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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To say that the "alternative medicine" and conspiracy theorists about Western medicine are dangerous to society?

245 replies

YourAmplePlumPoster · 24/06/2025 19:07

I have a friend I've known all my life. He first of all refused to have the Covid vaccine and then refused treatment for his prostate cancer and said he was going to treat it with homeopathic medicine. Result was that it spread to his hip bone. Luckily he started chemo and it's worked. What is wrong with these people?

OP posts:
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Noshadowsinthedark · 24/06/2025 21:05

Refusing vaccines or treatment and partaking complimentary therapies are not the same thing.

You should have a chamomile tea and calm right down.

ThisSillyFox · 24/06/2025 21:07

YourAmplePlumPoster · 24/06/2025 20:59

Well there may be some herbal remedies that work according to some but tell me one that works in the case of cancer. Not one.

Massage therapy is often used with cancer patients and palliative care to ease anxiety and pain.

Firefly1987 · 24/06/2025 21:09

YourAmplePlumPoster · 24/06/2025 20:59

Well there may be some herbal remedies that work according to some but tell me one that works in the case of cancer. Not one.

My dad's PSA came down whilst I had him on herbal tea. Could've been complete coincidence, but it was unusual for his disease progression at the time. He wasn't on any other treatment only palliative pain meds. Unfortunately he didn't take it for long as he wasn't a big believed in alternative meds either.

noworklifebalance · 24/06/2025 21:10

MrsTerryPratchett · 24/06/2025 20:58

Based on what? Mine is based on proper studies. Yours is based on the 6th form debating classic, “The Oxford English Dictionary defines placebo as…”

It has physical effects. You are wrong. Just own it. It’s an interesting and counterintuitive fact.

Reading skills is not a strong point clearly for you but do carry on

Bridgetjonesheart · 24/06/2025 21:11

You can’t be the thought police. People are allowed to have alternative thoughts and to voice them if they wish. What people choose to believe and take onboard is up to them.

ThisSillyFox · 24/06/2025 21:12

YourAmplePlumPoster · 24/06/2025 20:59

Well there may be some herbal remedies that work according to some but tell me one that works in the case of cancer. Not one.

Nurses told my grandad to drink hot water and ginger after his chemo to treat his nausea, it worked. Whilst I agree with you op there are some natural products that are used within western medicine. DoI think drinking ginger tea is going to cure cancer, no, but it does help deal with symptoms of sickness.

Fringle · 24/06/2025 21:13

Refusing childhood vaccines is the worst. This place used to be full of terrible scaremongering, foolish anti-vaxxers.

Many were just idiots. But one or two were, incredibly, apparently otherwise quite intelligent.

Lord knows how this nonsense takes hold. But it needs stamping on.

MrsSkylerWhite · 24/06/2025 21:14

Not really. Because most people realise they’re fruitcakes.

RafaistheKingofClay · 24/06/2025 21:14

LetsGoFlyAKiteee · 24/06/2025 20:54

Ooo my bad thought she did. Even so she got her treatment.

"On one video call, Chantelle says, Paloma said she had a new lump in her armpit, and her mother had told her it meant that the cancer was going out of her body"

How?!

Yeah the important bit is she got the functional bit of her treatment. This is fairly common in people who claim their cancer was cured by x, y or z. They tend to forget to mention that bit so their followers tend to not have the conventional treatment and just the rubbish.

Somnambule · 24/06/2025 21:16

Several years ago I knew a woman who had bowel cancer, detected relatively early, and she decided to treat it "naturally". She paid some charlatan naturalist an absolute fortune to "treat" her over six months or so, during which time her cancer inevitably progressed rapidly. Eventually she did go back to the doctor and ask for chemo, but it was too late - she was stage 4 by then and died a couple of months later. That witch doctor should be in prison for manslaughter if not murder.

Edited for weird typo.

RafaistheKingofClay · 24/06/2025 21:18

ThisSillyFox · 24/06/2025 21:07

Massage therapy is often used with cancer patients and palliative care to ease anxiety and pain.

That’s not really the same thing though. There are good reasons why massage would relieve pain and anxiety. It would be an issue if people were claiming it could cure the cancer.

