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A New Model For Health And Disease – Page 24

Medicine, as practiced today, is based more on faith than knowledge, as Mendelsohn aptly states in his book Confessions of a Medical Heretic: "You can easily test modern medical religion…by simply asking your doctor ‘why?’…Just ask why enough times and sooner or later you’ll reach the Chasm of Faith. Your doctor will retreat into the conditioned response that you have no way of… understanding all the wonders he has at his command. Just trust ‘him’!" 3
Other authors who were sensitive enough to perceive the actual situation made similar remarks….
— "…the patient is… seen as a passive recipient of the intervention,
preferably without interference or resistance, since the doctor
knows best. (Blum, 1960; Hayes-Bautista and Harveston, 1977)*
— "A patient is seen as a disabled mechanism, and the job of the clinic
or hospital is to ‘classify, confine and immobilize’ the patient."5
In reality, what established medicine was offering as a "rationale" for its questionable practices were certain gross models obviously conceived a posteriori in order to justify the empirical practices applied in everyday therapeutics. These models were represented as the acme of scientific knowledge.
Following is a short summary of the models which medicine has so far employed.
Since the eighteenth century a mechanistic way of thinking has prevailed in the scientific method which has led to a mechanical approach to the whole problem of health and disease. The body, separated from the rest of the organism, was considered a machine, and as a consequence of such a concept, any imbalance in the machine was considered the effect of a singular causative agent; e.g. a single type of bacterium causing an infectious disease. This theory was called the Koch model.6
When this model appeared to be rather superficial, medical scientists formulated a new theory that tended to explain disease as the result of a defect in cellular and molecular functioning. This defect was believed to be caused by an external agent or by a fault in the intrinsic machinery of the cell or in the structure of the molecule. This theory was known as the functional model and was attributed to Virchow.6 7
Later, a "diagnostic model" of disease was developed. This model maintained that disease was a totality of symptoms, and