Trust your doctor
Good Luck
Greed, deception and ignorance driven by the medical and pharmaceutical industry, government agencies and non-profit organizations.

Doctors have little training in alternative health or nutrition. They have also had a lack of encouragement to think for themselves. Just take this pill Mr. Jones, you'll feel better.

When it comes to acting in the best interest of their patients, be it through ignorance or ties to Big Pharma, how can doctors be trusted? 

While the public is slowly becoming increasingly aware of this disturbing reality and its implications, most doctors still remain uninformed or stubbornly indifferent.


In light of this, here are a few idea's that might reduce the chance of your doctor killing you.

 

#1 - Do a little research

We all have the tools today at our finger tips to find out what we need to know about any particular drug. Let's face it. Nine out of ten times a person goes to a doctor today, he or she leaves with a prescription, particularly those in the 60's and older age group.

The third leading cause of death in America today is medical care. In fact a good book to read is titled "Death by medicine" maybe well worth reading.

#2 - Don't assume a drug is OK

Don't assume a drug being prescribed is OK just because you assume it wouldn't be on the market and prescribed by your doctor if it could cause harm. Think about it. Notice all the commercials on television with legal firms offering to get compensation for people that have been harmed or even died from a drug that has often been on the market for many years and finally removed?

FDA approval does not mean a drug is OK anymore than it means the thousands of processed food items on the grocery store today are OK, items that could shorten the life or cause heart disease or cancer in a wild hog.

 

#3 - FDA approval could be meaningless
 
Dont assume that FDA approved drugs are safe. Its astounding to know that research has revealed that around 33 percent of FDA approved drugs have been taken out of the market because they turned out to be seriously harmful to health due to side-effects.

How could anybody put their trust in the FDA when knowing that this approval body is in the pocket of Big Pharma and have a process with an abysmal 33 percent failure rate?

 
 
#4 - Don't accept treatment without researching
 
Remember, doctors could have a number of reasons, particularly ulterior motives, to push their treatment on you or your family members.

Vaccinations are a classic case. Besides the politicized health agenda and the increasing push for mandatory vaccinations which is an abuse of our health freedom, there are other ulterior motives:

The pharmaceutical companies selling the vaccines may offer bonus payments to doctors for reaching target numbers of vaccinated patients.

Now, does that make the doctor anything more than a sales representative for the pharmaceutical company? What about the mounting evidence to support the claims that vaccines are potentially
harmful and have been shown to be ineffective?

#5 - Make sure your research is not biased
 
Discern the differences between biased pharmaceutical companies sponsored sources from other alternative health information.

Dont fall for the Big Pharma sponsored profit-based, biased and untrustworthy journals masquerading as having the definitive viewpoint.
#6 -  Alopathic medicine today
 
Big Pharma cannot have their doctors treating patients with cheap, natural, alternative options. That would undercut their business.

So these alternative approaches have to be ignored,  in spite of their effectiveness and suppressed.

Hence the reason, for example, why doctors know very little about nutrition as a cure for disease, because of a lack of training in the Big Pharma often highly controlled medical schools.


#7 - Have fun
 
Ask your doctor if the drug being prescribed is actually going to CURE your alledged problem, or is it simply going to treat the sympton?
 
You might be shocked at the response.  Above all, ask him what the side effects are.
Actually, he might fire you as a patient.