Fighting Quackery


I’m not popular with many cancer patients, particularly those who love their alternative practitioners. Many of us seem to want to believe in voodoo and witchcraft. We will happily throw away hard-earned cash, swallow buckets of pills and submit ourselves to weird and fanciful ceremonies – just because our naturopath, homeopath, chiropractor, intuitive healer or whoever, says so.

As a cancer survivor, I saw this first-hand. As a scientist, I decided to do something about it. This month I attended an investiture to receive an Order of Australia Medal for “service to community health”, which makes my decade of quack-busting ‘officially’ worthwhile.

Naturopaths, trained in universities, are caring people, capable of giving sensible lifestyle advice. But that’s where it ends. Attending an Australian university is, regrettably, no longer a guarantee that what is learnt has any basis in science. More than one-third of our universities offer ‘non-science’ (= nonsense) courses without any credible evidence to back their claims: homeopathy, acupuncture, craniosacral therapy, ‘energy medicine‘– the list goes on.

When naturopaths graduate, as unregistered and unregulated practitioners, things go pear-shaped.

Many use new-fangled hi-tech devices: VEGA & QXCI (diagnosing your allergies?), MSAS-Pro & Avatar (assessing your ‘meridian stress’?), Bioptron light therapy (treating you on the colours of your chakras?) – there is no end to their imagination. These devices can be accepted onto the Australian Register of Therapeutic Goods (ARTG) with no requirement for “proof of efficacy”, but with only a “safety certificate”. With no effective mechanism for removing them, it remains a free-for-all. If there were any evidence for their fantastical claims , we would be re-writing all our books on science, not only in Medicine, but in Physics, Chemistry, Engineering – you name it!

Using these devices, practitioners increase their income by hundreds of thousands of dollars annually, in Private Health Insurance-rebated consultations*, repeat appointments, and of course, all the ‘natural’ pills, potions and pads you stagger out with.

Alternative practitioners might seem like another option, but, apart from a friendly smile and reassuring words, what they offer is mostly a waste of time and money.

Going ‘undercover’ for current affair programs, I’ve watched terminally ill cancer patients being infused with bleach, have been sold ‘cancer cures’, been told not to have chemo and surgery, been assured that my cancer is cured and that it will never return – all for considerable sums of money.

While some practitioners have been exposed, a new one is probably setting up shop around the corner and could be looking for you. And, if you are a cancer patient, because you are worried, and fearful of dying, you may be tempted to ‘try anything’. “Anything must be better than nothing!”

How sadly wrong that is. How pathetic are those practitioners who, knowing that you have a possibly fatal illness, take your money – giving you nothing in return, except, perhaps, some false hope!

*The exception being the Doctors Health Fund!

 


2 responses to “Fighting Quackery”

  1. You BELIEVE what you want, Ms Smartypants, but you haven’t disproven that the above have no effect and you haven’t told us how cancer works. It’s quite basic, really. Why don’t you put your intellect and skepticism to better use and instead of pandering to the establishment with your glib rhetoric, do some research. A good start would be the following websites. http://www.cancertutor.com
    http://www.lowdosenaltrexone.org/
    http://www.doctoryourself.com/riordan1.html
    http://www.health-science-spirit.com/no-one.htm
    http://www.greenmedinfo.com/disease/cancers-all
    http://www.doctorsaredangerous.com
    http://www.tbyil.com/cancer.htm

    P.S. And please get over your smug “I’m-a-skeptic-so-I-know-it-all” attitude. It does not become you (and you might ACTUALLY help people in need).

    P.P.s. The CAPTCHA box below is idiotic – the image has numbers, not words. Very indicative of this site’s bona fides. Oh and the “Preview comment” button does not work (ditto!)

  2. Yes, university has been undermined by many courses, and certainly their are chalratins taking advantage of the vulnerable already dealling with a mongrel of a disease, some terribly. A Current Affair is no pedigree though.

    I have seen quite a few pharmacists touting magic cures and the vitamin and herb aisles prove that expensive urine is a big money maker for pharmacies.

    However, caring and treating cancer patients is about holistic care, not just surgery, not weeks of radiotherapy or cytotoxics.
    The Cancer Council has a document for patients on complimentary therapies amd cancer treatment- puts a lot in perspective and discusses evidence. People cancer journey is what works for them, complimentary therapies are there for supporting the mainstream interventions, not replacing them. If it helps someone through a horrible journey, necuase traditional interventionist are great with the scalpel or filling out a prescription, but atrocious at ‘well being’ concerns.

    Exposing quackery is one thing. Punishing everyone else just becuase of your own cancer journey isn’t.

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