By John Pint
Some years ago, on returning to Mexico after a very long flight from Oman, I
contracted some kind of respiratory disease and got very sick. Doctors
prescribed antibiotics and I took them while slipping deeper and deeper
into a zombie-like state in which I could barely move.
I put up with this for several weeks and then went to a lab where tests
were performed on my blood to see what pathogens I had in my system. By
the time I got the results (about ten days later), I was feeling
somewhat better.
I handed the lab report to a doctor. “¡Caray!” he said. “This is a list
of some of the deadliest viruses around. You had eleven of them,
including H1N1 and H3N2, but now you're completely clear. How did you
do it?”
Well, it wasn't the antibiotics, I learned, “because they don't work
against viruses.”
In my opinion, this was a dramatic example of my Self-Healing System at
work, but by no means the only example in my life. Over many years I've seen my
body heal fractured ribs, free me of frequent headaches and entirely
eliminate salmonella bacteria which had been hiding for years in my
spleen—unreachable by antibiotics.
What I'm calling the Self-Healing System is usually referred to as the
Immune System, but because it works 24 hours a day to repair just about
any anomaly that comes along, I think the word “immune” doesn't do
justice to this inner doctor's wide-ranging expertise.
Recently, a team of doctors from Harvard University began a project to
seriously study the organism's ability to heal itself. They were
inspired to do this after witnessing dramatic clinical tests involving
the placebo effect. In one such study, which took place in Houston,
Texas, arthroscopic surgery was performed on people with a crippling
knee problem. A second group of volunteers with precisely the same
problem underwent a simulated operation in which cuts were made in
their knees, but the cartilage-smoothing procedure required was not
performed. To add realism to the simulated operation, a tape recording
of the real procedure was played while the patient was under sedation.
To the great surprise of Dr. Bruce Moseley of Baylor College Medicine,
who performed the real operations and the simulations, the results
inside the knees of both groups of patients were identical. The
patients who had not been operated on were up and walking around just
like those who had had the surgery—and their knees are pain-free even
today.
This case and others equally baffling provoked the foundation of a
group called the Harvard Placebo Study Group, led by Harvard's Dr. Anne
Harrington, author of The Cure Within: A History of Mind-Body Medicine
(N.Y. 2007). In the words of group member Professor Fabrizio Benedetti
of the University of Turin School of Medicine, “The placebo effect has
evolved from being thought of as a nuisance in clinical pharmacological
research to a biological phenomenon worthy of scientific investigation
in its own right.”
In Mexico, such studies have been ongoing for at least 165 years. The
body's ability to heal itself is, in fact, at the very heart of
homeopathic medicine, whose popularity among Mexicans is witnessed by
the saying “Everybody uses it but the doctors.” In reality, the
ingredients of homeopathic medicine are not designed to affect some
part of the body chemically, the ways pharmaceuticals do, but simply to
alert the Self-Healing System to a condition that needs attention. If
the right homeopathic product has been chosen, the body then cures
itself in the same way that it cured the knees of patients who had not
been operated on in the Houston experiment.
I think the same principle is behind acupuncture, a form of treatment
which has been in continuous use for at least 2000 years. The
acupuncturist inserts ultra-thin needles at key points in the body and
twists them to produce a slight tingling, telling the Self-Healing
System where to go to work.
Once upon a time, while visiting my ailing mother in the USA, I tried
to take her to an acupuncturist. To my surprise, the doctor told me by
phone that “Wisconsin law allows acupuncture only for helping smokers
kick their habit.” Thanks to the overpowering control of the American
Medical Association (AMA) in the USA, only one of the various schools
of medicine in the world is allowed to operate freely in that country,
while all others are labeled quackery.
Today, Mexico is a haven not only for acupuncturists, naturistas,
biofeedback therapists and homeopaths, but also for proponents of
cancer cures like Laetrile, who were driven across the border to escape
the wrath of the AMA and the big pharmaceutical companies. Now,
however, a respected team of researchers from Harvard are breaking the
taboos and focusing on a subject to which every school of medicine
should give top priority: how does the Self-Healing System work and how
can doctors help it to do its job?
To see a documentary on the placebo effect and the Harvard Placebo
Study Group, click here or go to topdocumentaryfilms.com or YouTube and search for
“Placebo: Cracking the Code.”
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