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The Rise and Fall of Pharmacracy

By Christopher Kent, DC, JD

Psychiatrist Thomas S. Szasz (1) has written extensively on the medicalization of American politics. Medicalization is defined as a process or tendency whereby the phenomena, which had belonged to another field such as education, law, religion, and so on, have been redefined as medical phenomena. (2) Thus, medicalization is a process by which the medical profession asserts authority over a sphere of life previously overseen by guardians of morality.

Szasz describes the ideologies of legitimization: theocracy (God’s will); democracy (consent of the governed); socialism (economic equality); and pharmacracy (the therapeutic state). The emergence of the therapeutic state is a product of the 20th century.

From 1776 to 1914, the federal government played no role in civilian medicine. In 1914, the first antinarcotic legislation was enacted. As the century progressed, the federal government’s role in medicine exploded. Szasz offers the following statistics:

  • In 1950, funding for the National Institute for Mental Health was less than $1 million. In 1992, it reached $1 billion.

  • In 1965, when Medicare and Medicaid were enacted, their cost was approximately $65 billion. In 1193, it was nearly $939 billion.

  • Between 1960 and 1998, the public expenditure on health care increased more than one hundred times, from $35 to $3,633.

  • In addition to these expenditures, government spending in general went from a budget of $13.6 billion is fiscal 1941, to $1.65 trillion in 1998.

One of Szasz’s greatest insights is his description of the process where coercion is transformed into medical therapy:

1. The subject’s “condition” is diagnosed as a disease.

2. The intervention imposed is defined as a treatment.

3. Legislators and judges ratify these categorizations as “diseases” and “treatments.”

The traditional role of coercion as a public health measure dealt with the transmission of communicable diseases. Persons with communicable diseases were quarantined (as in measles) or banished (as in leprosy). Yet as a growing number of behaviors were defined as “diseases” coerced treatment was added to the armamentarium of public health and state authority.

Medicalized conditions include such diverse conditions as gambling (3), smoking (4), gun violence (5), and racism (6). Coercion is used not merely to isolate those with communicable diseases, but to force treatments on persons with tuberculosis, alcoholism, and a plethora of mental illnesses” where the subject is deemed a threat to “self and others.” Children are particularly susceptible to coerced medical interventions, ranging from vaccination to behavior modifying drugs for such dubious diagnoses as ADD/ADHD. Even when parents elect alternative courses of health care, courts have ordered dangerous treatments against the wishes of both parents. Pharmacracy has led to an uncritical deference for allopathic intervention by the legislatures and the courts.

Thankfully, pharmacracy is a 20th century paradigm. As we approached the turn of the century (and the new millennium), a subtle revolution was building steam. Despite economic disincentives, and medicine’s cultural authority, Americans sought to reclaim control over their lives and turned to “alternative” care in unprecedented numbers.

A study by Eisenberg (7) found that in 1990, 34 percent of the people surveyed used at least one “unconventional” intervention in the past year. Indeed, their visits to “alternative” practitioners exceeded visits to primary care medical physicians in that year. A follow-up study (8) in 1997 reported that utilization of “alternative” health care had increased to 42.1 percent. Total out-of-pocket expenditures doubled.

The trend is growing. Kessler (9) reported that 67.6 percent of those surveyed had used at least one “complementary” or “alternative” approach to health care in their lifetime. According to the article, utilization by Baby Boomers is about half, and use by post-Baby Boomers (who have reached the age of 33) is 70 percent.

The true revolution, however, is not in seeking different techniques for treating disease. It is the emergence of a different perspective on the human condition. This is the distinction between “alternative treatment” and “wellness.” People have realized that valuable as medical treatment may be in its proper context, it does not address vital, core issues concerning the human condition.

Legendary economist Paul Zane Pilzer (10) has written, “What we call the ‘health care’ business is really the sickness business. The $1.4 trillion we spend on medical care is concerned with treating the symptoms of sickness. It has very little to do with being stronger or healthier.” Pilzer predicts that wellness is destined to become a trillion dollar industry.

Pilzer wrote, “I define ‘wellness’ as money spent to make you feel healthier, even when you’re not ‘sick’ by any standard medical terms ... As much as we focus on the financial and lifestyle benefits of the business, the real benefit is what you can do to change a life -- and the lives of all people who are touched by that life.”

