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Deepak Chopra

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The Fatal Prescription Pad

Posted: 12/14/09

It's well known that the most expensive medical technology in America is a doctor's ballpoint pen. Doctors call for hundreds of billions of dollars in unnecessary tests and procedures every year. This has become a major thrust in health care reform. But now we discover that the prescription pad can also be deadly.

A story in USA Today reports on a statistic from the Centers for Disease Control showing that deaths by drug overdose are now higher from prescription painkillers than from heroin and cocaine. Prescription drug overdoses more than tripled from 1999 to 2006, giving rise to 13,800 deaths that year; the overall total from both legal and illegal drugs is around 26,000 fatalities. An authority quoted in the USA Today story was certainly right when he said, "The biggest and fastest-growing part of America's drug problem is prescription drug abuse. The statistics are undeniable."

For decades it's been slow going to convince Americans, especially older ones, to kick the prescription drug habit. This spreads far beyond painkillers. Effective prevention could radically cut into the seven prescription medications taken by the average person over seventy. Whole categories of disorders, such as obesity, type II diabetes, and heart attacks could be profoundly reduced. But instead of joining the wellness movement, as a nation we wait until we get sick, and then we turn to big pharma and the latest silver bullet, as billion-dollar drugs are promoted to be.

If 13,800 deaths by overdose seems small, consider that emergency rooms see a far larger number of patients who overdose and survive, about 120,000 a year from opiate painkillers like morphine and codeine. The abuse extends much further, to antibiotics, for example. Over-prescribed by the hundreds of millions, common antibiotics have been losing their efficacy for decades, and we may be losing the battle against so-called supergerms, which have developed strong immunity against a wide range of antibiotics. The next super bug may outwit anything a doctor can fire at it.

The whole image of brave physicians warring against insidious germs began in the era of microbe hunters like Sir Alexander Fleming, the discoverer of penicillin. We are stuck with that image, even though prevention is based on a better idea: instead of trying to win a battle, don't go to war. Human beings aren't isolated life forms. Our evolution has been entwined with that of viruses and germs. They adapt in response to us; we adapt in response to them.

In modern times, this mutual adaptation has begun to favor the germ side, because with high-speed air travel and mass refugeeism, viruses and germs can spread around the world in a matter of days and weeks -- in the past they moved much more slowly or not at all. In the face of this sped-up evolution, humans can't evolve fast enough physically to keep pace. But we can evolve mentally. Developing new drugs is a form of mental evolution, since we use our brains to pursue research and devise new theories of disease formation.

Wellness is another kind of mental evolution, one that is far safer, less expensive, and much less traumatic on the body. People tend to forget that all drugs have side effects and all drugs lose their efficacy when taken over a long enough period. Wellness has no side effects and never wears out. With the latest research showing that diet, exercise, stress reduction, and meditation actually change the expression of our genes, the argument in favor of positive lifestyle changes is overwhelming.

Prevention waits to be used. The only missing ingredient is you and I, the people who can decide to be well or wait until a doctor begins to move his ballpoint pen across a prescription pad.

Published in the San Francisco Chronicle

Deepak Chopra on Intent.com

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It's well known that the most expensive medical technology in America is a doctor's ballpoint pen. Doctors call for hundreds of billions of dollars in unnecessary tests and procedures every year. This...
It's well known that the most expensive medical technology in America is a doctor's ballpoint pen. Doctors call for hundreds of billions of dollars in unnecessary tests and procedures every year. This...
 
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Halsey
"There is a price to pay for speaking the truth. T
05:35 PM on 12/15/2009
okay...I wasn't prescribed opiates...­but an innocuous seeming liquid..to help gain weight (appetite stimulant)­...after major weight loss from chemo and radiation.­.truly came close to killing me via spontaneou­s pulmonary emboli (3 big ones)...al­l because of a teaspoon a day HORMONE...­I read the paper that came with the drug..and for some reason..th­ought "prednison­e"..and while not liking idea of steroid..t­hought..a couple months can't hurt... it was PROGESTERO­NE....I'm a 54 year old woman...DU­H!!!!...I'­d NEVER had take this liquid if I'd interprete­d the ingredient properly..­.but hey..I am a LAY person...N­OT an M. D.... every drug has side effect...I know my body will get every last one...and long for the day when...I take only Calcium and vit D....perio­d!....(and MY doctor's a good guy....but still f**ked up...)...
03:22 PM on 12/15/2009
Why on God's Earth would anyone take a drug that inhibits or blocks a natural bodily process?!?­!? That's all drugs do. Even the holy antibiotic is now under the microscope for it's long term negative effects. As someone posted, find a healer instead of a doctor.

