PayPal

StatCounter

Wednesday, April 7, 2021

DR ROBERT MENDELSOHN

© MMXXI V.1.0.0
by Morley Evans



Dr Robert S. Mendelsohn




June Gardner in Australia writes,

If we had more doctors like the late, great Dr Robert Mendelsohn and if his books were mandatory reading before walking into a doctor's office or hospital, I bet my life that not thousands, but millions, will be saved from iatrogenic harm — every year, me included.
When I first read the opening pages of his no-holds-barred book, The Confession of a Medical Heretic, I was taken aback, amused, and wondered if I was reading the correct book. The author, Dr Robert Mendelsohn, was an experienced, senior medical doctor – known to millions of Americans through his nationally syndicated column "The People’s Doctor". He was an associate professor at the University of Illinois Medical School and a director of Chicago’s Michael Reese Hospital. He was also chairman of the Medical Licensure Committee of the state of Illinois. Read what he wrote.
Dr Mendelsohn confessed that:
• I once believed in modern medicine … But, I no longer believe in modern medicine.
• I believe that …the greatest danger to your health is the doctor who practices modern medicine…I believe that more than ninety per cent of Modern Medicine could disappear from the face of the earth – doctors, hospitals, drugs and equipment – and the effect on our health would be beneficial.
• I believe that modern medicine’s treatments for disease are seldom effective and that they’re often more dangerous than the diseases they’re designed to treat.
The following are Dr Mendelsohn’s advice to you and me:
• I don’t advise anyone who has no symptoms to go to the doctor for a physical examination. For those with symptoms, it is not such a good idea, either. Unless, of course, if it is an emergency like an accident, etc.

Dr Mendelsohn reminded us that, If you are foolish to make a yearly visit for a routine check-up to be aware of the following:

1) Beware that you may be used for purposes other than your own. You may be subjected or asked to undergo certain procedures for the doctor’s own good.
2) Be reminded that doctors are unable to recognize wellness. They are trained to treat diseases, and most likely, he will always find something wrong with you.
3) As long as the doctor is in control, he can define and manipulate the limits of health and diseases any way he chooses. Of course, not all are that dishonest. But the worse scenario is when he has a vested interest in something or some procedure. Dr Mendelsohn said: beware of the doctor’s self-interest.
4) Doctors almost always get more reward and recognition for intervening than not intervening. A good analogy to this advice is to ask a barber what to do with your hair. Invariably, you will get your hair snipped off for one reason or another. If there is not much chance to snip anything off, you may end with a different coloured hair.
5) If you are given drugs to take, ask questions and study the drugs' side effects [before taking them]. For example, if you are given pills for high blood pressure. Take note that there are numerous documented side effects related to the drug – from rashes, muscle cramps to loss of sex drive in both men and women. Dr Mendelsohn wrote: I wonder just how much of the middle-aged population suffers from impotence, not from any psychological cause but simply from their blood pressure medication.
Again, Dr Mendelsohn asked: what kind of person will take that drug after reading the information? Unfortunately, many of us feel helpless. We are frightened to death. We experience fear after being told that something has gone extremely wrong with us. In haste, we just don’t think long or far enough. We swallow anything that is given to us. For this reason, drug companies sell thousands of tons of pills each month just to pacify those instilled fears – real or perceived. We do not have the slightest inkling of what these chemicals are going to do to us.
6) Dr Mendelsohn gave amazing advice. If you are sick, your first defence is to have more information about your problem. You’ve got to learn about your disease, and that’s not very hard. You can get the same books the doctor studied. Read them. It is most likely that after reading, you will be more informed than the doctor himself.
In this respect, I urge you to read more than one book. Go into the net, and you will be amazed as to how much information you can get – all for free. Let me also ask you to consider this. How long do you get to talk to your doctor when you see him/her? Is it one minute, five minutes or half an hour? I got only a minute for my skin problem, and I was shown the door after that. He did not answer any of my questions. Do you think, within that time span, the doctor knows what is going on with you? Indeed, the best defence is not to abdicate the responsibility of your health to someone else. Your well-being is your responsibility. The bottom line is if you read and when you get to see your doctor, you can ask sensible questions.
7) Dr Mendelsohn said, Ask the doctor questions. In some cases, he’ll answer the questions. That’s the rare exception. It seems that doctors are extremely busy people, and if you ask too many questions, he may just throw you out of his office. Patients told me these were what they got if they asked too much: Why do you want to know so much? I am a doctor. Are you are a doctor? But read what this good doctor wrote. Ask the questions anyway. From his attitude and response, you can judge him as a human being and get an idea of his expertise.
8) This is indeed hard advice to swallow when Dr Mendelsohn wrote that doctors, in general, should be treated with about the same degree of trust as a used car salesman. Whatever your doctor says or recommends, you have to first consider how it will benefit him. Make no mistake, these words come from an experienced and senior doctor – chairman of the Medical Licensure Committee of Illinois. The privilege was his to say. In his book, he even said that if you don’t like the drug prescribed, but you still need to be goody-goody with your doctor, then dump the drugs in the waste chute on the way home!
9) If you have a decision to make, this is one piece of advice that Dr Mendelsohn gave, which again amazed and shocked me to the core. He said you should seek out and talk to people you regard as having wisdom. Doctors tell you – don’t listen to the untrained, the quacks or pseudo-scientists. But Dr Mendelsohn wrote, They are wrong – they are protecting their sacred authority. You may find that you can do without such a doctor!
There are a few more shocking pieces of advice that he gave. Being a director of a Chicago hospital, Dr Mendelsohn wrote,
A hospital is like a war. You should try your best to stay out of it, and if you get into it, you should get out as soon as you can. A hospital is one of the most dangerous places on earth.
Overall, your chances of getting an infection in the hospital are about one in twenty. Half of the infections in hospitals are caused by contaminated medical devices, sheets, pillowcases, linens. Just because something is white doesn’t mean it’s clean. The linens may be washed, but the mattresses and pillows are not washed.

Everything gets mixed up in hospitals – including patients. Mix-ups occur all the time. Surgeons remove the wrong leg. Medicines are given to the wrong patients, wrong food is served to people, even babies are mixed up.

There are many more shocking points elaborated in Dr Mendelson’s book. Just try to get a copy of this book and read it for yourself. Let me end with Mendelsohn's remark:

"I believe that my generation of doctors will be remembered for two things – the miracles that turned to mayhem (that is, the abuse of penicillin and cortisone); and the millions of mutilations ceremoniously carried out every year in the operating rooms."

Don’t just read one or two books and pronounce yourself saved. Read 100 books! Read every book you can find on the subject of health, especially those that expose the dangerous inadequacies of Modern Medicine. Get used to the idea right away that NO SINGLE system can or should claim to have an exclusive fix on health dynamics. 

No comments: