INTRODUCTION
THE INCREASED USE OF NATURAL medicines and remedies
over the past decade has prompted one of the most exciting
developments in healthcare in our time. Many of the tenets of
modern medicine have been challenged, and the crisis that
conventional healthcare is now facing is the result of its own
philosophy. The main premise of conventional medicine is that curing
disease will lead to good health. This ignores the fundamental concept
that pathology is individual to the sufferer, and that prevention is
ultimately more important than treatment for the population at large.
This idea is borne out by the fact that modern medicine is simply not as efficient
or effective as we have been led to believe; indeed, evidence suggests that it may
cause and create more fatal diseases than it cures, and despite the huge sums of
money invested, the populations of the U.K., Australia, the U.S., and most of
Europe do not live as long or as healthily as people from other cultures, where
healthcare investment is substantially lower.
Adverse drug reactions and side-effects are one of the 10 most common
reasons for hospitalization in the U.S. The information provided to doctors and
physicians throughout the course of their careers is largely funded by the
pharmaceutical industry, which earns billions each year from sales of
prescription and over-the-counter medicines. As a result, we, in the West, have
been encouraged to adopt a “pill-popping” approach to health—taking an
average of 26.5 million pills per hour. Sleeping tablets, analgesics (painkillers),
antihistamines, sedatives, and antidepressants rank among the top 20 drugs
prescribed by physicians, and more than 52 million aspirin or acetaminophen
tablets are taken each day in the U.S.
Perhaps the most alarming result of this over-dependence upon drugs is the
fact that we have stopped taking responsibility for our own health. When we
have a headache, we take a painkiller; when we have a cold, we might take an
antihistamine. We suppress the symptoms of health conditions because we want
to feel better; we no longer accept the logic that pain or discomfort is a message