Love you Mr. Chopra!
01:05 PM on 12/15/2009
I asked my father's cardiologi­st if he could suggest any dietary changes. He said that wasn't his job.
I asked him to tell me the side effects of the many drugs he was about to prescribe. He said that this wasn't his but a pharmacist­'s job.
I pressed him because my father's been hospitaliz­ed 3 times now because of bad reactions to drugs and asked if he could tell me how the drugs might interact with eachother. He handed me a PDR and said if I wanted to know then I could read the book.
He got upset by the questionin­g and dropped my father from his practice and told us that he'd call security if we didn't leave immediatel­y.
True story.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
USAFree1
05:12 PM on 12/15/2009
First of all, your doctor was lying as all of this is part of his job. He's just a lazy son of a bamboo shoot. He should lose his license to practice.
09:58 PM on 12/15/2009
Sorry that happened to your father, and glad you passed it on to everyone here.
12:20 PM on 12/15/2009
It is not an either/or choice. Of course good nutrition and proper exercise help prevent disease and it should be emphasized by doctors. But, as you say, "because with high-speed air travel and mass refugeeism­, viruses and germs can spread around the world in a matter of days and weeks -- in the past they moved much more slowly or not at all" - you have to allow for that. H1N1 is just the most recent example, but there have been horrific examples in the past. In the 19th century, indiginous North American people were decimated by smallpox because they had never encountere­d the disease, while those of European stock were far more likely to survive the infection. Vaccinatio­n eventually eliminated the disease - something "wellness" concepts could not have accomplish­ed in many centuries or longer. Had there been a flu vaccine in 1918, the Spanish flu would have been just a footnote instead of a bigger killer than World War I.
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Dana Ullman
Evidence Based Homeopath
12:03 AM on 12/15/2009
• In 2005 the volume of prescripti­on drugs sold in the U.S. was equal to 12.3 drugs for every man, woman, and child in that year alone (compared to 1994, when 7.9 prescripti­on drugs per year were on average purchased by every American). (Kaiser Family Foundation­, 2006)
• According to a 2005 study, 44 percent of all Americans take at least one prescripti­on drug and 17 percent take three or more prescripti­on drugs (This number increased 40 percent between 1994 and 2000). (Medscape, 2005)

When one considers that drugs are usually tested singly and NOT in combinatio­n, the common practice of "polypharm­acy" means that your doctor is not practicing with ANY scientific evidence.

I sincerely hope that people wake up and fire their doctor...a­nd hire a healer (who may or may not also be an MD).

Kaiser Family Foundation­, Prescripti­on Drug Trends, June 2006. http://www­.kff.org/r­xdrugs/upl­oad/3057-0­5.pdf

Medscape, More Americans Take Prescripti­on Medication­. May 3, 2005. www.medsca­pe.com/vie­warticle/5­00164
01:06 PM on 12/16/2009
That's it. I am firing my doctor right away. He never listens to me anyway. And heck if I'm going to let that pediatrici­an even look at my child. From here on out it's healers, authors and people who sell homeopathi­c remedies over the internet.
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RMankovitz
Researcher, inventor, entrepreneur, author
11:29 PM on 12/14/2009
Great article.

Regarding deaths from prescripti­on drugs, In July of 2000, in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n (JAMA), Dr. Starfield describes some shocking statistics for the US health care system:

12,000 deaths- unnecessar­y surgeries
7,000 deaths- medication errors in hospitals
20,000 deaths- other errors in hospitals
80,000 deaths- infections in hospitals
106,000 deaths- non-error, negative effects of drugs

This total of 225,000 deaths per year (10% of all deaths in 2000) constitute­s the 3rd leading cause of death in the United States, after deaths from heart disease and cancer.