Chiropractic is perfectly positioned to provide the leadership for the wellness movement, which is both a revolution and a renaissance. We have the opportunity to bring more fullness and joy to humanity than ever before. Will we rise to the challenge, or abdicate our birthright by limiting our vision? Open your mind, open your heart, and let your light shine. Embrace the challenge and change the world.

REFERENCES

  1. Szasz TS: The therapeutic state: the tyranny of pharmacracy. The Independent Review 2001;5(4):485.
  2. Sato A: Medicalization and medicalization theories.
  3. Potenza MN, et al: Pathological gambling. JAMA 2001;286(2):141.
  4. Antidepressant therapy may help COPD patients stop smoking. Reuters. London. 7/26/01.
  5. New AMA president takes on gun lobby. Reuters. Chicago. 6/21/01.
  6. Racism as mental illness. ABCNews.com. 6/1/01.
  7. Eisenberg DM, et al: Unconventional medicine in the United States. Prevalence, costs, and patterns of use. New England Journal of Medicine 1993;328(4):246.
  8. Eisenberg DM, et al: Trends in alternative medicine use in the United States, 1990-1997. JAMA 1998;280(18):1569.
  9. Kessler RC, et al: Long-term trends in the use of complementary and alternative medical therapies in the United States. Annals of Internal Medicine 3001;135(4):262.
  10. The next trillion. Interview with Paul Zane Pilzer. Network Marketing 2001 3(5):40.



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Article's Comment     ( 9 Comments )
 
 
 +8 Points           
 
Author of the Article
BY YourSpine   
  
[ Joined on 11/06 ]
[ Posted on November 14, 2007 ]
Post Reply

Health is a result of proper cellular function. Disease is the result of abnormal cellular function. The brain controls and regulates cellular function in the body through the nerve system. Chiropractors analyze, detect and correct any impediment to this communication network that results from misalignment of the vertebrae of the spine. The spine houses and protects the brain stem, the delicate spinal cord and the root nerves that exit at each vertebral level to facilitate two way communications between the brain and all other systems of the body. Visit www.YourSpine.com to learn more about the importance of the health, fitness and maintenance of the spine.

 

But it takes more than just a fully functioning nerve system to achieve proper cellular function and therefore health. A diet of natural, nutrient rich food, clean pure water, regular exercise, adequate restful sleep and emotional well being are all necessary in order to achieve and maintain a state of health.

 

Reflect back on this list and you will notice that none of these requisites can be patented or monopolized. They all require the active, ongoing participation of the health seeker. None can be used to funnel billions of dollars of wealth to one monopolistic group, like the pharmaceutical/medical cartel or industrialized food and beverage production groups.

Chiropractors are uniquely positioned to lead the Wellness Revolution as all of the above truths align perfectly with the principles and concepts on which chiropractic is founded. The opposite of industrialized food and medicine is natural food and health care as clearly as war is the opposite of peace. Perhaps with less of the former, we can have more of the latter.


 
 +6 Points           
 
Author of the Article
BY Bridestein   
  
[ Joined on 12/06 ]
[ Posted on November 12, 2007 ]
Post Reply
"Unless we put medical freedom into the Constitution, the time will come when medicine will be organized into an undercover dictatorship.
To restrict the art of healing to one class and to deny equal privileges to others will constitute the Bastille of medical science.
All such laws are un-American and despotic and have no place in a Republic.
The Constitution should make special privilege for medical freedom as well as religious freedom."

Benjamin Rush, physician, signer of the Declaration of Independence

 

 +4 Points           
 
Author of the Article
BY EQ   
  
[ Joined on 03/07 ]
Author of the Article [ Posted on November 13, 2007 ]
 
For many medical and religous (spiritual) freedom are one in the same.

            
 
Author of the Article
BY Russ Bianchi   
  
[ Joined on 09/06 ]
Author of the Article [ Posted on November 13, 2007 ]
 
'Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness"...

I think 'happiness' might well be defined as optimum health, liberty the ability unfettered to pursue said optimum health as life - long and prosperous a net effect of the first two essential rights.

Uncle Russ

 
 +5 Points           
 
Author of the Article
BY bigboy29   
  
[ Joined on 05/07 ]
[ Posted on November 13, 2007 ]
Post Reply
Awesome article - thank you!!

It is amazing that the whole "health" industry is setup in a way that it gets paid MORE if it has MORE customers. Was it in China (long ago) that doctors would get paid if they did not have any business? So it was in their interest to have healthy population?

I know - that makes way too much sense... sigh.
 

            
 
Author of the Article