A Foreword by Dr.
Leonard G. Horowitz
Author of Emerging Viruses: AIDS & Ebola—Nature, Accident or
Intentional?
It should be noted, while reading the
following excellent article by Dr. Joseph Mercola, that the same
medical-pharmaceutical industrialists that largely control health care
in the U.S. and abroad, also control the international blood banking
industry. Officials who represent both industries, as well as U.S.
Government regulatory agencies given oversight responsibilities for
these concerns, are clearly guilty of “iatrogenocide”—a new word, I
coined with the publication of Death in the Air: Globalism, Terrorism
and Toxic Warfare (1-888-508-4787; or visit
www.deathintheair.com), combining two very related words: 1)
iatrogenesis, meaning
physician induced illness, and 2) genocide, reflecting the mass killing
of people for economic, political, and/or ideological reasons. It should
be known that the Rockefeller family, primary initiators of global
“population control,” conducted under the auspices of “family planning”
and “maternal and child health,” largely directs and controls the
research, developments, and institutions dedicated to serving these
fields of “health” and depopulation.
By Dr. Joseph Mercola
This article in the Journal of the
American Medical Association (JAMA) is the best article I have ever seen
written in the published literature documenting the tragedy of the
traditional medical paradigm.
IThis information is a followup of
the
Institute of Medicine report which hit the papers in December of
last year, but the data was hard to reference as it was not in
peer-reviewed journal. Now it is published in JAMA which is the most
widely circulated medical periodical in the world.
The author is Dr. Barbara Starfield
of the Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health and she
desribes how the US health care system may contribute to poor health.
ALL THESE ARE DEATHS PER YEAR:
- 12,000
-----unnecessary surgery
8
- 7,000
-----medication errors in hospitals
9
- 20,000
----other errors in hospitals
10
- 80,000
----infections in hospitals
10
-
106,000 ---non-error, negative effects of drugs
2
These total to
250,000 deaths per year from
iatrogenic causes!!
What does the word iatrogenic mean?
This term is defined as induced in a patient by a physician's activity,
manner, or therapy. Used especially of a complication of treatment.
Dr. Starfield offers several
warnings in interpreting these numbers:
- First, most of
the data are derived from studies in hospitalized patients.
- Second, these
estimates are for deaths only and do not include negative effects that
are associated with disability or discomfort.
- Third, the
estimates of death due to error are lower than those in the IOM
report.1
If the higher estimates are used,
the deaths due to iatrogenic causes would range from 230,000 to 284,000.
In any case, 225,000 deaths per year constitutes the third leading cause
of death in the United States, after deaths from heart disease and
cancer. Even if these figures are overestimated, there is a wide margin
between these numbers of deaths and the next leading cause of death (cerebrovascular
disease).
Another analysis
11 concluded that between 4% and 18% of consecutive patients
experience negative effects in outpatient settings,with:
- 116 million
extra physician visits
- 77 million
extra prescriptions
- 17 million
emergency department visits
- 8 million
hospitalizations
- 3 million
long-term admissions
- 199,000
additional deaths
- $77 billion in
extra costs
The high cost of the health care
system is considered to be a deficit, but seems to be tolerated under
the assumption that better health results from more expensive care.
However, evidence from a few studies
indicates that as many as 20% to 30% of patients receive inappropriate
care.
An estimated 44,000 to 98,000 among
them die each year as a result of medical errors.2
This might be tolerated if it
resulted in better health, but does it? Of 13 countries in a recent
comparison,3,4
the United States ranks an average of 12th (second from the bottom) for
16 available health indicators. More specifically, the ranking of the US
on several indicators was:
- 13th (last) for
low-birth-weight percentages
- 13th for
neonatal mortality and infant mortality overall
14
- 11th for
postneonatal mortality
- 13th for years
of potential life lost (excluding external causes)
- 11th for life
expectancy at 1 year for females, 12th for males
- 10th for life
expectancy at 15 years for females, 12th for males
- 10th for life
expectancy at 40 years for females, 9th for males
- 7th for life
expectancy at 65 years for females, 7th for males
- 3rd for life
expectancy at 80 years for females, 3rd for males
- 10th for
age-adjusted mortality
The poor performance of the US was
recently confirmed by a World Health Organization study, which used
different data and ranked the United States as 15th among 25
industrialized countries.
