| What Doctors Don't Tell You: The Truth About the Dangers of Modern Medicine |  | Author: Lynne McTaggart Publisher: Thorsons Category: Book
List Price: £14.99 Buy New: £7.27 as of 9/9/2010 10:54 UTC details You Save: £7.72 (52%)
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Seller: chaptersmedia_uk Rating: 9 reviews Sales Rank: 29,575
Media: Paperback Edition: New edition Pages: 432 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9 Dimensions (in): 9 x 6 x 1.3
ISBN: 0007176279 EAN: 9780007176274
Publication Date: February 7, 2005 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
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Product Description New edition of this highly controversial and campaigning book that reveals the truth about the pills and procedures your doctor prescribes and offers proven alternatives for diagnosing, preventing and treating many illnesses. Includes updated information on all the most recent health issues -- vaccination, HRT, Viagra, IVF and more.
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 9
A little desparate September 7, 2010 Andrew Elliot Langton This type of book will appeal to the type of person, that wants to live a natural lifestyle - hide away themselves, and their kids from the dangers and poisons in everyday life. I am sure the book has some genuine good advice, but I found it a little desparate. Grabbing at every little study, that goes against modern medicine. Well good luck if you want to live like we did 300 years ago. The average lifespan was then 35. Of course there will be side affects to modern medicine. But just look at the alternative. I dont want to avoid every danger. I know that will be the best way to die early when my body meets that danger, and doesnt know how to deal with it, whether it be chemicals or germs. Do I want to create future generations of kids, that cant deal with our toxic world? Everything is poison - nothing is poison - its all a question of dose. Extremes are bad. Some centenarians even smoke and drink a little. Worrying about everything this book tries to make you worry about will do you more harm than just enjoying your life. I thought most of it was rubbish especially not using ultrasound to check your baby is developing OK. Billions of humans walking today, all unharmed by ultrasound. We are also getting more intelligent, so obviously the damage is minimal or non existant.
A cautionary tale of 21st century medicine June 16, 2010 Dr. H. A. Jones (Wales) 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
What Doctors Don't Tell You: The truth about the dangers of modern medicine, by Lynne McTaggart, Thorsons (HarperCollins), 1996, 400 ff.
A cautionary tale of 21st century medicine
By Howard Jones
Relevant Internet sites tell us that there are about 7000 deaths and well over one million people injured each year from medication errors in America. In Britain, with its much smaller population, there are thought to be about 40,000 errors annually in drug administration in British hospitals. Almost every pharmaceutical preparation is prescribed to control symptoms - it doesn't cure anything and most medications have side effects. These may be minor in relation to the illness - but not always. These statistics are alarming and make Lynne McTaggart's book highly relevant, even though it is now over a decade since publication. This does not detract from its impact, though it is heavily slanted towards the negative influences.
Many of the unwanted effects described by McTaggart do indeed occur, but fortunately not all of them to everyone and not always. The problem is that most patients feel they have no option but to trust the medical professionals and only find out too late that they were not given the full picture. So what this book does is tell you, if your health professional does not, some of the dangers and possibly unpleasant side-effects that can occur with drugs or medical procedures and it at least gives you a choice as to whether or not to proceed with the recommended procedure or medication.
Chapter 1, a mere 10 pages, gives the context for the book. Chapters 2 to 4 are about what is possibly over-diagnosis through technology - screening of various kinds. Chapters 5-7 deal respectively with the medical profession's preoccupation with cholesterol levels, vaccination and HRT. Then follow four chapters on treatment - by drugs, dentistry, cancer surgery and other procedures. The final chapter is an advocacy of naturopathic treatment, eating healthily and exercising regularly, and adopting positive mental attitudes as lines of first treatment rather than what is now known as allopathic medicine - a philosophy I support.
The strength of this book is that, like its title says, it gives you information that should be given you by your doctor or surgeon but too often isn't. My criticism is that, in its 400 pages, the book is unrelentingly negative and perhaps therefore over-cautionary. It's useful, but my overwhelming concerns are that patients without any other source of medical information may be put off accepting palliatives or even undergoing life-saving treatment and, if treatment is needed, we should not destroy faith in the medical profession quite so thoroughly. Pharmaceuticals and surgery have saved very many lives and brought relief from suffering to many others.
Dr Howard A. Jones is the author of The Thoughtful Guide to God (2006) and The Tao of Holism (2008), both published by O Books of Winchester, UK.
Limits to Medicine: Medical Nemesis - The Expropriation of Health
the other side of the coin March 29, 2010 Ms. Z. Cumberpatch (yorkshire) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This is good to look at if you want to find out what's behind the information that is given to us by the medical profession. It is well worth while having a look if you are interested in a full picture of whatever ailment you had. I can recommend it - it helped me with my situation.
The author lacks objectivity and provides misleading information November 27, 2009 A doctor 2 out of 12 found this review helpful
As a medical practitioner who has undertaken research, I found this book to be inaccurate and lacking objectivity in the way it reports scientific evidence. I felt a lot of the content was grossly misleading. I would not recomend this for people who are seeking genuine answers to difficult questions.
Eye Opening Revelations August 22, 2009 Charles Carter (London) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
bought this as a replacement for an earlier copy which I lent to a friend. He never returned it so he must also have rated it highly.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 9
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