The Great Assumption: Difference between revisions
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*Access to monitors! Patients need access to economical tests to monitor the health of their microbiome. | *Access to monitors! Patients need access to economical tests to monitor the health of their microbiome. | ||
*Information! Patients need to know what impact particular medical treatments have on different species of microbes in our microbiome. Patients shouldn't have to guess. | *Information! Patients need to know what impact particular medical treatments have on different species of microbes in our microbiome. Patients shouldn't have to guess. | ||
*Bugs! Microbes! I'm sure there are plenty of beneficial microbes that are commonly eradicated by medical treatments that aren't commercially available. | *Bugs! Microbes! I'm sure there are plenty of beneficial microbes that are commonly eradicated by medical treatments that aren't commercially available. We need fast track the identification and approval of such microbes. | ||
*Compensation! Why does the patient have to pay for microbiome restoration? | *Compensation! Why does the patient have to pay for microbiome restoration? | ||
Revision as of 00:35, 4 March 2022
The Great Assumption is:
The assumption by prescribers that a medicine or medical procedure will have zero to minimal impact on the patient's microbiome and if it does have an impact it will heal on its own.
Medical Cornerstone
The Great Assumption is an unspoken cornerstone of modern medicine.
The Problem
The Great Assumption was a valid placeholder during medical treatment in the early days, 50+ years ago, of modern medicine but lots of research the last 20+ years shows The Great Assumption is false and detrimental to our health. But no changes have been made in the exam room where patients meet their doctors. The Great Assumption is still part of the FDA playbook in the exam room.
Complicating this problem is the affinity doctors have with Big Pharma. Drugs are what they do and I am concerned they feel that any microbiome dysbiosis that occurs as the result of medical treatment is the jurisdiction of the patient and their responsibility to repair.
Despite all the scientific research going on right now to unlock the secrets of our collective microbiome and its impact on our health it will probably be years to decades before patients see tangible results. And even then patients won't get treatments that restore the damaged ecosystem the microbiome becomes. Instead they'll probably get patented microbes and new drugs that do the things a healthy microbiome would be doing if it hadn't been degraded during medical treatment.
My Complaint
I want the microbes in my microbiome that were eradicated by medicine back! I want to know what impact particular medical treatments have on different species of microbes in my microbiome. In the absence of better support from the medical community for their microbiome health patients don't have the tools they need to monitor and maintain a healthy microbiome. You can't get all the species of microbes that get eradicated by medical treatments by eating a cup of yogurt or an over the counter probiotic.
A Partial Solution
Just give us the bugs! I don't care if you have to keep them in a temperature controlled vat in a laboratory, just give us the bugs!
If the healing and repair of their microbiome post medical treatment is the up to luck and the responsibility of the patient then patients need much more information to be able to do microbiome restoration in an effective manner. Patients need:
- Access to monitors! Patients need access to economical tests to monitor the health of their microbiome.
- Information! Patients need to know what impact particular medical treatments have on different species of microbes in our microbiome. Patients shouldn't have to guess.
- Bugs! Microbes! I'm sure there are plenty of beneficial microbes that are commonly eradicated by medical treatments that aren't commercially available. We need fast track the identification and approval of such microbes.
- Compensation! Why does the patient have to pay for microbiome restoration?
The Great Assumption = Global Warming Denial
Microbiome dysbiosis = global warming.
The mentality that got us in the global warming crisis is the same mentality that gives us The Great Assumption: an unfounded belief in the capacity of the human organism to absorb and recover from the microbiome dysbiosis medicine can cause.
In 2022 I think our collective microbiome looks like the Cuyahoga River in the 1960s.
If Left Unchecked
What can we expect if The Great Assumption goes unchecked?
- Patented microbes that we have to buy to get back to replace the bugs medication eliminated.
- New drugs that do what the microbes in our microbiome whould be doing if they were there.
- Genetically modified probiotics.
- More unnecessary medicines to fix downstream problems rooted in microbiome dysbiosis.
Not Just Medicine Alters Our Microbiome But...
According to this article on the Frontiers in Pharmacology website dated August 2020:
- "Medication has recently emerged as one of the most influential determinants of the gut microbiota composition and activity"
- www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fphar.2020.01153/full
Has anyone's doctor has mentioned this? Ask The Great Question!!!
Flip The Great Assumption!
I am not talking about not using medicine.
- I am talking about including the microbiome as part of the whole human organism.
- I am talking about monitoring and restoring our microbiome if its health degrades for whatever reason.
- I am talking about not ignoring the obvious impact our microbiome has on our health.
- I am talking about not ignoring the obvious impact medicine has on our microbiome.
Unfortunately I don't see modern medicine moving in that direction. Today modern medicine is synonymous with Big Pharma and Big Pharma is interested in developing new drugs. Having to pay attention to microbiome disruption caused by a medicine would cause significant disruption to drug development and distribution.
So The Great Assumption remains in place in conventional medicine. That is why patients need to ask The Great Question to be vigilant and proactive to protect this valuable health resource.