Current Posts – 29 Apr 2016

Junior doctors are not alone in complaining about a contract that forces them to behave in ways they predict will harm patients. Some GPs are quietly rebelling over the one-size-fits-all guidelines they are required to follow, which inevitably mean more drug prescriptions and fewer options for treating or preventing chronic diseases. Dr Joanne McCormack explains why she has become convinced that cheaper and safer life style changes make much more sense.

Previous editorials...
I have been heralding the arrival of a new super son-of-statin drug for months. One that gets cholesterol really, really low and is super expensive. Well it is here and it promises not to cause the awful muscle pains that affect at least 20% and maybe 40% of statin users, say its promoters. Isn’t that interesting? After years of being told statins were virtually side effect free. Who to believe?

The link between suicide, anti-depressant SSRIs and children was first made public over ten years ago. We don’t need to worry though, say the experts, because children only get the safest sort of SSRI – Prozac. But is Prozac really any safer? Documents sent recently to HIUK suggest that Prozac’s superior safety is a myth based on spin and misrepresentation. Prozac needs an independent investigation. Read more…

Alzheimer’s charities have fallen victim to a serious case of cognitive dissonance. They pay lip service to the importance of prevention while spending the bulk of their funds on drug research. Meanwhile they support trials on the most promising non-drug treatment that seems either to reveal lamentable ignorance of nutrition or are designed to fail. Time the Alzheimer’s community to stop donating and start demanding. Read more…

Editorial

Editorial

Editor: Jerome Burne | editor@healthinsightuk.org
Editorial

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