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Chris Bray's avatar

My direct personal experience is that the gaslighting often ropes in the patient in a kind of Stockholm Syndrome:

Me: You got much sicker right after [name of medical intervention].

Response: Oh, right, where did YOU go to medical school?

That white coat means wisdom, and the way your body is screaming at you must be a lie. I've seen this several times, now, up close and personal, in ways that seemed shockingly obvious. I'm always particularly fascinated by the maneuver of "we don't know what's causing it, but here's the list of medications we're adding to treat it." Sounds good, doctor.

There's just a portion of the population that won't get off the ride, no matter where it takes them. "These are the experts, Chris."

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Mrs S's avatar

I gave up my academic career and trained to be a medical herbalist mostly because i didn't want anyone i loved to have to be treated by the NHS.

Medical herbalists are trained to take a full case history and perform a physical examination (a first appointment takes 60-90 minutes). We are taught to listen and to get a proper picture of the patient's lifestyle and diet. We build a timeline of when the problems started. We draw up differential and then a working diagnosis. We actually try and figure out the root cause.

Then we give herbal medicines that have been used successfully for millennia and which support the body in healing.

It's a much better model.

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