Forgotten Foundations of Thyroid Knowledge
Mar 16, 2001 -
© Edna Kyrie
"Peter Medawar, Nobel prize-winner for his contributions to transplantation observed that...the real 'science' in medicine is the thorough understanding of the nature of a medical problem that comes from talking at length to the patient, and performing a physical examination to elicit the relevant signs of disease. From this old fashioned...style of medicine it is usually possible to infer precisely what is wrong in 90 percent of cases. By contrast, the technological gizmos and arcane tests that pass for the 'science' of medicine can frequently be quite misleading. The logic of Medawar's argument leads to the playful paradox that the more tests that doctors can do, the less 'scientific' (in the sense of generating reliable knowledge) medicine becomes." from The Rise and Fall of Modern Medicine by James Le Fanu 1999 Little, Brown and company 253 Perhaps that reasoning helps to explain why thyroid never achieved more status in mainstream medicine. Medicine has always gone in fits and starts claiming one idea as gospel and later rejecting it as untrue. Which ideas are taken up by the system is often the result of pure chance. Following is a brief selection of people whose work in the area of thyroid research has impressed me greatly. IF ONLY their ideas and research had been listened to and built upon by more of the medical profession.
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