True
Believers
One of the differences between science and pseudoscience is
that if something can be demonstrated to be not true a real
scientist will discard it and get on with other things. A
pseudoscientist, however, will cling to ideas even in the face of
contrary evidence. This can be understandable if the evidence
completely refutes their hypotheses, theories and world views, and
an example of this would be that the entire edifice of creationism
collapses if it is accepted that the Earth is billions of years
old. What puzzles me is that people will continue to believe
irrelevant things which are shown to be untrue. An example of this
in the myths below is that the etymology of the word "quack" has
absolutely no bearing on the safety or dangers of dental amalgams.
It seems that any concession to the other side, no matter how
trivial, is too damaging to be tolerated. Blind faith and
fundamentalism is like that.
During one recent week I saw four examples of this coming from
the world of pseudomedicine.
The first myth is that word "quack" to describe a fraudulent
medical practitioner comes from the German "quacksalber", meaning
"quicksilver", and came into use because dentists used "mercury
amalgams" to fill teeth. The truth is that the use of silver
amalgam to fill teeth was first proposed at the beginning of the
19th century and took about 30 years to gain any popularity. More
than 150 years before, in the 1646 book "Pseudodoxia Epidemica",
Sir Thomas Browne used the word "quacksalver" to describe what we
would now call a quack doctor. "Quacksalver" means a person who
makes meaningless noise ("quack") about his cure-all ointments
("salve"), and the word has nothing to do with mercury. The word "quacksalber"
in German means exactly what "quacksalver" means in English (and
Dutch) and has done so for several centuries. The German word for
mercury is "quecksilber" ("nimble silver"). Also, there is no such
thing as a "mercury amalgam" because the word "amalgam" means an
alloy of mercury and some other metal. The response I received was
to be told that I was just repeating the lies of the ADA about
mercury amalgam, and that word "quack" comes from the German word
"quacksalber" ...
The second myth was that when amalgam fillings were first
suggested, dentists were banned from using them by their
professional body. The American Dental Association then came along
with its vested interests, killed the professional body and forced
dentists to use amalgam. The truth is that there was an
organisation set up to oppose amalgam fillings, but this was
because the cheaper amalgams threatened the lucrative practice of
filling teeth with gold. The organisation collapsed after a short
time when it was found that the total membership was not enough to
provide a quorum for the annual meeting, even if everyone turned
up. The ADA was set up shortly after this collapse, and was (I
think) the first professional society for dentists in the world,
and some patents for amalgam formulas were assigned to the ADA but
there was no monetary value and the patents have long expired..
Nobody has ever been forced to fill teeth with amalgam. The
response in this case was that I was repeating the lies of the
ADA, which makes millions from its patents on amalgams. When
amalgams first appeared, dentists were banned ...
The next falsehood was that Harry Hoxsey invented a cure for
cancer, but Dr Morris Fishbein, President of the American Medical
Association, tried to buy the formula to suppress it. Hoxsey
refused to sell it to him, but Fishbein used his enormous power as
AMA President to destroy Hoxsey's work and make sure that nobody
could ever have access to this miracle cure. I would have a jar of
Hoxsey's miracle cure on my desk, except that I lent it to a
television producer. It is readily available off the Internet. Dr
Morris Fishbein was never President of the AMA, but was the editor
of JAMA for some years, and in Hoxsey's own autobiography he says
that the person who offered to buy his formula was Dr Martin
Harris, who later became President of the AMA but wasn't at the
time. The response to this was remarkable, as I was told: "It
doesn't matter if he was president or editor. Look up corruption
and Fishbein in Google".
The final myth is one of my favourites, and it was expressed
this time as: "Medical errors topped out at some 752,000 admitted
deaths". For the truth, you only have to go to
http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/fastats/deaths.htm to see the latest
death statistics for the USA. There were 2,416,425 deaths in 2001
and the top ten causes were heart disease (700,142), cancer
(553,768), stroke (163,538), chronic lower respiratory diseases
(123,013), accidents (101,537), diabetes (71,372),
influenza/pneumonia (62,034), Alzheimer's disease (53,852),
nephritis, nephrotic syndrome, and nephrosis (39,480) and
septicaemia (32,238). When you subtract these numbers from the
total it leaves 515,446 for all other causes combined, somewhat
less than the 752,000 "medical mistakes". I received two responses
to this. One was to quote the CDC figures and repeat the 752,000
number. The other was to say that the real number was 195,000 and
this made medical mistakes the sixth leading cause of death after
"diabetes, influenza, pneumonia, Alzheimer's disease and kidney
disease".
Sigh!
This article by Peter Bowditch was published in the
September
2004
edition of Australasian
Science
