ies.
3. Research centers.
Of all the three branches the research centers appear to comprise the core of allopathic medicine. The public’s expectations of these centers are considerable. The pressures of modern life place a premium on rapid cure and the speedy elimination of symptoms.
In contrast, the educational centers seem to be paralyzed. They have failed to introduce any significant innovations of their own in medical thought, and they have likewise refused to incorporate any of the novel concepts proposed by the alternative health care movement, derogating the alternative ideas as too theoretical or abstract for practical application.
Similarly, medical practitioners have fallen victim to inertia. Despite the discouraging number of therapeutic dead ends encountered in clinical medicine, they have seldom voiced their dissatisfaction with the ineffectiveness of many of the drugs introduced by research centers. By failing to express their complaints, in refraining from upsetting the established sociomedical order, a crucial feedback mechanism among the three branches that could have prevented the current situation has failed to evolve, and the supremacy of medical research has thus been assured.