Medical Testing: Health By The Numbers Doesnt Work


Perhaps one of the most insidious dangers in modern technology is medical testing. Although it would be nice to be able to visit our doctor and get all hooked up with electrodes, inflatable cuffs, probes, needles and catheters and have a read-out telling us exactly how we are working and where there is a problem, that is a myth, not the reality.

Such testing creates false confidence and the illusion for people that they are being wise and practicing "preventive medicine." But prevention is not detecting existing disease. Diagnosis is not to be confused with cause or cure. Not only do patients have these misconceptions, the entire medical industry does as well. Modern medicine is focused on naming diseases and treating symptoms, not preventing disease and addressing causes.

Medical tests (done on yourself or by others) give a false sense of control and knowledge. The better choice is to take every step we can to modify life-style and nutritional habits to actually create health, not simply live life with gusto and have yearly stress tests and mammograms. Waiting for disease (reacting to injury, which disease is) to strike and then taking action is certainly not an intelligent approach.

None of this speaks to the waste in much of the $200+ billion a year that is spent on laboratory and clinical tests. Not only do they drain our economy and not create health, they are often inaccurate and unnecessary. Some 75% of doctors surveyed admitted to performing more tests than necessary. In one study of 25,000 tests, only 20% of them reproduced the same result 90% of the time. In another study, 197 out of 200 were "cured" by simply repeating the same tests. (Wysong, RL. Laboratory self-testing. Wysong Health Letter. March 1992.)

This brings me to a serious danger of laboratory testing: a false positive or false negative. If the test is falsely positive, the emotional trauma from believing you may have a serious disease can be enough to create a disease. Thus a test can make a well person sick. A false negative could send you on your way happily believing that everything is fine and that no life modifications are necessary. Meanwhile, the disease continues to incubate and spread.

Medical tests have inherent dangers like any other medical procedure and should be submitted to only with that understanding. Even entering a hospital or doctor's office poses the risk of exposure to infectious disease (nosocomial infection). A "sterile" needle to draw blood could result in a fatal (albeit rare) systemic infection. Squeezing breasts for a mammogram can activate dormant cancerous tissue and increase the spread of cancerous cells (metastases) by 80%. (Greenburg, DS. NCI blasted for mammography confusion. The Lancet. 345(8942): 129.) Pap smears are performed millions of times a year yet have never been proven to change morbidity or mortality. (McCormick, JS. Cervical smears: a questionable practice? The Lancet. 2: 207-209. 1989.) Ultrasound may influence fetal growth. (Newnham, JP, et al. Effects of frequent ultrasound during pregnancy: a randomized controlled trial. The Lancet. 342(8876): 887-91.) X-rays are always dangerous (carcinogenic) and their effects are cumulative over a lifetime. Vaginal and rectal exams can introduce infection. Cancers penetrated with biopsy needles may increase the spread of cancer to sentinel lymph nodes by as much as 50% over lump excision. It is estimated 1 in 20 liver biopsies result in new tumors. (Evans, GH, et al. Safety of and necessity for needle biopsy of liver tumours. The Lancet. 1: 620. 1987.) Let the buyer (patient) beware.

Health is something you do to yourself, not something others do to you with machines or analysis. Health "by the numbers" of cholesterol, blood pressure, prostate antigens, white cell count and the like is a fantasy. Subscribing to this idea will start you on a slippery slope of medications, medications to treat the side effects of medications, surgeries and other interventions that destroy health, not build it.

This is not to suggest that diagnostic tests are not important for refractory diseases or those to which no reasonable cause can be assigned. But as a "preventive" measure for healthy individuals the benefits of the practice are dubious at best. (See article on medicine as the greatest threat to health by the author.)

The best test of health is to evaluate yourself. If you feel well, leave well enough alone, no medical test should convince you otherwise. The best test is to examine your life-style and nutritional practices against the standard of genetic context. We are adapted to fresh air and water, sunshine, exercise and fresh natural foods. (See CD the master key by the author). If you are not living as you are genetically programmed, do it. By so doing you will not only be preventing, but reversing disease. It's easy, cheap and has passed the "test" of time in being the best medicine ever invented.

