Volume 35 No 2 January 1965

Page 1

Editorial

At the Ninety-Seventh Annual Meeting of The Canadian Medical Association, held during the summer in Vancouver, Jesse D . Rising speaking on "The General Practitioner in a Changing World" made the following observation : "People, unable to obtain the services of a general practitioner, have turned to specialists, Christian Science practitioners, chiropractors, and assorted quacks;" In this issue of the Journal some of the psuedomedical cults are examined more closely to find out more about their philosophy of disease, their methods of treatment, and their success in treating sick people. And success they have, as many a former patient of a chiropractor, an osteopath or the like will readily testify. This poses the question why do they succeed, sometimes even in cases where the medical profession apparently failed? Could it be that the medical profession is becoming too scientific and is making the error which Plato warned against two thousand years ago: "For this is the greatest error of our day that physicians separate the soul from the body"? Also, in this issue, we have a review of the literature on vitamin E as a therapeutic agent. Over the years much has been said about vitamin E but its action and its uses still are shrouded in ignorance. Many claims and counter-claims have been made but few appear to be based on truly objective evidence. Recognizing that any improvement in the patient's condition is desirable even if it can be measured in terms of the subjective only, the need for objective evaluation of therapeutic agents is obvious. The literature on vitamin E indicates a need for more Science and less Art in the evaluation of therapeutic agents and procedures. G.J. M. T.

JANUARY,

1965

41


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