
(Take a look at the link below for some statistics of our health care system.)
http://www.webdc.com/pdfs/deathbymedicine.pdf
There is a concerning problem in the "health care" system. This problem is frightening to those of us who are involved in the delivery of health care. The problem is that as much as some people like to attack medicine and its shortcomings and dangers, the fact is that medical practice is becoming more and more effective every year. Now some may be wondering how that is a problem. If drugs are becoming more effective, isn't that good? If the side-effects of drugs are being diminished, isn't that beneficial? If surgical procedures are more routine today than they were 10-15 years ago, isn't that wonderful? Heart by-pass was a serious life-threatening procedure in 1980. Today it is almost as routine as an appendectomy. If scientific medicine is able to develop new drugs that can relieve people's symptoms for longer and longer periods of time, isn't that progress? Shouldn't we be thankful? Well, in a sense it is helpful, but not in the long run.
If all we are doing is relieving people's symptoms but not making them any healthier, are we really making a difference? To feel more comfortable until you die may be a benefit to some but not for the many who are still years from their deaths. Let's not mistake comfortable deaths with the full expression of life and health. If we have virtually wiped out smallpox and developed a new vaccine for chicken pox but AIDS is growing every year, have we really made any progress? A recent study has shown that if cancer was completely eliminated today (which is highly unlikely inasmuch as the incidence of the disease is increasing), the average life span would only be increased by less than 1.5 years.
Here is the danger: medical advances may lull us into believing either that we are healthier or that being healthy is not important as long as we are disease-free. Yet, ridding the world of a disease like cancer will only increase the life span at best by 1.5 years and perhaps not that much if other diseases take its place. Medicine's progress is like the individual who cannot seem to live within a budget and is constantly using his credit card until it is "maxed out." Then the credit card company tells him not to worry because his limit has been increased by $2,000. That is the worst thing that could happen to him. It will treat the symptom for a while longer, delaying the inevitable which will be worse, he will have $2,000 more debt! But saddest of all, it will prevent him from addressing the real problem. His lifestyle and budget need to be altered so he can live without running to an ATM or spending money he doesn't have.
Similarly the greatest danger of medicine is that it works. It relieves symptoms, treats disease and makes you feel better to the point that you think you are better. Unfortunately, it has little to do with health. Mastering bypass surgery will not encourage us to live healthier lives which may lead to healthier hearts and thus prevent the very need for surgery. Health is the real need. People need to know that true health comes from within. The cure is not outside of you but rather inside. It consists of doing those things necessary to be healthy including eating nutrient dense foods, getting sufficient rest, moving and exercising, avoiding pollutants and dealing with mental and emotional stress positively. Just as importantly, it includes visiting the upper cervical doctor on a regular basis so that nerve interference or damage in the spine is corrected and the body's self-healing, self-regulating principle, the innate intelligence, is free to maintain your health. When this happens there is no limit to the quality of life and the benefits of all the other things you do to be healthy. Insanity is doing the same thing over and over and over again and expecting a different result. Something must change. That change begins with you.
*some information printed with permission from F-A-C-E.com*
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