bkkguy wrote:yes but he said this a few weeks before he really understood infectious diseases and genetic pre-disposition and a few other minor issues!
how many doctors still treat AIDS, diabetes, or most other diseases based on a knowledge of the four humors?
bkkguy
Have you never heard of "an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure?"
Get real. If I break my leg, I'm not going to treat it with chicken soup!
thaiworthy wrote:Get real. If I break my leg, I'm not going to treat it with chicken soup!
so when christianpfc says "I don't take any medicine ... with normal healthy food you don't need anything else" and you reply "This is absolutely correct" perhaps what you really mean is "sometimes" or "usually" rather than "absolutely"?
forgive me if I am not "real" enough for you - I am just a simple native English speaker trying to understand other people's usage of the language
bkkguy wrote: . . . perhaps what you really mean is "sometimes" or "usually" rather than "absolutely"?
Nonsense. Merely hyperbole.
bkkguy wrote:forgive me if I am not "real" enough for you - I am just a simple native English speaker trying to understand other people's usage of the language
You're forgiven.
The doctor of the future will no longer treat the human frame with drugs, but rather will cure and prevent disease with nutrition.
--Thomas Edison.
thaiworthy wrote:
The doctor of the future will no longer treat the human frame with drugs, but rather will cure and prevent disease with nutrition.
--Thomas Edison.
US doctors get very little in the way of nutrition education in med school. That's why, if needed, they send you to a nutritionist.
thaiworthy wrote:
The doctor of the future will no longer treat the human frame with drugs, but rather will cure and prevent disease with nutrition.
--Thomas Edison.
That is what Steve Jobs believed until it was too late for effective treatment.
diseases that can easily be cured (like my last diarrhoea, from taking antibiotics to a significant improvement only 12 hours, efficient and cheap),
diseases that are difficult to cure (or the cure does not really help the patient, but is a great way for pharmaceutical companies to make money, like cancer and HIV - uncurable at the moment, but expensive medicine is necessary to delay the outbreak of AIDS),
ailments due to lifestyle choices, that can partially be cured by medicine (e.g. problems due to drinking, smoking, unhealthy food, lack of exercise; it would be best to give up the unhealthy lifestyle, but people prefer to take medicine to partially cure the effects)