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Die letzten 6 Beiträge

6

Dienstag, 11. Oktober 2005, 22:40

Von Kidmed

So ist es !

Gerade auch in Anbetracht anderer Berufe(inclusive der Ärzte,die alle Pflichten eines Beamten haben - ohne auch nur einen Hauch von deren Privilegien.

Warum sitzen soviele Lehrer und andere Beamte sowie Juristen in den Parlamenten und z.B. so wenig Ärzte?

(Die sogenannte Gesundheitsministerin ist irgendeine Lehrerin und kein Fachmann.)

Der Grund ist klar:

Nur Beamte und Lehrer werden staatlich so üppigst alimentiert,daß sie sich das leisten können.

Deswegen haben wir solche Parlamente.

5

Dienstag, 11. Oktober 2005, 21:34

Von lovecraft

Zweiklassenmedizin:

mit welcher Begründung sind Lehrer/innen
überhaupt beamtet und somit first class-
Patienten?!
Der dösige Steuerzahler, der selbst B-Patient ist, finanziert denen nicht nur üppige Saläre, Superpensionen, alle mögl. anderen Privilegien (z.B. ein "Lümmeljahr"
bei durchaus erträgl. Gehaltskürzung, 3 Monate(!) bezahlten Urlaub, Unkündbarkeit,
Pension mit durchschn. 55-57 und vieles mehr)!!!
Das schreit zum Himmel und gehört schleunigst abgeschafft.
Doch leider füllen diese Brüder und Schwestern unsere Parlamente.

Warum sind Hochschullehrer meistens beamtet
bei 8 Std. Pflichtunterricht im Monat!?

Früher war jeder Schienenleger bei der Bahn
und jeder Briefmarkenkleber bei der Post
"Beamter".
Dieser Irrsinn ist abgeschafft.
Jetzt müssen gerade im Hinblick auf die Neue Armut etc. weitere scharfe Einschnitte folgen; und zwar rigoros!!!

4

Dienstag, 11. Oktober 2005, 14:16

Von Kidmed

Zur IGeL-"Medizin":

So Igeln Schweine-igel

3

Dienstag, 11. Oktober 2005, 13:56

Von Dr.Braendle

Geb ich gerne weiter an einen lieben Kollegen. Der Sauerstofftherapie, Chiropraktik, Akupunktur und Naturheilkunde sowie Naturheilkunde und Hypnosetherapie... probiert hat und mit steter Regelmässigkeit immer wieder zum Stamm der Medizin zurückkehrt. Weil er einfach keine Zeit hat, vor lauter echt kranken Patienten in seinen Chaosstuben, sich endlich zu IGEL-Medizin und schönem ruhigen Leben aufzuschwingen.

Tja, Managementqualitäten und antiemetische Selbsthypnose braucht`s halt auch, wenn man umkehren will zu einer ausschliesslichen Behandlung privatversicherter Lehrerinnen und deren Brut... :-)

2

Freitag, 22. April 2005, 16:46

Von Kidmed

Das könnte man mal weitergeben.

1

Sonntag, 10. März 2002, 23:54

Von Kidmed

Wie aus einem Arzt ein Scharlatan wird

Warum aus einem früher möglicherweise mal gut ausgebildeten Arzt(hat ja schließlich auch eine Menge Geld gekostet) ein Scharlatan,ein Krimineller,wird,der nur noch Unheil anrichtet :

Langeweile,massivste Ausbildungsprobleme,fachliche,organisatorische,intellektuelle und emotionale Inkomptenz,Wegrennen der Patienten,Wichtiguerei,Geldgier,seriöse Konkurrenz,überwertige Ideen,Religiotentum,Asozialität,brutalste Dummheit,Sadismus,kriminelle Energie,Charakterdefizite bis hin zur Psychopathie und Psychose.

Es ist eine Form der Sozio-Psycho-pathie von als völlig überwertig empfundenen,gleichwohl sehr schwachen Egos.Krasse Intelligenzmängel und Wichtigtuerei kommen hinzu oder sinds bisweilen auch alleine.

Und :
schamlose und haltlose finanzielle Interessen.



Why Health Professionals Become Quacks
William T. Jarvis, Ph.D.


It is especially disappointing when an individual trained in the health sciences turns to promoting quackery. Friends and colleagues often wonder how this can happen. Some reasons appear to be:

Boredom.

Daily practice can become humdrum. Pseudoscientific ideas can be exciting. The late Carl Sagan believed that the qualities that make pseudoscience appealing are the same that make scientific enterprises so fascinating. He said, "I make a distinction between those who perpetuate and promote borderline belief systems and those who accept them. The latter are often taken by the novelty of the systems, and the feeling of insight and grandeur they provide" [1] Sagan lamented the fact that so many are willing to settle for pseudoscience when true science offers so much to those willing to work at it.

Low professional esteem.

Nonphysicians who don't believe their professions is sufficiently appreciated sometimes compensate by making extravagant claims. Dental renegades have said "All diseases can be seen in a patient's mouth." Fringe podiatrists may claim to be able to judge health entirely by examining the feet. Iridologists point to the eye, chiropractors the spine, auriculotherapists the ear, Registered Nurses an alleged "human energy field," and so on. Even physicians are not immune from raising their personal status by pretension. By claiming to cure cancer or to reverse heart disease without bypass surgery, general physicians can elevate themselves above the highly trained specialists in oncology or cardiology. By claiming to heal diseases that doctors cannot, faith healers advance above physicians on the social status chart (physicians are normally at the top of the chart while preachers have been slipping in modern times). Psychologists, physicians, actors, or others who become health gurus often become darlings of the popular press.

