Originally posted by DrChuck
Cecil,
Not my name. (See the website under my signature.)
Devolution has a point, biases and confounding data are everywhere and careful steps to eliminate them are taken into account in medical
studies. Using anecdotes to validate or presume any type of relationship between risk and disease without critical evaluation can lead to very bad
medicine.
I understand that you have a passion for this type of practice, but if iridology was as diagnostically accurate as you have portrayed it I would think
that it would be much more widely accepted and practiced. It may be a valid medical art, but its hard to accept as legit practice without
peer-reviews, control studies, etc.
First of all, let me tell you a true story--although I
fully suspect that you will accuse me of lying.
And then I will explain why your statements are divorced from the 'non-peer reviewed', 'unreproducible' reality in which people actually live their
lives.
The year was probably 2005 or 2006 and I was operating a health food store/Iridology practice. A man walked in off the street looking for directions
to another local business. He asked me what my business was and I explained that I was an Iridologist focusing my research on the under-acid stomach,
which is responsible for stomach ulcers. Then he told me his story:
He had been suffering from an undiagnosed pain in his stomach area for the past several years. First, he took over-the-counter antacids and they
seemed to work for awhile. He finally decided to go to a doctor when he was constantly taking antacids. The doctor wrote a prescription for a stronger
antacid. The pain did not go away. So the doctor 'scoped' his stomach and found nothing. Then the doctor did an exploratory surgery and found nothing.
Over a period of a few years, the man's insurance company had spent $20,000 in tests and other diagnostic procedures but the doctors had found
nothing. So, obviously, such a patient was
CRAZY; and it was recommended that he go, instead, to a
psychiatrist for the 'pain' in his
stomach. And, in the mean time, he had lost his health insurance because he was considered to be nothing more than a hypochondriac.
I looked in his iris with my scope and, not surprisingly, found an under-acid stomach ring. But then I saw a very bright, but very small acute sign in
his right iris immediately adjacent to the stomach ring at 8:00 o'clock on the iris chart, just interior to the area for the gall bladder--this is
described on the Iridology chart as the duodenum--which immediately raised two possibilities for me.
The man had little money because of his medical expenses, so I told him that, as a researcher, I would take pictures of his iris for free (the whole
reason for buying my $3500 Iridology camera being to prove to my clients what signs I was looking at). Only after taking the pictures was I able to
determine that the acute sign was in his duodenum.
After taking the pictures, I explained what the acute sign means in the iris: in 13 year-old girls, the acute sign signifies growth of breast tissue;
in nursing mothers, it signifies increased activity of tissue; in BPH, it signifies proliferation of tissue; in an appendix it indicates inflammation;
a snow white acute sign in the stomach indicates
helicobacter pylori infection; in people with fibro-myalgia, it indicates pain.
And, then, I had to engage in a circumlocution that every Iridologist must engage in so as not to be prosecuted for practicing medicine without a
license and threatened with financial ruin and, possibly, prison time: "You have a hyper-acute sign in your duodenum. That is
all that I can
say as an Iridologist.
It is against the law for me to tell you that you have a duodenal ulcer." And, when they ask for clarification: "Listen
carefully:
It is against the law for me to tell you that you have a duodenal ulcer."
I then contacted a doctor--an M.D.--specializing in alternative medicine and natural healing modalities, explained my suspicions and referred the
client to that doctor for follow-up. The client decided to pay me for taking his pictures after all.
Now, I am an Iridologist, not a doctor. And my peers are other Iridologists not doctors. So, is there a Journal of Iridology Research? Not to my
knowledge. Why? Because medical journals are typically under the control of those with interests--for example, thousands of dollars of investments in
common stock--in the pharmaceutical companies. And no pharmaceutical company is going to want to fund any research journal whose ultimate goal is
natural healing, or which in any way threatens the illusion of competence of the orthodox medical profession.
In any case, would a typical medical journal be interested in this anecdote of mine?
Not merely no, but
hell no.
Various doctors had been paid in excess of $20,000 for this person's diagnosis but had found nothing.
And, were it made known that Iridology could assess and narrow down the diagnostic possibilities in this particular case, they would not have been
paid that $20,000.
In any case, can you imagine going to an auto mechanic for a problem with your car, the auto mechanic giving you a bill for $1500....
But then saying that he was unable to find out the problem....
And demanding payment
anyway?
Only in the medical profession and the
theology profession are stupidity and incompetence
rewarded.
Now, is this client's pain "reproducible"?
Of course not.
I may very well never see another case like this, which is why I wanted to take his pictures in the first place.
But that does not mean that the pain this client was experiencing was not
real.
And, moreover, even that
picture--but, of course, this does
not apply to a
radiograph--you would most probably consider to
be nothing more than "anecdotal" anyway.
So, you can live in a reality which is "peer reviewed" and "reproducible", if you want--maintaining this
delusion that the pharmaceutical
companies and the orthodox medical profession would actually
publish information which seriously threatens their lucrative paradigm. But the
reality in which I used to practice was a reality in which a significant portion of my clients were diagnosed as having psychiatric problems because
the doctors could find NOTHING; for example, thyroid problems, duodenal problems, "ADHD" (really colon toxicity) and what eventually became known as
fibro-myalgia.
In any case, this
arrogant,
upstart "scientific method" and medical-pharmaceutical paradigm that you are so proud of is merely a few
hundreds of years old.
Chinese medicine, Indian medicine, herbal medicine, etc. etc. etc. etc.--all anecdotal--have been practiced for at least 3000 years;
not
without quite satisfactory
results.
Oh, by the way, I assessed a chronic to degenerative sign in another client's abdomen as
requiring medical intervention; this in a client who
had not gone to see a doctor for more than 20 years because he "did not trust" doctors.
He made an appointment for a physical, was diagnosed by a
doctor--someone with an M.D.--with an abdominal aortic aneurysm; and was in the
hospital the next day for surgery.
Had this client not come to see me, the doctor who diagnosed the AAA would not have been paid the office visit, nor would the surgeon have been paid a
surgical fee, such diagnoses often being made only upon autopsy.
Michael
edit on 18-10-2010 by Michael Cecil because: (no reason given)
edit on 18-10-2010 by Michael Cecil because: add information on
AAA assessment