She had a fourteen hour flight to Australia, explained
a woman with a thick French accent. Unfortunately, she had thrown her back out
again. Would I come and give something to relax her muscles for that long
journey?
I don’t know any medicine that does that, but she was
certain that, in the past, her French doctor had prescribed something that did
the trick.
She was already taking the usual pain remedies, so
there was no point in a housecall. The woman agreed, but she was clearly
disappointed. I know she wondered if I was truly on the ball.
It’s a popular medical belief (remember reader: all
popular medical beliefs are wrong) that if you are sick, the doctor will do his
best. But if you absolutely must feel well – you have a vacation, important
business, a wedding – a smart physician will make a special effort and come up
with something even better.
As a hotel doctor, I deal with this yearning all the
time. Since doctors are tenderhearted, it’s tempting to prescribe a placebo if
no useful medicine exists. Placebos work although not as dramatically as
enthusiasts claim.
The problem is that they’re not available. Decades
ago, drug companies sold pills labeled “placebo,” but, perhaps for medicolegal
reasons, they stopped. The result is that when a doctor decides you need a
placebo, he prescribes a real medicine in the full knowledge that he’s doing
something wrong. As I’ve written repeatedly, the advantage of alternative,
folk, holistic, and herbal healing is that their medicines are a hundred
percent safe. Medicines from real doctors have side-effects, so we’re not
supposed to prescribe them unless they’ll help.
Life is easier for doctors who ignore this, so many
do.
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