by xrn » Mon Nov 19, 2007 6:39 pm
My frustration is probably now evident (to anyone reading this) after my seeing the programme on TV. I had written to THINCS in an effort to generate a sense of coherence and to try and foment some action. herewith...
Re: The ITV programme "Tonight" - UK TV (oh dear me)
Oh dear me. I could not have been less prescient and more wrongheaded, when I had used the phrase "another confusing presentation of anodyne frippery" for this TV programme before it was broadcast. It was a complete whitewash... in the pejorative sense of the word... it was a camouflage, a deception, a façade.
Any sense of balance was completely absent from this execrable example of the TV programme maker's art. The take home message was repeatedly drummed home... bad cholesterol needs to be dealt with either by some sort of wild-eyed diet (sorry, "lifestyle", in a nod to the good Dr Jarvis) or being told that we must have statins to reduce our bad cholesterol. Her gushing to each of the three guinea pigs, over the apparent reduction in risk, was acutely embarrassing. It was merely the back of a cigarette packet statistics, for the hard of thinking. Bah!
[Please Note: the word 'wild' has replaced another perfectly acceptable word... when juxtaposed with the word 'eyed' but this site had inserted a row of asterisks so I have changed the word so that the sense of the paragraph is largely unaltered.]
Where were the incisive interviews with medical professionals? Why was the doctor from Pfizer allowed to have so much air time? How could he be permitted to dismiss the damage as minor and only affecting a few people, with no balancing counter-argument to be seen or heard? Why were just a few members of the public, who had the misfortune to have had bad experiences on statins, the only 'evidence' for possible harm. No Uffe? No Malcolm? No Duane?
The programme was a shocking travesty of journalism, with an indecent disregard for facts, combined with a deliberate obfuscation of truth. Disgraceful and odious TV at its worst and the only time it will be acknowledged as such, is when a TV producer/director is forced to take statins or has a close relative who is statin-damaged.
It would be inhuman to hope that any family member or friend, of the TV executives who were responsible for the broadcasting of this sordid programme, has to become statin-damaged before the instructional elements of such a happenstance become obvious to the miscreants who had a hand in approving this egregious TV programme.
I urge the THINCS community to consider the value of the THINCS organisation, without a public face. Agreeing with the converted may well produce a nice warm fuzzy feeling but it will not be doing much to bring about the necessary change in attitudes within the medical profession nor will it have any substantial effect on public opinion. The power of the drug company cash was obvious from this 30 minute programme. I am of the opinion that if THINCS started to talk to the public directly, it would contribute something to short circuiting the power of the drug companies.
Is THINCS up to the task of changing opinions? The medical profession opinion is formed by the opinion makers like Dr Solomon Grundy, or so it would appear. What strategies can THINCS offer in the face of such overwhelming (and approved of) power? Where national governments are being dragged around by their nose rings, what hope does THINCS have
of changing perceptions.
What lies ahead (in the UK at any rate) is the increasing use of pharmacists to advise the public on their health. Oh wait... they also sell over the counter statins. So the issues discussed on the THINCS forum are much wider than... should medic A, be prescribing
substance B, for condition C. The public have no-one to trust their healthcare to and the situation is not about to get any better.
I ask these questions in all seriousness because I believe that I can see some very serious people using this forum to ask pertinent questions about the wisdom behind the mass statinisation of innocent victims. I would opine that what is needed are more simple statements like the TV image of Malcolm eating a cream cake. It would surely provoke people to say... "well that doctor was eating a huge cream cake so cholesterol is clearly not worrying him". (indeed, we should not be restricted to watching just Malcolm eating cream cakes... I say cream cakes for all!)
I don't see how public opinion will ever be engaged by abstruse and erudite medical debate, especially since they are unlikely to see it written down or to hear it. Nevertheless, the drip drip of the cholesterol/heart hypothesis and the bad cholesterol message, is corrosive and unhelpful but getting through and becoming a standard mantra. It is being seen and heard daily, by medics, as well as lay members of the public.
The outcome is that the cholesterol/heart hypothesis is no longer a discredited theory but a living fact that we must all act upon (or die?). Dr Jarvis was clear that her patients who did not reduce their bad cholesterol by the dietary changes she supported, would 'have to' take statins. This is new... telling patients what they must do. I guess it must be the thought of all those lovely QOF payments that is causing this particular blind spot.
While I have enjoyed the recent illuminating comment from Leib (and others) and have watched the spirited defence (Anthony) of some issues... it amounts to little more than a 'hill of beans'. I can stand back and admire the stance taken by Henry David Thoreau (Walden and Civil Disobedience) yet the selfish approach of divorcing oneself, from that
which irks us, does not fix anything that may be wrong with the society we inhabit. Had statins been put into Thoreau's water without his knowledge, his stance would have been utterly meaningless.
Once again, I implore the THINCS community to consider what ought to be done, what needs to be done and then to work on a strategy to actually do something, en masse so that it has the authority of like-minds, rather than restricting the group to discussing the merits and demerits of any particular academic argument, for, in my view, it is tantamount (albeit unintentionally) to fiddling while Rome burns.
In an impromptu straw poll, how many of the THINCS membership would agree with the notion that statins are bad?
Respectfully,
Jeff