If one wanted to examine the actual state of health of the western world, it would be necessary to completely halt the massive consumption of pharmaceutical drugs currently in vogue. This would be an interesting experiment, because it would allow the real picture of "health in the world" to emerge. To do this, we would have to withhold the anxiolytic, anti-psychotic, anti-epileptic drugs, all the painkillers that sedate patients, etc., and then watch the consequences.
I believe we would see terrifying scenes unfold. The violence and insanity that have been so long suppressed would erupt. We would see homicides and suicides, hear the shrieks of pain and agony, see epileptics with fits, crippled people in pain, mad people talking to ghosts, and people suffering from spasms, hysteria and fear.
Then, and only then, would we see the world’s real state of health today. We do not know the actual number of all those who are suffering, but I don’t think it is an exaggeration to say that more than half of the population of the western world is suffering from a major or minor chronic ailment and is under some kind of treatment. There are very few individuals who don’t take some medication for an ailment, minor or major, within the course of a year. Can we possibly claim victory over a disease just because we manage to palliate some of its manifestations?
Let us compare the above scene with the picture of a peaceful, remote village where medical and pharmaceutical services are not available, where people treat themselves by traditional means—herbs and folk remedies. Unfortunately, there aren’t many such places left in the world today. I am sure that one would not find scenes of pandemonium, as described above, in such places. The difference is not in the way of life but in the methods of treatment and prevention of diseases. Have the people of the Caucasus Mountains, who are known to live longer than anybody else on this planet, ever attributed their longevity to the "miracles" of allopathic medicine?
Established medicine must resume its work with a different mental attitude and make new efforts. It has to realize that the palliation of pain and suffering is not an adequate solution, that in fact such palliation may only create new problems or prolong existing ones.