Blind Spots: When Medicine Gets It Wrong, and What It Means for Our Health
4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars | 64 ratings
Price: 21
Last update: 09-28-2024
About this item
Bloomsbury presents Blind Spots written and read by Dr Marty Makary
From Johns Hopkins medical expert Dr. Marty Makary, the New York Times-bestselling author of The Price We Pay—an eye-opening look at the medical groupthink that has led to public harm, and what you need to know about your health.
More Americans have peanut allergies today than at any point in history. Why? In 2000, the American Academy of Pediatrics issued a strict recommendation that parents avoid giving their children peanut products until they’re three years old. Getting the science perfectly backward, triggering intolerance with lack of early exposure, the US now leads the world in peanut allergies—and this misinformation is still rearing its head today.
How could the experts have gotten it so wrong? Dr. Marty Makary asks, Could it be that many modern-day health crises have been caused by the hubris of the medical establishment? Experts said for decades that opioids were not addictive, igniting the opioid crisis. They refused menopausal women hormone replacement therapy, causing unnecessary suffering. They demonized natural fat in foods, driving Americans to processed carbohydrates as obesity rates soared. They told citizens that there are no downsides to antibiotics and prescribed them liberally, causing a drug-resistant bacteria crisis.
When modern medicine issues recommendations based on good scientific studies, it shines. Conversely, when modern medicine is interpreted through the harsh lens of opinion and edict, it can mold beliefs that harm patients and stunt research for decades. In Blind Spots, Dr. Makary explores the latest research on critical topics ranging from the microbiome to childbirth to nutrition and longevity and more, revealing the biggest blind spots of modern medicine and tackling the most urgent yet unsung issues in our $4.5 trillion health care ecosystem. The path to medical mishaps can be absurd, entertaining, and jaw-dropping—but the truth is essential to our health.
Top reviews from the United States
I still have very high regard for the field of medicine, but my views have been tempered in a useful way by this book. I think it could have a hugely positive effect by highlighting some of the opportunities to increase the receptivity of medicine to new ideas and new data.
This book really opened my eyes to the politics involved in research studies that i was never aware of. It actually angers me to see how closed-minded and set in their ways some of these doctors are. I, too, was fired from a job for standing up for what I believed in when I didn't agree with how things were happening, and it turned into a blessing in disguise. I have very strong feelings on some healthcare concerns that are being politicized and just tried to "fly under the radar" and not share my thoughts with people with opposing views just to not rock the boat, but once i started opening up debate dialogue I found both sides have valid points. I agree with Dr. Makary that we need more studies. On any topic, there should be 2 independent studies to validate results. Politics has no place in scientific research. Doctors should be allowed to research what they want, and journals shouldn't be able to quash legitimate articles just because they don't like how the results turned out. Their job should be to review the methodology and statistics to ensure it was not an "altered outcome" but not reject it on topic alone. To think that so many people have died because of the politics involved in progressive doctors questioning the status quo and trying to make it better is appalling. As Dr Makary says, saying, " I don't know" is better than making something up or passing off opinion as fact. His discussion about studies being done or falsified just to push the agenda of an industry shows the bias in the medical community is not towards improving healthcare and looking for a better way to help people, but to uphold their own prior achievements. I grew up learning that the only thing constant is change. Things are constantly changing. It is ok for things to be one way and new discoveries to change those things multiple times. Hopefully those behind the scenes responsible for preventing good new research will read this and take the blinders off and open their eyes to new ideas, at least be open to legitimate debate and research to prove or disprove those ideas, and not just shut them down because they dont like the idea initially.
I know this from firsthand experience, since I got blacklisted from conferences for calling out the workplace wellness industry, which as coincidence would have it was enabled by a lower-level employee of Dr. Makary’s own institution. Remember when your employer used to hire a “vendor” to line you up to take your blood and tell you and your employer all the undiagnosed diseases you had? The data quite clearly showed zero value in this but a combination of groupthink, profitability and payoffs to benefits consultants kept it going long past its Sell By date.
Now imagine this groupthink thing playing out in the medical field as a whole. Accurate data is developed by independent, underfunded iconoclasts contradicting the consensus, a consensus feeding many careers. As Upton Sinclair said: “You can’t convince someone of something whose salary depends on believing the opposite.”
So the medical establishment suppresses this dissent, blacklists the dissenters, and cuts off their research funding. The Blind Spot provides numerous examples of this.
Example: antibiotics are not “harmless,” and are probably prescribed maybe twice as often as they should be, especially for children. Children given multiple antibiotics as babies and toddlers end up with adverse effects that don’t show up until years latger.
Example: hormone replacement therapy got a bad rap due to one study way back in 2002 and is only now getting its mojo back as a quality-of-life improvement that also significantly reduces common health risks.
Example: many people still don’t eat eggs because some researchers were bribed almost a half-century ago by the sugar lobby to demonize fat-and-cholesterol. It’s taken decades to undo that lie, largely because dissenters were suppressed. (My own nutrition course was taught by one of those perps, and it took me decades to get over it.) Even today, sugary products advertise “Contains No Cholesterol.”
Example: most deadly ovarian cancers don’t originate in the ovaries. They originate in the fallopian tubes. This is well-established. But women are still subjected to invasive surgeries that don’t address this root cause.
My only complaint about Blind Spot is that all the things that could have been in there that aren’t. For instance, few people know that most cavities (including my own, as it turned out) can be treated painlessly for $40 or less with a couple of drops of silver diamine fluoride. It’s been around for years, but for obvious reasons dentists don’t tell you about it. Perhaps Dr. Makary is saving nuggets like this one for a sequel…