At the annual meeting of the American Public Health Association in Chicago, following a two days’ discussion of preventive measures against Influenza and Pneumonia, Dr. Chas. J. Hastings, president of the organization said: “A tremendous amount of damage is done by interfering with nature, when nature would have done better had she been left alone. We have very little power over pneumonia. I am convinced that as many patients have been killed by physicians as have been cured.”
The talented “Health” editor of the Los Angeles Times, commenting upon these matters, writes: “The handling of this epidemic by ‘health boards’ and doctors who have been running around like wet chickens—their eyes, however, fastened on the feed box—has furnished another striking evidence of the futility of what is misnamed ‘Medical Science.’”
All this carries one back 50 years to the memory of Sir John Forbes, Court Physician to the late Queen Victoria of England, and the eminent Editor of the British and Foreign Medical Review, who thus tersely recorded the scientific conclusions arrived at in the course of his long, professional experience, in connection with drugs, drug medication and allopathy, under the title of “Why we should not be poisoned because we are sick:” “Firstly,—that in a large proportion of cases treated by allopathic physicians, the disease is cured by nature and not by them. Secondly,—that in not a small proportion, the disease is cured by nature in spite of them. Thirdly,—that consequently, in a considerable proportion of diseases it would fare as well or better with patients if all remedies, especially drugs, were abandoned;” and he emphatically adds: “Things have come to such a pass that they must either mend or end.” This, be it remembered, was in 1868,—50 years ago—and such frankness would not have been tolerated from other than “Sir John”—for, as was said by an inspired American: “He who dares to see a truth not recognized in creed must die the death.” And now indeed is revealed the wisdom of Shakespeare when he said: “Ignorance is the Curse of God;” or of Bolinbroke’s bitter assertion: “Plain truth will influence half a score men at most in a nation or an age, while mystery will lead millions by the nose.”
I am not prepared to endorse the cynical saying of Voltaire: “Regimen is superior to medicine—especially as from time immemorial out of every hundred physicians ninety-eight are charlatans.” But this much is certain, that they have found the needs of nature too laborious—the pathway of their leader—the Great Hippocrates—of Galen, Sydenham, Boerhaave, too tame, and have listened to the lure of Paracelsus, and adopted, with its high pontificial manner and medication, the more luxurious empiricism of the medicasters of five centuries ago.
But the time has come when the reign of bigotry, drugs and mystery must have an end—the chartered lien on human life must cease and the antique secret consistories so long omnipotent, must be brought to the enlightened level of the day.