Books

A New Model For Health And Disease – Page 187

clinical experience will help these therapeutic disciplines further realize their potential and further enhance and refine their methods.
On the International level
On this level the role and importance of the World Health Organization (WHO) is paramount.
Its officials should be the first ones acquainted with the real facts emerging from statistical analysis and global collection of information. The statisticians should be able to study the facts correctly, and a "think-tank" should be employed to interpret general trends in health care, to evaluate different kinds of therapeutic disciplines and finally to advise the different governmental agencies.
This Model suggests, for instance, that the average lifespan within western societies will soon start showing a downward trend due to constant epidemics, new acute diseases and the explosion of chronic incurable diseases. Soon the statistics will have to take into consideration the quality of life and find ways to measure it. It is for this reason that WHO will have to define health and disease more precisely, so that the statistics can have a point of reference. The present definition of health accepted by WHO is insufficient and overlooks a number of important factors, A symposium on the "Definition of Health" should be organized by international agencies like WHO.
The Model also suggests that the quality of life has already dropped dramatically. The increase of anxiety, insecurity and chronic diseases in general have compromised that quality despite the advancements in technology over the last twenty years which were supposed to ease working conditions and improve life.
The Model also suggests that the way in which we have tried to fight disease has so far been flawed; the results have been misleading and, in the long run, devastating. The Model tries to point out that the "quick-fix" methods used in curing "non-serious" ailments have driven them deeper into the recesses of the organism and thus created more severe diseases. If this statement holds true, then we must painfully acknowledge that the whole civilized world is on a course toward self-destruction.