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Drugs
and Doctors May be the Leading Cause of Death in U.S.
By
Joseph Mercola, D.O.
At one time, the main title
of my Web site read:
Doctors
are the Third leading Cause of Death.
This title stemmed from a JAMA
article that was published over two years ago. This article, available
on my home page, was widely circulated on the Internet and was one
of the reasons why my Web site was initially popular.
However, JAMA actually published
a study a year earlier that could support that doctors may be the leading
cause of death in the United States.
This finding is more of a
speculation though, so below I have provided some other studies to support
this assertion.
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In 1994, an estimated 2,216,000
(1,721,000 to 2,711,000) hospitalized patients had serious adverse drug
reactions (ADRs) and 106,000 (76,000 to 137,000) had fatal ADRs, making
these reactions between the fourth and sixth leading cause of death.
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Fatal ADRs accounted for 0.32
percent (95 percent confidence interval (CI), 0.23 percent to 0.41 percent)
of hospitalized patients.
JAMA
April 15, 1998;279(15):1200-5
Serious
and Fatal Drug Reactions in US Hospitals
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Drug-related morbidity and mortality
have been estimated to cost more that $136 billion a year in United States.
These estimates are higher than the total cost of cardiovascular care or
diabetes care in the United States. A major component of these costs is
adverse drug reactions (ADE).
Healthsentinel.com
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The numbers of deaths reported
in data sets varied 34-fold and were up to several 100-fold less than values
based on extrapolations of surveillance programs.
Am
J Med August 1 2000;109(2):122-30
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About 0.05 percent of all hospital
admissions were certainly or probably drug-related.
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Incidence figures based on death
certificates only may seriously underestimate the true incidence of fatal
adverse drug reactions.
Eur
J Clin Pharmacol October 2002;58(7):479-82
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In one study of 200 patients,
ADRs may have contributed to the deaths of two (one percent) patients.
J
Clin Pharm Ther October 2000;25(5):355-61
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In a survey of over 28,000 patients,
ADRs were considered to be the cause of 3.4 percent of hospital admissions.
Of these, 187 ADRs were coded as severe. Gastrointestinal complaints (19
percent) represented the most common events, followed by metabolic and
hemorrhagic complications (nine percent). The drugs most frequently responsible
for these ADRs were diuretics, calcium channel blockers, nonsteroidal antiinflammatory
drugs and digoxin.
J
Am Geriatr Soc Dec 2002;50(12):1962-8
| DR.
MERCOLA'S COMMENT: |
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As health reporter Nick
Regush said last year:
"There is no way
to be nice about this. There is no point in raising false hopes. There
is no treatment or vaccine in sight. There is no miracle breakthrough on
the horizon.
Medicine,
as we know it, is dying. It's entering a terminal phase.
What began as an acute
illness reached the chronic stage about a decade ago and progression toward
death has been remarkably swift and well beyond anything one could have
predicted.
The disease is caused by
conflict of interest, tainted research, greed for big bucks, pretentious
doctors and scientists, lying, cheating, invasion by the morally bankrupt
marketing automatons of the drug industry, derelict politicians and federal
and state regulators - all seasoned with huge doses of self-importance
and foul odor."
Currently, the United
States spends about 1.5 trillion dollars for healthcare, and the projections
are that it will double in less than 10 years.
The sad tragedy is that
we are spending all of this money on disease management focused on drugs
and surgery, and our return on this investment is profoundly poor. More
and more people do not have the energy they need to get through the day
while millions of others are suffering with painful crippling diseases
because they have violated basic health principles.
Often, negative health
and lifestyle choices are made because of a lack of knowledge, and it's
my passion to increase the public's awareness of the health tragedies facing
the nation. I will give you, the consumer, the tools to become a major
force for good health and to alleviate disease and suffering.
At Mercola.com, we have
been steadily working to introduce innovative software that will accelerate
this process, but finishing the manuscript of my book pushed the project
back a bit. The beta version will be released shortly and I hope to have
the full version out very soon.
The software will help
all of us to transform the system together.
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