DrStraw wrote:But, of course, for physicians to recommend non-pharmaceutical solutions such as kefir goes against what the AMA teaches and so it not generally permitted. That is probably why you were not told initially.
Why not? It can be scientifically proven to work, and work well, and it is certainly not harmful or dangerous. So why would it be against AMA policy? There might be "proper" meds which work better, but I was also not given those, even though the doc knew I will have trouble after all those antibiotics. So why not give me any of the proper meds *before* I got the issue?
There are, in general, a lot of "natural" remedies, which are proven to work, and yet not sanctioned by AMA, I hear. Kefir/yoghurt is just one example, but there are many others.
This is what I am talking about. AMA has its stupid rules which allow to prescribe untested and unsafe drugs (thus all the action law suits) but a natural and proven solution like kefir is frowned upon just because it is non-pharmaceutical?
It makes me think that the reason such solution are frowned upon is because its the diary farmers and grocery stores who make profit. Rather than pharma companies and drug stores who spend fortunes to lobby AMA. Combine it with the fact that most doctors should never have been doctors to begin with, and you have the present-day american medicine in a nutshell. Its a mess, by and large, driven by big money and even bigger interests. Not much unlike NRA, just to give one example.
So I can sort-of understand the whole disillusion people have with the "proper" medical methodology when I look at it in this light. And I have to admit, I can't blame them much. Which is not to say they are always right, but they do have a point worth listening to.