Originally posted by Pikaia
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Charlies dodgy influence strikes again
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Resurrection Man
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Originally posted by scottycelt View PostDo you think the NHS should use public money to provide artificial insemination for single women and lesbian couples, Flossie ... ?
This is not meant to be flippant but a serious question!
Anyway, I fail to see what this has to do with the influence Charlie exerts (or tries to exert). Unless you think that, just as he had to have someone help him collect a urine sample, he needed help with
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Originally posted by teamsaint View PostStatistics must well know, to be treated carefully.nother equally valid set, (deaths per journey) it is one of the least safe. I accept the validity of those Wiki stats, but how
By one set of reliable statistics, air travel is the safest means of transport. But by awe use or interpret them is critical
Statistics need using carefully, and can, as we all know, be used to our disadvantage.
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amateur51
Originally posted by Resurrection Man View PostPerhaps. One would hope that all treatment options were explained to the patient. Just because you (or others) don't think that homeopathy works, doesn't necessarily make it so. For my part, I also don't think that homeopathy works but, as ts has pointed out so many times, many people do. And for that reason I don't see why it shouldn't be available on the NHS.
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Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostThis sort of argument in relation to statistics often conceals an attempt to dismiss evidence entirely, or else to treat two or more possibilities as being of equal weight, when they are not. Statistics are facts. Assuming the research has been of acceptable quality, the statistics provide real evidence.
If I saw a reliable stat that said showed that the vast majority of people using NHS Homeopathy returned for conventional treatment, that would be hugely persuasive. I haven't seen such statistics. If they exist and are reliable, then that is fine.
Going back to VCs air travel stats, which are clear enough, is it safer to travel by air or bus? Its not clear to me at all from the stats, although I can draw certain conclusions.
Here are the stats.
Which demonstrates very nicely how we should be wary of, but not ignore, the statistical facts.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View PostThe NHS should provide the sorts of treatments that people want.
it should provide the treatments that WORK
not waste valuable resources on witchcraft
I also am self employed and had a life threatening condition , I had excellent treatment which stopped me dying ....... no help financially BUT compared to the alternative i'm happy (but much poorer in cash terms) .....
This is a classic case where the retail business model doesn't work.
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Well we have to disagree, MrGG.
You had the great treatment that you deserved. I didn't.
The question of which treatments work, or are offered is a huge one, and the people who pay and use the service deserve a say, as they do in every other walk of life. A retail model has nothing at all to do with it.
There are plenty of conventional treatments offered which probably shouldn't be, (and which waste money to boot) for example oral retinoids to youngsters with mild skin conditions. The question about why that kind of treatment is offered is actually a lot more important than a discussion about homeopathy, on which the NHS actually spends very little.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View PostThere are plenty of treatments offered which probably shouldn't be, for example oral retinoids to youngsters with mild skin conditions.
The consultant surgeon who did my operation has spent his whole life learning about a small niche of medicine so I would rather trust people with that amount of knowledge than some made up nonsense about dilution increasing the power etc
As said before, there's nothing wrong with ignorant folk spending their cash on sugar pills BUT to endorse this nonsense or even suggest that somehow it has legitimacy is very dangerous indeed.
It is a retail model to say that because you pay you should decide about the details.
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Not talking about details, just about the principle that those who use and pay should have an input into the kinds of treatments offered.
That is different to a retail model.
people do indeed need to be well informed about homeopathy. They also need to be well informed about potentially dangerous conventional treatments like oral retinoids, for example, and they frequently aren't, and that is very dangerous.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View PostNot talking about details, just about the principle that those who use and pay should have an input into the kinds of treatments offered.
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In my case I had three choices
1: Big operation with an excellent chance of complete recovery (but not without pain)
2: A life without moving about too much and hope to be ok (but probably die at a random moment and in agonising pain)
3: Carry on and die painfully at a random moment
I certainly didn't want to be offered
4: Wave a magic stick which will use the power of fairies to make everything better and align the chakras to co-incide with the setting sun on Glastonbury Tor at the equinox.........(and also suffer a painful death caused by internal bleeding at a random moment)
So I guess suffering and death are always inevitable BUT I think I made the right choice
It's fraudulent and dishonest to suggest that Homeopathy is an effective treatment, which is NOT to say that everything in "orthodox" medicine is wonderful.
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It is your(and plenty of other peoples) opinions that homeopathy is as you say.
Lots of people , though, disagree with you, and I think they should have their opinions taken into account.It is a very substantial group of people after all.
Choice, input,call it what you will,is very important, whether at the personal or strategic level.Last edited by teamsaint; 17-02-13, 12:55.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by Resurrection Man View PostPerhaps. One would hope that all treatment options were explained to the patient. Just because you (or others) don't think that homeopathy works, doesn't necessarily make it so. For my part, I also don't think that homeopathy works but, as ts has pointed out so many times, many people do. And for that reason I don't see why it shouldn't be available on the NHS.
If "some people think it works" is to be the criterion, then surely these, too, should be available on the NHS. Would you be comfortable with that?
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