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A Boy, His Brain, and a Decades-Long Medical Controversy

12 pointsby cdjkalmost 2 years ago

2 comments

torstenvlalmost 2 years ago
The doctor&#x27;s dismissal of the boy&#x27;s condition (&quot;That’s a made-up disease&quot;) is in the same key of some of the discussion yesterday in &quot;When dying patients want unproven drugs&quot; <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=36393327">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=36393327</a><p>It is shameful that so much of the medical establishment rejects evidence that hasn&#x27;t been peer reviewed and published. It&#x27;s even more shameful when juxtaposed with the acceptance of evidence that <i>has</i> been peer-reviewed and published, but is nevertheless unreliable.<p>To say that inflammation from an infection is &quot;made up&quot; while also claiming that &quot;psychiatric drugs and talk therapy are backed up by decades of robust scientific evidence,&quot; despite the replication failure—or just bad math—in so much of psych, is positively medieval.
unsupp0rtedalmost 2 years ago
&gt; The tests kept coming back normal. Neurologists referred him to psychiatrists. Psychiatrists referred him back to neurologists. Pediatricians recommended therapists. Therapists suggested psychologists.<p>Oh boy are cycles like this familiar. I remember when a respirologist referred me to a psychologist for my inability to take good breaths. &quot;Stress&quot; (i.e. hypochondria probably)<p>Well eventually a gastroenterologist realized it was stomach acid bubbling up into my throat or something like that. I&#x27;ve been on Nexium for 15 years now, and I can breathe just fine.