What You Should Know About Drugs Part I
In 1976, Tom Ferguson — then a fourth-year medical
student at Yale — launched a magazine called Medical
Self-Care . . . which — he hoped — would serve as "a
Whole Earth Catalog of the best medical books, tools, and
resources".
Tom spoke of his plans for the publication —
and of his conviction that self-care could raise the general
level of health in this country and lower our inflated levels of
medical spending — in the Plowboy Interview in
MOTHER NO. 51 . . . and left no doubt that he would work toward
making those "dreams"come true.
Well, Tom Ferguson is Doctor Ferguson now, and the medical
self-care "movement" — as well as Tom's
magazine — has flourished. People are beginning to
assume more responsibility for their own well-being and are eager
for information that will help them take better care of their
bodies.
So — in an effort to provide just such very
necessary data — THE MOTHER EARTH NEWS' offers as
a regular feature a piece by Tom Ferguson, M.D., entitled (what
else?) "Medical Self-Care".
MEDICAL SELF-CARE
This month's column is about the role of drugs in self-care,
and contains the first part of an interview I had with Joe
Graedon. Joe's a pharmacologist, the author of The People's
Pharmacy (available for $4.95 from Avon Books, 959 Eighth Avenue,
New York, New York 10019), which is the book for folks who want
to improve their understanding of prescription and
nonprescription drugs. He also serves as a consultant to the
Federal Trade Commission, does a bi-weekly radio show for
National Public Radio, and is on the staff of Medical Self-Care
magazine. What follows is an edited version of our
conversation.
** ** ** ** **
FERGUSON: What is the most important fact to
know about drugs?
GRAEDON: First and foremost, don't ever focus
your treatment efforts exclusively on such substances. If you
have an ailment, first try to understand the problem, its causes,
and its symptoms. Learn what's going on with your body and how it
relates to the rest of your life. Then you can consider ways of
treatment . . . with a pharmaceutical product being just one
possible way of dealing with the ailment.
FERGUSON: What should you ask your doctor
when he or she prescribes a drug?
GRAEDON: Anytime you're considering taking
medication, you've got to weigh the potential benefits against
the potential drawbacks. So you should learn right off whether
the drug you may take is intended to give purely symptomatic
relief — which will not lead to a cure — or will
actually help your body remedy its underlying ailment.
You should also find out about the medicine's common side
effects, serious or not . . . about all possible drug
interactions with other substances . . . and about any dangerous
reactions the remedy has been known to cause, no matter how
infrequently such repercussions may occur. Be sure, as well, that
you know what the early warning signs for the serious side
effects are.
Don't neglect to learn the name of the drug, either . . . that
simple but vital fact is frequently not provided to the consumer.
And I'm talking about the generic term . . . not just the brand
name. In fact, if you're going to be taking a combination remedy,
write down every ingredient in the medicine and-if you can
-obtain from your doctor an information sheet about each of
them.
Lastly, make certain that you under stand precisely how to
administer the drug — "before meals" is not a very specific
time guide, for instance — and the reasons for the
instructions.
FERGUSON: Are there any completely safe
drugs?
GRAEDON: No, indeed. There are potential
problems with all pharmaceuticals. Often, though, doctors and
clients risk being lulled into thinking that particular
medications are completely harmless . . . so let your doctor know
about any side effects you experience from a drug, no matter how
minor the reaction. Otherwise, the physician might not think to
warn the next patient to whom he or she gives the medication.
FERGUSON: Why do most people rely so heavily
on drugs for treatment?
GRAEDON: I think there are four main reasons
for that dependency. One cause is the vast number of
advertisements for over-the-counter drugs. Just count the number
of medication-oriented ads you see on television in one week!
Children are bound to grow up thinking that such potions are the
answer to all health problems.
The second cause for our culture's drug reliance is the even
more intense advertising efforts drug manufacturers make to
promote their products to doctors. Pharmaceutical companies have
thousands of employees whose sole job is to go to physicians'
offices and "push" their drugs. Not only that, but almost every
medical journal contains dozens of very expensive medication
commercials. Such a sales blitz can't help having a very big
impact on doctors' treatment tendencies.
Thirdly, health workers are educated to believe that "there's
a pill for every ill". Prevention and non-drug-oriented
treatments are too often either ignored or given only lip
service.
And finally, the time pressure involved in clinical visits
encourages drug therapy. The average doctor has perhaps 10 or 15
minutes to see each client. That's not enough time to think about
prevention . . . or even begin to ask how the current problem
might relate to the rest of an ailing person's life. In fact, 15
minutes is barely enough time to take a brief history, check the
individual's blood pressure, and then write a prescription.
FERGUSON: A lot of people would feel cheated
if they got advice instead of medication.
GRAEDON: Absolutely. Many of the pressures
for drug use come from the client. We live in an "instant"
society today, and — when folks are ill — they expect
instant relief. Besides that, the doctors who are charging you
$50 for a 15-minute visit aren't likely to recommend a
nonprescription treatment like aspirin, even if that common
medication happens to be the best and safest remedy for the
illness . . . people will feel that they could have done that
much for themselves.
FERGUSON: How can we break such patterns?
GRAEDON: People have to learn some basic
clinical medicine for themselves . . . health workers need to
step out of their authority roles a bit and share their own
uncertainties and doubts . . . and medical education needs to
stress non-drug treatment.
Right now, if someone comes into a physician's office with
high blood pressure, the doctor's first thought will usually be
to prescribe a thiazide diuretic . . . but a more appropriate
initial step might be to recommend that the person lose weight,
begin exercising, quit smoking, cut down on salt intake, learn
new ways of dealing with stress, or apply a useful combination of
these self-care approaches.
FERGUSON: What are some good self-health-care
tools that are available in drugstores?
GRAEDON: One very good tool is the dipstick
packet you can use to test your own urine. It provides a number
of easy, inexpensive, and completely safe screening tests for
excess sugar, blood, or protein in the urine.
Another new kit allows you to test your own stool specimen for
traces of blood. Persons over 40 should take such an examination
once a year: All they have to do is touch the fecal sample to a
piece of moistened test paper . . . the strip changes color if
blood is present.
And I highly recommend blood pressure cuffs for home use.
Having your own tester is very helpful if you have high blood
pressure and are working at controlling it on a self-help basis.
The cuff provides a kind of biofeedback.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Part II of the Joe Graedon interview,
covering the drugs that should be kept on hand at home, will
appear in MOTHER NO. 63. Tom Ferguson's quarterly journal,
Medical SelfCare, is available for $10 per year from MSC, Dept.
TMEN, Box 717, Inverness, California 94937.