Drug companies exist and operate to make a profit not to supply drugs that cure illness.
Alternative Therapy people exist and operate for personal gain not to supply therapy's that cure illness.
Patch said:I never said that.
No but your contributing to those ''VAST (VULGAR) amounts of money'' :wink:
I wouldn't if I had to pay for 'em myself, though.
I'm sure you would if it meant life or death.
God bless the NHS, eh?
Patch said:VAST (VULGAR) amounts of money
Natural stuff is cheap, and when it's effective
All I'm asking is that natural or alternative therapy's should be as rigorously tested for safety and effectiveness as anything else.
Patch said:That would be great. But the cost of the testing is dis-proportionately high in relation to the amount of revenue the "success" of the test would generate for natural remedies.
alaska said:I'm on analogue insulins but I totally get where Patch is coming from.
There is quite a lot of 'business' that gets in the way of potentially better solutions being developed.
You can't put a medical product to market these days without having made some attempt to demonstrate short/medium term safety.
(As a result, you get drugs like Avandia coming through as the new saviour of diabetes and then when the medium term consequences start to kick in, the drug gets pulled.)
Funding this research costs millions of pounds, to the extent whereby commonly only large pharmaceutical companies have the money to fund the research.
..and a pharma company will likely not invest its money in a project that will reduce its long term profits.
I wouldn't personally be totally gobsmacked if I found out that some pharma companies bought out smaller companies to ensure their drug/vaccine fails.
On the synthetic drug / natural drug issue. Most synthetic drugs have their origins in a natural product anyway.
al_leister said:Marketing and mammon do not mix well with medicine.
...
alaska said:On the synthetic drug / natural drug issue. Most synthetic drugs have their origins in a natural product anyway.
One problem seems to be that people keep trying to find the elixir by trying to isolate the 'one magic ingredient' from nature -but- nature generally doesn't work in this way.
Take insulin. We refined it into pure insulin but, in doing so, missed out the smaller quantities of c-peptide and amylin (and presumably other small molecules) which I believe are needed to help the body know what's going on.
I have a feeling that it's the lack of molecules like c-peptide and amylin for the reason that type 1 diabetics can't naturally correct low blood sugars with their own glucagon until a very late stage when the body goes into a form of shock.
Researchers also keep looking for the singular flavonoids in food that can beat heart disease but I personally feel the reason why foods work for us is the fact that they bring a whole portfolio of beneficial ingredients, and importantly, in the correct, nature dictated proportions.
alaska said:people keep trying to find the elixir by trying to isolate the 'one magic ingredient' from nature
alaska said:Why try and mimic a courgette or broccoli in a pill when you can just aim to include plenty of the real deal in your diet? Quite a lot of modern research ends up reading like a literate form of madness I find.
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