Paranormal tendencies.

Many health systems are actually hygienic religions with deeply-held, emotionally significant beliefs about the nature of reality, salvation, and proper lifestyles. Vegetarianism, chiropractic, naturopathy, homeopathy, energy medicine, therapeutic touch, crystal healing, and many more are rooted in vitalism, which has been defined as "a doctrine that the functions of a living organism are due to a vital principle ["life force"] distinct from physicochemical forces" and "the theory that biological activities are directed by a supernatural force." [2,3] Vitalists are not just nonscientific, they are antiscientific because they abhor the reductionism, materialism, and mechanistic causal processes of science. They prefer subjective experience to objective testing, and place intuitiveness above reason and logic. Vitalism is linked to the concept of an immortal human soul, which also links it to religious ideologies [4].

Paranoid mental state.

Some people are prone to seeing conspiracies everywhere. Such people may readily believe that fluoridation is a conspiracy to poison America, that AIDS was invented and spread to destroy Africans or homosexuals, and that organized medicine is withholding the cure for cancer. Whereas individuals who complain about conspiracies directed toward themselves are likely to be regarded as mentally ill, those who perceive them as directed against a nation, culture, or way of life may seem more rational. Perceiving their political passions are unselfish and patriotic intensifies their feelings of righteousness and moral indignation [5]. Many such people belong to the world of American fascism, Holocaust deniers, tax rebels, the radical militia movement, and other "libertarian" causes. Liberty Lobby's newspaper The Spotlight champions such causes and also promotes quack cancer cures and attacks fluoridation.

Reality shock.

Everyone is vulnerable to death anxiety. Health personnel who regularly deal with terminally ill patients must make psychological adjustments. Some are simply not up to it. Investigation of quack cancer clinics have found physicians, nurses, and others who became disillusioned with standard care because of the harsh realities of the side effects or acknowledged limitations of proven therapies.

Beliefs encroachment.

Science is limited to dealing with observable, measurable, and repeatable phenomena. Beliefs that transcend science fall into the realms of philosophy and religion. Some people allow such beliefs to encroach upon their practices. While one may exercise religious or philosophical values of compassion, generosity, mercy and integrity (which is the foundation of the scientific method's search for objective truth), it is not appropriate for a health professional to permit metaphysical (supernatural) notions to displace or distort scientific diagnostic, prescriptive or therapeutic procedures. Individuals who wish to work in the area of religious belief should pursue a different career.

The profit motive.

Quackery can be extremely lucrative. Claiming to have a "better mousetrap" can cause the world to beat a path to one's door. Greed can motivate entrepreneurial practitioners to set ethical principles aside.


The prophet motive.

Just as Old Testament prophets called for conversion and repentance, doctors have to "convert" patients away from smoking, obesity, stress, alcohol and other indulgences [6]. As prognosticators, doctors foretell what is going to happen if patients don't change their way of life. The prophet role provides power over people. Some doctors consciously avoid it. They encourage patients to be self-reliant rather than dependent, but in doing so they may fail to meet important emotional needs. Quacks, on the other hand, revel in, encourage, and exploit this power. Egomania is commonly found among quacks. They enjoy the adulation and discipleship their pretense of superiority evokes.

Psychopathic tendencies.

Studies of the psychopathic personality provide insight into the psychodynamics of quackery. Dr. Robert Hare who investigated for more than twenty years, states, "You find psychopaths in all professions. . . the shyster lawyer, the physician always on the verge of losing his license, the businessman with a string of deals where his partners always lost out." [7] Hare describes psychopaths as lacking a capacity to feel compassion or pangs of conscience, and as exhibiting glibness, superficial charm, grandiosity, pathological lying, conning/manipulative behavior, lack of guilt, proneness to boredom, lack of empathy, and other traits often seen in quacks. According to Hare, such people suffer from a cognitive defect that prevents them from experiencing sympathy or remorse.

The conversion phenomenon.

The "brainwashing" that North Koreans used on American prisoners of war involved stress to the point that it produced protective inhibition and dysfunction. In some cases, positive conditioning causes the victim to love what he had previously hated, and vice-versa; and in other cases, the brain stops computing critically the impressions received. Many individuals who become quacks undergo a midlife crisis, painful divorce, life-threatening disease, or another severely stressful experience. The conversion theory is supported by a study of why physicians had taken up "holistic" practices. By far the greatest reason given (51.7%) was "spiritual or religious experiences." [8]

Many people -- including far too many health professionals, law enforcement officials, and judges -- exhibit a cavalier attitude toward quackery. Although most reject the idea that quackery is "worth a try" for a sick person [9], it is important to reinforce and mobilize those who understand quackery's harmful potential.

References
Reid WH and others. Unmasking the Psychopath. New York: W.W. Norton and Company, 1986.
Webster's New Collegiate Dictionary.
Dorland's Illustrated Medical Dictionary, 25th Edition. Philadelphia: WB Saunders Co. 1974.
Sarton G. A History of Science, Volume I. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1952, p.497.
Hofstadter R. The Paranoid Style in American Politics and Other Essays. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1966.
Dominian J. Doctor as prophet. British Medical Journal 287:1925-1927, 1983.
Goleman D. Brain defect tied to utter amorality of the psychopath. The New York Times, July 7, 1987.
Goldstein MS, Jaffe DT, Sutherland C. Physicians at a holistic medical conference: Who and why?" Health Values 10:3-13, Sept/Oct 1986.
Morris LA, Gregory J D, Klimberg R. Focusing an advertising campaign to combat medical quackery. Journal of Pharmaceutical Marketing and Management 2:(1):83-96, 1987.

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