The other day I saw an ad depicting Larry the
Cable Guy trying to sell Prilosec. “Suffering from heartburn day after
day is as unnecessary as wearing sleeves,” he says. It might be catchy,
and it obviously sells a lot of drug, but it makes no more sense to take a drug
to cover up heartburn than it does to cover up a skin cancer with a fresh
Bandaid every day.
Unfortunately, this has been the approach
physicians have taken toward a host of health problems for over 100 years.
Instead of making the effort to determine the cause of an individual’s
heartburn, for example, we are content to suppress it with drugs that reduce
stomach acid. As long as the patient feels better now, never
mind the fact that excess stomach acid may have nothing to do with the
problem. Never mind, either, that long-term acid suppression has some
very serious consequences. When the
heartburn continues or worsens, we increase the dose of stomach acid-reducing
medicine until the maximum dosage is reached. When that no longer works,
patients are offered the next drug on the list or even advised to go under the knife
in the hope of fixing the problem.
By contrast, at the Grand County
Wellness Center ,
our interest is not in merely finding the magic pill that temporarily
suppresses or controls every symptom. Instead, we search for potential
causes and make every effort to help patients rebalance their physiology.
Our approach is simple: Give the body what it needs; remove what it
doesn't need; treat causes, not symptoms. The body has a remarkable
ability to heal itself if we give it the right fuel, remove the obstacles to
health, and utilize an ever-growing array of tools to support the body’s
repair. The more we learn, the more we discover that nobody has all the
answers and that no single treatment is the definitive answer to a given
condition.
Fortunately, people are becoming increasingly
aware that covering up each symptom with a drug doesn't necessarily solve their
problems. As a result, they are demanding more effective, less risky
(think of all the side effects and complications rattled off at the end of the
commercials), and more personalized care. They even ignore national
expert committee opinions and specialty society consensus guidelines that seek
to reduce human beings to numbers and medical professionals to technicians in
an assembly line. Fortunately too, when doctors run lab tests and say
"there is nothing wrong with you, just take this pill," patients are
no longer content. They keep looking.
At the
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