- cross-posted to:
- britishcolumbia@lemmy.ca
- Evkob ( @Evkob@lemmy.ca ) 13•1 year ago
I feel like Canadians are weirdly receptive to homeopathic/naturopathic bullshit.
- oneofthemladygoats ( @oneofthemladygoats@lemmy.ca ) 14•1 year ago
I think BC and QC have concetrated communities of anti-science individuals, which makes the ignorance seem more prevalent than it actually is. Then again, the number of people I know who recognize naturopathy is bullshit but then routinely see a chiropractor is WAY too high
- Erk ( @Erk@cdda.social ) 6•1 year ago
Frankly as a doc myself, I’d sort of rather my patients see a naturopath if they have to choose one. I’m not a fan of either but at least I know the local naturopaths will provide a nice listening ear, while the chiropractors just seem to do everything they can to actively hurt people.
- BloodForTheBloodGod ( @BloodForTheBloodGod@lemmy.ca ) English2•1 year ago
My regular doctor refused to engage with research-based approaches to long-term health that cure underlying disease. Referred me to a naturopath instead. I’m talking about a study supporting targeted anti- and probiotics as a possible cure for a chronic condition.
Most doctors seem to busy to even consider preventative medicine.
- Erk ( @Erk@cdda.social ) English3•1 year ago
Depending on the thing you’re discussing, it sounds like your doctor referred you to a person who they felt would be appropriate for the request you had, so in general I’d say that’s kind of a harsh summary. We can’t be trained in all the things at all the times.
In the case of antibiotics and probiotics for chronic conditions in particular, there is - and I cannot understate this - an unbelievable amount of woo and misinformation around that topic. That isn’t to say your specific concern falls in there, but I can understand why some docs feel overwhelmed with it. We get flooded with an incredible amount of pseudoscience in that specific domain, and it takes a huge amount of work to sort through what’s real and what isn’t.
- BloodForTheBloodGod ( @BloodForTheBloodGod@lemmy.ca ) English3•1 year ago
Yeah, that’s fair. My difficulty is feeling like chronic conditions are mostly ignored. In this particular case, I had a study that recommended a very specific course of action for my specific conditions, which didn’t seem particularly woo to my eyes.
But yeah, every doctor should instead be 3 doctors, plus a dietician, pharmacist, and other health care providers. All working for holistic health of the patients.
The fact that this isn’t happening isn’t the fault of the doctors, but a lack of societal care for health.
- Erk ( @Erk@cdda.social ) English2•1 year ago
I’ll have to be vague to avoid too much specific info, but I have worked in both contexts where I have a full team at my disposal and where I’m just a lone doctor, and I agree wholeheartedly we need the team. Best if it’s under the same roof. It isn’t necessary for every patient but for the people who need it it makes a huge difference.
If it helps, many provinces have been trying to push something like that for a long time, but there are an entire host of problems that go along with getting it rolling. BC’s interprofessional team systems are sort of that, but they’re weak.
- BloodForTheBloodGod ( @BloodForTheBloodGod@lemmy.ca ) English1•1 year ago
I would imagine funding and public support is among the biggest problems. Any other massive ones you see?
- HikingVet ( @HikingVet@lemmy.sdf.org ) 4•1 year ago
NS has a concerning number of them.
- Evkob ( @Evkob@lemmy.ca ) 2•1 year ago
It’s pretty popular in NB as well, which shouldn’t be surprising considering half the province is functionally illiterate.
- scorpionix ( @scorpionix@feddit.de ) 5•1 year ago
FMT in and of itself is proven. But firstly trying to treat Autism with it and secondly administering it as capsule seems highly questionable.
- Evkob ( @Evkob@lemmy.ca ) 13•1 year ago
Fecal transplants being an actual medical procedure is pretty entirely irrelevant to the story, though.
If some quack spouted “Reject all food, the only thing one’s body must imbibe is water!” I wouldn’t respond with “Hydration in and of itself is proven.”
- scorpionix ( @scorpionix@feddit.de ) 5•1 year ago
Well, your comment sounded to me as if you argued that FMT was pseudoscience.