Questions about interaction of mainstream medicine and energetic therapy?!


Question: Questions about interaction of mainstream medicine and energetic therapy?
Next week I would have an appointment for treating an old lady.
Her problem is tinnitus, but of course this is just a symptom
and in fact quite irrelevant, unless for the blind.

She asked her GP about, and the GP says not to do it because it can interact with her pills.

How is this possible?
I thought mainstream medicine men only believe in the placebo effect of such treatments.
Can a treatment-placebo-effect interact with a chemical substance?
Do the placebo effect of the pill and the placebo effect of the treatment show destructive interaction?

Please scientists and fake scientists,
draw me the quantum probability curve of both so I can understand the phenomenon.

A curious remark :
he doesn't know what kind of treatment (not the name, nor the application).
Is his reasoning scientific and double checked?
It it peer reviewed?

Please heeeeelp, I am so confused.

Answers:

the potential interaction excuse is medical jargon for, " i don't want them to try something different that might work and show me up to be the pill pushing failure and quack that i am".



Sounds like a misunderstanding. Your client may not have explained the treatment properly to her doctor, and/or she didn't quite grasp his response. Or he was avoiding upsetting her by telling her energy therapy is bogus horseshit.

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EDIT: Are you unable to read?



If she's taking prescription medication for tinnitus and still running to an MD it's obviously not working, though who'd expect it would? Allopaths who think energetic therapies are "placebos" haven't investigated their own branch of medicine thoroughly enough.
Of course energy medicine has no chemical effect, so it can't logically interfere with drugs. Of course MD's regularly peddle nonsense to patients, especially the elderly. When they drop dead from drug interactions and side effects they blame the patient not the drugs.

People who resort to profanity simply illustrate their lack of vocabulary. Probably stems from medical illiteracy, but that's what you get from armchair critics pretending that scientism is science.




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