Books

A New Model For Health And Disease – Page 194

they should subsidize health practitioners to gain the appropriate knowledge and only partly subsidize the patient. The reason is that health practitioners are the main advocates and seekers of the best therapeutic knowledge and are eyewitness to the systems which really benefit patients; thus, they in their turn are qualified to seek out the best possible schools and teachers because they and their patients will both benefit from this knowledge. Governments and insurance companies should pool their efforts in producing good and efficient health practitioners, rather than paying the huge costs of medical treatment which more often than not create more sickness than health. At the present time, governments and responsible agencies alike are caught in a vicious cycle because of tremendous costs and unforeseen future consequences for the health of the general public. A worldwide informational campaign should be started so people have the facts about allopathic medicine and its consequences. This will help relieve them of their naive notions of the well-advertised "miracle drugs" and will help them to think for themselves and judge accordingly.
In my estimation, another concept which has destroyed allopathic medicine is the idea that an institution, a medical school, can give exclusive right to practice medicine without teaching the students the necessary lessons of "humanism."
I say this because the factors such as ability, intention, sacrifice and compassion needed to be a healer have been completely ignored. The main priority taken into consideration is whether the student has answered certain technical questions correctly in the examination. Afterwards, the state medical licensing agency enters the picture and bestows the lucky individual with the "license to practice medicine"— in other words, with the exclusive, unconditional right to deal with people’s health. But that is not all; they also manage to pass laws which punish anyone practicing an alternative method of therapy and who do not belong to their associations.
It has also been silently agreed that medical doctors will give account of their actions only to the medical association to which they belong.
I believe it is difficult for people outside the medical establishment to realize the intricacies and the extreme control inherent in such situations. Finally, because of the relegation of the patient to so "unfair" and subordinate a position, the idea of