The article treats this as a case of inadequate regulation — that the FDA is too willing to approve ineffective treatments, and that new liberalizing reforms will allow more ineffective treatments to market.
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(Yeah, it’s a bit less risky to have a hospital birth than a home birth, and it makes a big difference in an emergency. But in most cases, you’re fine either way.)
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Doctors and nurses should not be the only professional be-nice-to-you-when-you’re-sick-ers. Medical hospitals should not be the only place you can go when you need caretaking.
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Before they could treat TB with antibiotics, they took sick people to sanitariums. Basically no effective medicine went on there, just rest, care, a change of scene, and natural beauty. This fundamentally makes sense to me, given a disease medicine doesn’t know how to treat yet.
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(Plus it’s good for public health! Keeps sick people from infecting others!)
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Immune function affects how well you recover from *a lot* of diseases; and it responds to stress. “Be nice to sick people and make their lives easier” is not pseudoscience; it makes a measurable difference.
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Obligatory topical tie-in: hospitals are gonna be overwhelmed with COVID19. Some people who get the disease need specialized equipment you can only get in an ICU to survive. Far more people are just gonna be, y’know, sick. Laid up, contagious, unable to get much done.
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We have *terrible* infrastructure as a society for dealing with “a lot of people need to rest up.” They’ll be clogging hospitals, they’ll be trying to push through and go to work, etc.
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It’s a measure of how good or bad we are at translating wealth into leisure, to see how well or poorly we can adapt to “lots of people are sick in bed.”
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End of conversation
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