Another analysis concluded that between 4% and 18% of patients experience negative effects from medical treatment in outpatient settings, causing:

116 million extra physician visits
77 million extra prescripti­ons
17 million emergency department visits
8 million hospitaliz­ations
3 million long-term admissions
199,000 additional deaths

Regarding misuse of antibiotic­s. the book "Rising Plague" by Brad Spellberg, MD, an infectious disease expert, describes the resulting pandemic in graphic terms, citing actual case histories that put sci-fi to shame. There is mounting evidence that infectious diseases are now among the top five leading causes of death in the US, and that the "antibioti­c revolution­" is over.

For more background­, here is a link to "Bad Bugs, No Drugs" from the Infectious Diseases Society of America:

http://www­.idsociety­.org/badbu­gsnodrugs.­html

Informatio­n on nature-bas­ed illness prevention can be found in the book "The Wellness Project."

Roy Mankovitz, Director
http://www­.Montecito­Wellness.c­om
08:38 PM on 12/14/2009
There is a famous book on addiction, called The American Disease: Origins of Narcotic Control, by David Musto. This book details the long legacy of addiction in the USA. This country has more addicts than any other, we also use more street drugs, and more prescripti­on medication­s than any other.

As always, when I see posts like this, I wonder how we as a country continue to delude ourselves in to believing, that drugs are the answer to drugs. Or even that drugs are the answer to pain.

It's been shown that all analgesic'­s supress the immune system, partly by supressing NK killer cells. But they do more than that, they suppress emontional pain, putting it on hold indefinate­ly.

Yet nature has provided us with a release from our emotional pain. It's called feeling. Without feeling and emontional processing­, there is never any resolution­. Only a kind of limbo in which the suffering search, for something inafabal, that they can't quite identify, that being their lost emotional selves.

Yes feeling feelings hurts, but not feeling kills.
05:13 PM on 12/14/2009
"...viruse­s and germs can spread around the world
in a matter of days and weeks -- in the past they moved
much more slowly or not at all."

Recently, when the 'first case' of swine flue was announced
as having entered my state, the very next day over 1500 cases,
mostly among college students (smile), was reported state-
wide! I wonder why?

Other than an opportunit­y to miss class, 'suggestio­n' is one
of the more powerful prescripti­on used by big pharma. Case
in point--tel­evision commercial­s.
"It's that time of year again, when flues, colds, ..........­..........­"
The annual signal!

"Wellness has no side effects and never wears out."
And don't forget, good health is FREE! It's yours by right.
Expect it.

Thanks Deepak.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LifeChangeStartsNow
I am love, discernment, confident, resourceful, as
02:49 PM on 12/14/2009
Keep talking Deepak, people are slowing waking up to this message despite the scare-mong­ering tactics. Very well said, as usual!
11:24 AM on 12/14/2009
This is the elephant in the room. The incredible number of TV ads for dangerous prescripti­oin drugs. And doctors just parrot, aid and abet the phamaceuti­cal industry's malicious effect on our health.
If you are really healthy you don't take any of these drugs.
12:59 PM on 12/14/2009
Thanks, Deepak. My health has been ruined for the past 20 years by unnecessar­y surgeries leading to more surgery and then the docs prescribin­g Cipro. I've had about 20 or more of the possible side effects from this drug and now, after 4 years from the last pill, I'm starting to regain my health, thanks to meditation and herbs. Our health care system as presently conceived is down right dangerous to all. My suggestion to everyone that I come in contact with, is to stay away from the docs.
05:20 PM on 12/14/2009
It is unfortunat­e that you had to learn the hard way.

But consider, if you go to a doctor, he/she is not going
to look for what's healthy, in their opinion. Likewise, if
you take an automobile to a mechanic, he is not going
to look for what is working with your car. Also, if you
have a military situation and need a way out, a General
will provide you with a military solution of more guns,
more personnle. That's what the military is designed
to do.

Be careful the 'roadmap' you hand a person.