Guest guest Posted April 7, 2004 Report Share Posted April 7, 2004 " WDDTY e-News " WDDTY e-News Service - 01 April 2004 Fri, 2 Apr 2004 15:18:47 +0100 WHAT DOCTORS DON’T TELL YOU - E-NEWS BROADCAST No. 76 - 01 Apr 2004 Please feel free to email this broadcast to any friends you feel would appreciate receiving it. THE SILENT EPIDEMIC: It may kill up to one in five, and yet nobody knows its name There's an epidemic that is starting to take hold in many Western countries. It already claims the lives of 1800 people in the UK every year, but it will be another 11 years before it reaches its peak when up to one in five lives may be at risk. Yet it's a disease that nobody has heard of, nobody has written about, and medicine seems to be at a loss as to how best to treat it. It is mesothelioma, a cancer of the lungs and chest that is a reaction to exposure to asbestos. Asbestos is now a banned material, but it was commonly used as an insulator, in filters and cements, and in boards until the 1980s. Those most at risk are men who worked with it, so carpenters and joiners are especially susceptible. But there have already been cases of wives and daughters, who were exposed to workmen's overalls at home, dying from the disease. Mesothelioma is a very slow-acting cancer, and can take up to 25 years to develop. The epidemic is expected to occur in the UK, the rest of Europe and Australia, where asbestos-usage has been particularly high. It is thought that the disease may have already peaked in the USA as health officials there were quicker to act in banning the material. Symptoms can include chest pain and breathlessness, but sometimes there are no indications of the disease. Treatment is limited, and surgery to remove the tumours has occurred in just 20 patients in the past five years in the UK. Another option is radiotherapy, but the best therapy is not known because there has not been any research up to now into the disease and treatment. Presumably people who worked in buildings with asbestos insulation will not develop the cancer. If they do, a tragedy may become a national catastrophe, and one that was avoidable if our public health 'watchdogs' had the same commitment to our well-being as their American counterparts. (Source: British Medical Journal, 2004; 328: 237-8). * To find out about the latest therapies and discoveries in treating cancer, you need to be at the next WDDTY conference, The Cancer Battleplan. Some of the world's leading exponents will be talking, including Bill Wolcott, pioneer of metabolic typing. The conference will be held in London on June 19 and 20. To find out more, : http://www.wddty.co.uk/conference_about.asp VETS AND VACCINES: The boosters are unnecessary, they admit A group of vets in the UK have announced that booster jabs for your pet are unethical and unnecessary. Several have said that the boosters have also caused a range of illnesses. Jabs are far more powerful than the pharmaceutical companies admit, say the vets, and their protection lasts far longer than just a year. * To find out the truth about veterinary and pharmaceutical care and your pet, you must read the WDDTY report What Vets Don't Tell You. It tells you everything you need to know about caring for your cat or dog safely and responsibly. To order your copy of this 'must-read' report, : http://www.wddty.co.uk/shop/details.asp?product=389 TAINTED RESEARCH: What's good for Wakefield is good for the rest, too Our thoughts have turned to Dr Andrew Wakefield, whose research findings of a possible link between the MMR vaccine and autism have been discredited. As you may recall, a Sunday Times journalist discovered that a few of the 12 children in Wakefield's study programme were also taking part in a different study being funded by the Legal Aid Board. The consequence of all this, according to the journalist who was acting as judge and jury, was that Wakefield's conclusions were tainted, and suspect. So why have we started thinking about Dr Wakefield again? Well, we happened on a new study that found that 40 per cent of all studies published in two medical journals in 2001 had conflicts of interest. They were either directly funded by the drug company whose drug was being tested, or some of the researchers were in the employ of the drug company concerned. This would seem to be a clearer case of discredited research than anything undertaken by Dr Wakefield. But have these studies been similarly dismissed? Perhaps we just missed it. (Source: Journal of Internal Medicine, 2004; 19: 1). NOW WASH YOUR HANDS: Our children may do it, but our doctors won't Possibly the greatest breakthrough in hospital care was the novel idea that doctors should wash their hands after seeing a patient. It was an observation first made in the 1850s, and there was a sudden and dramatic improvement in patient recovery. Patients will not be delighted to hear that it remains a rare event. The vast majority of doctors still do not wash up, but instead spread germs to the next patient on their rounds. In an attempt to encourage doctors to visit the little boys' room, the Mayo Clinic is recommending a super alcohol-based hand rub as a great way to keep down those nasty germs. But if the average doc shirks away from good old soap and water, it's unlikely he's going to run for the new hand wash. (Source: Mayo Clinic Proceedings, 2004; 79: 109-16). FOLIC ACID: More good news (we really should be buying shares) Hard on the heels of the article last time about the benefits of a diet rich in B vitamins comes more good news. Researchers have discovered that men who consume large quantities of folic acid are far less likely to suffer a stroke. A similar result was found in men who had a high intake of B12. Folic acid, part of the B family, is naturally found in fruits and vegetables. The US government recently advised all manufacturers to fortify grain products with folic acid, although, as we reported last time, scientists are concerned about long-term health hazards with synthetic folic acid. The latest study merely repeats findings of earlier trials, which confirmed that folic acid could reduce levels of homocysteine, now recognized as a major cause of heart problems. (Source: Stroke, 2004; 35: 169-174). READERS' CORNER Drugs and the elderly: Most drugs are prescribed to the elderly, and yet older people are rarely involved in pre-licensing trials, as we reported last time. But one correspondent heard a radio advertisement the other day from a drug company that appealed for elderly people to participate in a drug trial. Although we didn't hear the advert, there is a world of difference between a pre-licensing trial and a post-marketing one. In the latter case, people for whom the drug is intended clearly get involved, although the drug company is under no obligation to publish the results. Informed consent: Our piece last week about the guidelines of the General Medical Council for informed consent prompted a reply from one complementary practitioner. To her mind, informed consent should mean only that the patient understands the nature and purpose of the proposed treatment, and has been informed of every known side effect. She never recommends any alternative practitioner to obtain 'informed consent' as it could lead to a malpractice claim. Instead, 'valid' or 'effective' consent should be sufficient. Informed consent, as we understand it, involves the practitioner making the patient aware of any and every treatment, proven or otherwise. Take, for example, the use of chemotherapy. It has a very low success rate, and yet the effects on quality of life can be enormous. This means that the patient could suffer unnecessarily when there was a more benign option also available, which was just as effective, but about which he or she was unaware. * To search the WDDTY database - where every word from the last 14 years of research can be found – click on http://www.wddty.co.uk/search/infodatabase.asp Listen to Lynne On the radio: Hear Lynne McTaggart on Passion the new DAB Digital Radio Station focusing on your health and your environment - http://www.wddty.co.uk/passion_main.asp On demand: Select and listen to any of Lynne's archived broadcasts on Passion, there's a new one each week - http://www.wddty.co.uk/passion_archive.asp View missed/lost e-News broadcasts: View our e-News broadcast archives, follow this link - http://www.wddty.co.uk/archive.asp Help us spread the word If you can think of a friend or acquaintance who would like a FREE copy of What Doctors Don't Tell You, please forward their name and address to: info. Please forward this e-news on to anyone you feel may be interested,they can free by clicking on the following this link: http://www.wddty.co.uk/e-news.asp. Thank you. ============================================================= Small Business $15K Web Design Giveaway - Enter today Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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