Dr. Wysong is a former veterinary clinician and surgeon, college instructor in human anatomy, physiology and the origin of life, inventor of numerous medical, surgical, nutritional, athletic and fitness products and devices, research director for the present company by his name and founder of the philanthropic Wysong Institute. He is author of The Creation-Evolution Controversy now in its eleventh printing, a new two volume set on philosophy for living, several books on nutrition, prevention and health for people and animals and over 15 years of monthly health newsletters. He may be contacted at Wysong@Wysong.net and a free subscription to his e-Health Letter is available at http://www.wysong.net .


MORE RESOURCES:

National Ledger

Are Your Kids in Danger: Cold Medicine Recall Request by Some Doctors
National Ledger, AZ - 12 hours ago
As parents deal with all of the information and counter information about cold medicine and kids we can now toss another request into the mix. ...
Video: Cold Meds Under Fire, Again CBS
Children's Cough Medicine Recall Requested By Physicians Post Chronicle
FDA Mulls Limits on Kids' Cough Medicine WebMD
MarketWatch - CNNMoney.com
all 782 news articles


The Plain Dealer - cleveland.com

Publication in Annals of Internal Medicine Highlights Clinical ...
WELT ONLINE, Germany - 4 hours ago
EXACT Sciences Corporation (NASDAQ: EXAS) today announced the publication in the Annals of Internal Medicine the findings of a National Institutes of ...
Annals of Internal Medicine tip sheet for Oct.7, 2008, issue EurekAlert (press release)
Task force: Colon cancer screenings can stop at 75 The Associated Press
Screening for Colorectal Cancer: US Preventive Services Task Force ... Annals of Internal Medicine
MarketWatch - The Plain Dealer - cleveland.com
all 224 news articles


US Preventive Medicine: Economic Crisis Creates Opportunity in ...
MarketWatch - 9 hours ago
During this downturn, companies generating double or triple digit annualized growth trends, such as US Preventive Medicine, could be regarded as safe havens ...


Academic Medicine Means Business for Ohio: $37.2 Billion Economic ...
MarketWatch - 16 hours ago
Quantifying academic medicine's economic impact in areas ranging from tax revenue to job creation, the report underscores the significant role Ohio's seven ...
UC College of Medicine generates $4.8 billion in economic impact Bizjournals.com
Health network's impact: $4.8 billion Cincinnati.com
Claiborne hospital receives USDA grant Knoxville News Sentinel
Bizjournals.com
all 21 news articles


Washington Post

Nobel medicine prize reopens old AIDS wounds
Reuters South Africa, South Africa - 6 hours ago
By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Editor WASHINGTON, Oct 6 (Reuters) - The decision on Monday to award the Nobel Prize for Medicine to Luc Montagnier and ...
European Researchers Win Nobels for Medicine Washington Post
Three Europeans Win the 2008 Nobel for Medicine New York Times
Noble Medicine Forbes
International Herald Tribune - CNN
all 1,030 news articles


Special Broadcasting Service

Medicine award kicks off Nobel Prize announcements
The Associated Press - 18 hours ago
Only seven women have won the medicine prize since the first Nobel Prizes were handed out in 1901. The last female winner was US researcher Linda Buck in ...
The Nobel Prize TIME
all 232 news articles


The Center for Sleep Medicine receives program reaccreditation
Hattiesburg American, MS - 1 hour ago
The Center for Sleep Medicine at Hattiesburg Clinic recently received program reaccreditation from the American Academy of Sleep Medicine. ...
Hattiesburg Clinic Ophthalmologist receives recertification Hattiesburg American
all 2 news articles


Three Europeans win the 2008 Nobel for medicine
International Herald Tribune, France - 3 minutes ago
By Lawrence K. Altman The Nobel Prize in Medicine was awarded Monday to three European scientists who discovered viruses behind two devastating illnesses, ...


Bolivia tries to bolster public health with traditional medicine
Scientific American - 2 hours ago
The US has a decidedly ambivalent relationship with alternative medicine, though large numbers of Americans routinely ingest nostrums from ginkgo to garlic. ...


Hospital ushers in new sports medicine program
Effingham Herald, GA - 4 hours ago
Effingham Hospital sponsored Effingham Hospital Sports Medicine Night at Rebel Field on Sept. 26, just before the football game between South Effingham High ...

Medicine - Google News

home | site map
© 2006