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A New Model For Health And Disease – Page 33

If it were possible that someone could objectively observe humanity, all human beings would look alike. Established medicine has generally treated all human beings alike, as if they were identical machines with an identical defect that needed an identical remedy. This whole concept has been aggressively promoted and promulgated as the ultimate of scientific attain¬ment. The question that should arise in medicine is "can we afford to ignore the principle of individualization in treating diseased individuals?" But Weiner states, "People are infinitely variable; psychological polymorphism is limitless, so one cannot label people accurately. Diagnosis is fruitless, classification difficult."4
Even today, the trend in research laboratories is to find a drug to cure cancer, AIDS, epilepsy, etc., never to cure the "indi¬vidual that has cancer, AIDS or epilepsy."
So far it has not been understood that one individual with "cancer" can be cured while another with the same type of cancer cannot; an individual with epilepsy can be treated suc¬cessfully and another cannot; and I even dare say one with AIDS can be cured while another cannot. In medical literature, spon¬taneous cures for all diseases, even the most severe ones, have been described and millions of cures have taken place outside of established medicine—the result of alternative methods of treatment.5"21
One must ask certain key questions in order to explain certain facts about the AIDS virus. Why is it that certain individuals will not even be carriers of the virus in spite of coming in contact with it, while others who are carriers will never develop AIDS? Why will some individuals get the virus and succumb to it within a short period of time, while others succumb to it at a much later date?
A simple example of this concerns the Hepatitis B virus. There are millions of carriers of the Hepatitis B virus. Neverthe¬less, the majority of these people remain carriers and do not develop any of the variety of diseases associated with it. Others may develop any of the following diseases—acute hepatitis, chronic hepatitis, immunological abnormalities or deficiencies, liver cirrhosis or primary hepatic carcinoma.
Established medicine has never considered the "constitu¬tion" of the sick individual a matter of therapeutic concern