Cure
is the Surest Path to Recognition of a Condition
There are stages that can make it easier for doctors to
recognize medical conditions:
-
A condition having a recognizable set of symptoms.
-
Some physical evidence of a problem, either
in the examination of the patient or in some kind of medical
test.
-
Symptoms that improve while patients are on
treatment.
-
Symptoms and findings remaining improved even
after treatment has been discontinued (persistent cure).
Stage 1 - Recognizable set of symptoms
Due to difficulties with the first stage above, many doctors still
refuse to recognize Depression, Fibromyalgia, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome,
Candida overgrowth, Mercury Toxicity, Multiple Chemical Sensitivities
and many other conditions as real medical problems. These conditions
can cause non-specific and generalized complaints. They are non-specific
because there can be quite a lot of overlap of symptoms with other
medical problems. The argument is, "If there are a lot of conditions
that can cause the same symptoms how do we know if they're separate
problems, and if they are, which one is causing the symptoms?"
Stage 2 - Physical evidence or test
Some doctors refuse to recognize conditions for which there is
no objective test or measure. For example, even though Migraine
Headaches is a well recognized diagnosis, patients suffering from
them still face great difficulties. This is because the treatment
for migraines is often an injection of narcotic pain medicine. However,
there is no objective test or measurement that proves a person is
or is not experiencing a migraine headache. So patients have to
convince and doctors have to decide that a patient is actually having
a migraine headache and is not simply pretending in order to get
a shot of narcotic. Many migraine patients must suffer the humiliation
of being suspected of being headache-faking drug addicts. Sadly,
some migraine patients do become addicted to the pain medication
they take which further complicates the issue. Likewise, there is
no objective test that can prove that a patient does or does not
have depression. Consequently, many doctors still do not regard
depression as a real or sure diagnosis.
Stage 3 - Symptoms improve with treatment
Symptoms improving with treatment can be compelling evidence of
the existence of an illness. Anti-depressants, for example, have
done a lot to legitimize Depression as a recognized condition since
they often alleviate the symptoms of depression. When patients'
complaints go away with treatment, it suggests that the patients
really did have a problem and that they weren't just complaining
for the fun of it, or in order to get attention or sympathy. Truly,
many patients are accused (directly or indirectly) of spending their
time and money on doctors as a form of recreation. When patients'
complaints come back after the treatment's been discontinued, some
would say that proves that the patient really had a problem. On
the other hand, some would say that suggests the patient was only
feeling the effects of a drug, not really treating a problem. When
the symptoms come back when the treatment's been stopped, doctors
have to wonder if they are really treating conditions or just medicating
patients? In other words, are the doctors helping sick patients
to feel better, or contributing to some form of drug dependence
in healthy patients? This uncertainty can cause a lot of discomfort
between doctors and patients when it comes to medicine for depression,
anxiety, migraines, and many other conditions. However, Wilson's
Thyroid Syndrome doesn't fall under the same condemnation because
patients frequently remain improved even after the treatment's been
discontinued. This is good evidence that WTS patients are genuinely
helped, and not just drugged.
Stage 4 - Symptoms remain improved after treatment discontinued
Symptoms going away with treatment and remaining improved even
after the treatment's been discontinued is the most compelling evidence
of all that the patient actually had a medical problem (rather than
just a test abnormality). If an abnormal medical test can demonstrate
that a patient may be suffering from a real condition that
may respond well to treatment, how much better a demonstration is
it when a patient is actually cured? Do you realize how few
medical treatments there are that actually meet this stage's requirement?
Very few treatments afford patients persistent cures. Most medical
treatments have to be taken for life or the symptoms will return.
It can be very profitable for drug companies to make medicines people
need to take for life. On the other hand, it can be very exciting
for patients to be able to get back to normal and not need to keep
taking medicine.
It's true that WTS can cause fairly non-specific complaints. It's
true that there is no test that can prove beforehand whether a patient
will respond to treatment for WTS. That's why some doctors are reluctant
to try the treatment. But doctors who see the logic and try the
treatment are typically rewarded with patients responding dramatically
well to treatment, and incredibly, many patients remain persistently
cured. For the above reasons, Dr. Wilson defined WTS as that condition
that responds to the T3 therapy outlined in the Doctor's Manual.
Some who haven't seen or experienced the results for themselves
might say that the patients weren't cured but experienced a "placebo
reaction." The question is, why didn't these patients experience
a placebo reaction with the last 10 doctors and treatments they
tried that failed?
Generally, the people that say there is nothing to Wilson's Temperature
Syndrome have not read the Doctor's Manual, or haven't treated the
first patient for WTS, or haven't treated it properly. Consequently,
they haven't seen patients persistently cured. Generally, the doctors
who believe in WTS are the ones who've actually treated patients
and seen them recover. As one endocrinologist put it, "There's
nothing like doing it to see it."
Clearly, the whole point of the practice of medicine is to correct
or cure medical problems. WTS is persistently curable, which explains
why it is quickly gaining recognition as a medical condition throughout
the world.
|