There is a perception that the
American public "behaves badly" by smoking, drinking, and perpetrating
violence." However the data does not support this assertion.
·
The proportion of females
who smoke ranges from 14% in Japan to 41% in Denmark; in the United
States, it is 24% (fifth best). For males, the range is from 26% in
Sweden to 61% in Japan; it is 28% in the United States (third best).
·
The US ranks fifth best
for alcoholic beverage consumption.
- The US has
relatively low consumption of animal fats (fifth lowest in men aged
55-64 years in 20 industrialized countries) and the third lowest mean
cholesterol concentrations among men aged 50 to 70 years among 13
industrialized countries.
These estimates of death due to
error are lower than those in a recent Institutes of Medicine report,
and if the higher estimates are used, the deaths due to iatrogenic
causes would range from 230,000 to 284,000.
Even at the lower estimate of
225,000 deaths per year, this constitutes the third leading cause of
death in the US, following heart disease and cancer.
Lack of technology is certainly not
a contributing factor to the US's low ranking.
- Among 29
countries, the United States is second only to Japan in the
availability of magnetic resonance imaging units and computed
tomography scanners per million population. 17
- Japan, however,
ranks highest on health, whereas the US ranks among the lowest.
- It is possible
that the high use of technology in Japan is limited to diagnostic
technology not matched by high rates of treatment, whereas in the US,
high use of diagnostic technology may be linked to more treatment.
- Supporting this
possibility are data showing that the number of employees per bed
(full-time equivalents) in the United States is highest among the
countries ranked, whereas they are very low in Japan, far lower than
can be accounted for by the common practice of having family members
rather than hospital staff provide the amenities of hospital care.
Journal American
Medical Association Vol 284 July 26, 2000
COMMENT: Folks, this is what they
call a "Landmark Article". Only several ones like this are published
every year. One of the major reasons it is so huge as that it is
published in JAMA which is the largest and one of the most respected
medical journals in the entire world. I did find it most curious that
the best wire service in the world, Reuter's, did not pick up this
article. I have no idea why they let it slip by.
I would encourage you to bookmark
this article and review it several times so you can use the statistics
to counter the arguments of your friends and relatives who are so
enthralled with the traditional medical paradigm. These statistics prove
very clearly that the system is just not working. It is broken and is in
desperate need of repair.
I was previously fond of saying
that drugs are the fourth leading cause of death in this country.
However, this article makes it quite clear that the more powerful number
is that doctors are the third leading cause of death in this country
killing nearly a quarter million people a year. The only more common
causes are cancer and heart disease. This statistic is likely to be
seriously underestimated as much of the coding only describes the cause
of organ failure and does not address iatrogenic causes at all.
Japan seems to have benefited
from recognizing that technology is wonderful, but just because you
diagnose something with it, one should not be committed to undergoing
treatment in the traditional paradigm. Their health statistics reflect
this aspect of their philosophy as much of their treatment is not
treatment at all, but loving care rendered in the home.
Care, not treatment, is the
answer. Drugs, surgery and hospitals are rarely the answer to chronic
health problems. Facilitating the God-given healing capacity that all of
us have is the key. Improving the
diet, exercise, and lifestyle are basic. Effective interventions for
the underlying emotional and spiritual wounding behind most chronic
illness are also important clues to maximizing health and reducing
disease.
Related Articles:
Medical Mistakes Kill 100,000 per year
US
Health Care System Most Expensive in the World
Drug Induced Disorders
Author/Article Information
Author Affiliation: Department of
Health Policy and Management, Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public
Health, Baltimore, Md. Corresponding Author and Reprints: Barbara
Starfield, MD, MPH, Department of Health Policy and Management, Johns
Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health, 624 N Broadway, Room 452,
Baltimore, MD 21205-1996 (e-mail: bstarfie).
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Dr, Joseph Mercola directs the Optimal Wellness
Center. His weekly newsletter in which this was published is available
from: http://www.mercola.com.