Cult medicine requires denialism | Arthritis Information

Share
 

Another one of my favorite blogs...

Denialsim, defined in detail elsewhere, is an interesting phenomenon. It makes use of uniquely human qualities such as our intelligence, our pattern-recognition abilities, and our tendency to over-estimate how well we understand things. In the past, most “science”, including medicine, relied on similar human qualities. It was based on observation mixed with superstition and other non-evidence based ways of understanding the world. Many of these systems were internally consistent, but ultimately failed to accurately describe the real world.

The gradual transition of medical science (the use of evidence is used to evaluate medical practice) has revolutionized medicine. We no longer rely on the glorified shamanism that existed before the mid-20th century.

This also means that medicine has become a true “profession”; it isn’t something you can just “pick up”, hang up a shingle, and practice out of your front room. I’ve taken to calling practices that aren’t evidence-based “cult medicine”. This is because many of the practices have charismatic advocates who encourage followers to dedicate their beliefs and their money to non-mainstream (and ineffective) health practices. Cult medicine is full of folks who have simply decided what they think medicine should be.

Denialists also like to indulge in “should-ism”. AIDS, the WTC attacks, the moon landings are events they have difficulty explaining, so rather than getting educated or asking an expert, they ask themselves. They develop (often) internally consistent explanations of phenomena based on their own interpretations of facts, and their own preconceptions of what “should” be true. Partly because no one believes them, they close ranks, and feel conspired against (although to be fair, that thought pattern may begin before the conspiracy theory).

The patterns seen with denialism and cult medicine are very similar. Whether it’s the CIA-Zionist conspiracy to blow up the WTC towers as causus belli, or the Big Pharma/AMA/FDA conspiracy to suppress the “truth” about vaccines, denialists “deny” reality in favor of their own paranoid, Byzantine ideas.

http://whitecoatunderground.com/2008/03/19/cult-medicine-requires-denialism/
Lynn492008-10-14 03:08:06this is good, relates hereYes, there's also denial here of real medicine. It's odd, since you think people would want as many options as possibleAs for the Big Pharma/AMA/FDA conspiracy to suppress the “truth” - well, I'm firmly in that camp now.  Pity - I'm thinking my own conspiracy theaories would be a LOT more inventive.  But I would like some things explained.  Like JAMA articles and research showing how doctors are influenced by the 'freebies' Pharma gives them.  Or how some companies refuse to donate free meds for study because is interferes with their business model?  Or how the FDA has been in trouble quite a few times for not requiring more studies, or even follow up studies, on meds that were eventually pulled because they were killing us?  I mean, it's common knowledge that Pharma fees are the basis for the FDA's budget.  Could killing a drug in late stage trials cut their own budget? 
Yes,in the case of "conspiracy theorists" when it's actually been exposed that pharmaceutical companies suppress damaging information, who are the deniers? Those who accept the reality that these companies are not diclosing the full truth, or those that still refuse to believe that they aren't?Gimpy-a-gogo2008-10-14 10:03:38Snow -
 
Faith is a potent form of healing.  The placebo effect has been well studied.  There are some mainsteam studies out there with 'really good placebos'.  LOL
 
I guess it's just interesting to me that the pot is calling the kettle black.  If somebody heals, does it matter?  When does science back ancedotal evidence?  How about when they get a piece of the pie. 
 
Did you read my Ethnobotanist v biopirates thread (now on page 3)?  Same idea.
 
Pip
Lynn-
 
Denial is present in many situations, alcoholism, drug abuse, even death, anything people don't want to acknowledge.
[QUOTE=Lynn49]

Another one of my favorite blogs...

Maybe denialsim is simulated denial? Or the name of one of his favourite Sim characters?Here is the original. I wonder how the author has had time to become an expert in medicine, AIDS, the moon landing, the World Trade Centre attacks,vaccines, the AMA and FDA, the psychology of Denialsim, and still have time to maintain a blog. Mind boggling.

Perhaps he became an expert by asking himself.
Copyright ArthritisInsight.com