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Homeopathy – Medicine for the New Millennium – page 87

The greater the number of drugs a doctor prescribes, the better he appears to be in his clients’ eyes, and it is also better for the chem- ist, the pharmaceutical industry and the patient generally, who believes that in this way he may get better sooner. This myth (that a doctor’s efficiency can be measured by the number of drugs he prescribes) has widely been accepted by patients, who ask for, or even demand, an ever-increasing number of expensive drags.
In this way a vicious circle has been created which benefits the pharmaceutical agents and companies as well as the chemists, but which harms the patients in the long run and also serves to perpetuate and aggravate both the world health problem and its financial relationship with government health organisations.
Governments, of course, require their doctors to be more con- sistent, to be better informed, to do more research, to prescribe less drugs, and to earn less money.
They forget however that doctors are members of a greedy soci- ety created by all of us and our way of thinking, and that it is not possible for them to escape the general trend.
No centralized health system can succeed, no matter how auto- cratic or democratic it may be, because the individual’s egocen- tric self-interest will always precede any other interest. But if it should succeed, pity the poor patients! The result would be sim- ilar to the situation in Romania or other Eastern European coun- tries, prior to the collapse of Communism, which were able to boast the best medical care, although the WHO statistics would show the lowest life-expectancy rate in those countries.
In other words, such patients that can take unlimited amounts of drugs from a disinterested doctor, could count on lowering their life-expectancy rate. The reason would be that since, in such a case, the cost of medicines would be very low or even nil, pa- tients would swallow them in great quantities, in the belief that they were thus benefitting their health, whereas in reality their health was being destroyed.
Perhaps this all seems exaggerated, but if there is interest in ex- ploring the health problem and the ways in which it was creat- ed and expanded to the desperate situation prevalent today, one may refer to my book A New Model for Health and Disease, published by North Atlantic Books, California.