JamesAndTheGiantReach · 24/06/2025 21:18

My son was damaged by a “safe” paediatric drug so I’m wary about how safe we’re told drugs are.

I’m also aware that history is littered with drugs and products we were assured were safe but turned out to be really dangerous, leaving trails of destruction and damaged people. At the same time those making millions out of the products were busy covering it up.

There are several drugs known to be causing severe side effects with very little benefits or extended life, and I’m certain that in 20/30+ years there’ll be films about them and the fat cat pharmaceutical companies that made billions.

It’s no wonder many don’t trust them, and tbh I’m amazed so many fully trust pharmaceutical companies and their known manipulative marketing.

That said I’m not anti western medicine, we are all vaccinated.

For mental health though alternative treatments and therapies seem to be far more effective than anything the NHS can offer.

I know a few people who stay away from western medicine , one family because of a genetic disorder that means they tend to have weird side affects to drugs, so they live very naturally and seem healthy on it. Others distrust what we’re told, and at the end of the day they are adults and it’s up to them.

noworklifebalance · 24/06/2025 21:20

ThisSillyFox · 24/06/2025 21:12

Nurses told my grandad to drink hot water and ginger after his chemo to treat his nausea, it worked. Whilst I agree with you op there are some natural products that are used within western medicine. DoI think drinking ginger tea is going to cure cancer, no, but it does help deal with symptoms of sickness.

Yes, there a lot of “mild” conditions that are helped by various herbal/alternative treatments. Ginger, mint, turmeric etc - all used safely in cooking so no one is going have serious side effects by taking them for relatively minor ailments. Likewise using a hot water bottle for back pain, ice pack to reduce swelling.
Taking herbal medicines from a random shop or self styled expert is not safe and is not going to help the actual disease process, although psychologically you may feel your symptoms have improved.
I don’t judge anyone who desperately seeks out treatments especially when more conventional ones have failed them.

ItssssAMeMariooo92 · 24/06/2025 21:21

Myself and my son have had our childhood vaccinations. There were no ifs or buts for him as he almost died at less than a day old and spent time in nicu for it. However, i have only had one covid jab and my son has had none.

I also use prescription medication for my diabetes, adhd etc and he is on stuff for sleep and asthma but I also fall in the middle with regards to natural medicine and pharma stuff

Annoyeddd · 24/06/2025 21:23

Cocomelonhauntsme · 24/06/2025 20:24

Western medicine is amazing. All my family are fully vaxxed and I have lots of loved ones who wouldn't be here if it weren't for the miracle of modern medicine. We have come to take it for granted.

That said, for some there is an over reliance on it. There have been lots of studies on the overuse and misuse of antibiotics. Sometimes diet and exercise is the answer. Also while many herbal remedies are placebos, placebos work and genuinely can improve health outcomes (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK513296/) so as long as they are being used for things that won't kill you, like the common cold then I'm all for it.

I know some people who are very anti modern medicine and I don't believe calling them nutters, patronising them, calling them stupid is helpful. They are listening to deeply persuasive people who skillfully play on fears and warp facts. There absolutely have been terrible things with modern medicine ie Thalidomide. We've also had the infected blood scandal, we know doctors in America were bribed to prescribe addictive opioids off label as pain killers leading to addiction and ODs and we know doctors often ignore women's pain and perform treatments without appropriate pain killers.

Now, many people in my family are in the medical professional, I see the amazing work they do and as I said I thank god on my knees for western medicine but there have been scandals so dismissing and belittling people who are opposed won't do any good. Listening to why they feel this way and compassionate communication is the way forward.

Thalidomide was used 60 years ago and because of it we now have lots of regulations in place to avoid this happening again.
Thalidomide is now being used again (along with two other similar drugs) for myeloma with very strict precautions in places - most patients are over 50 and the occasional younger female patients are only given a small amount of tablets after a negative pregnancy test and a lot of explanation - the damage occurs at 8-10 weeks of pregnancy and because of the restrictions there have been no reports of babies being born with the limb problems

Cocomelonhauntsme · 24/06/2025 21:25

@noworklifebalance apologies I think i misread your post. Agreed placebo is likely working not because they themselves work ie have medicinal properties but due to physiological impact in which case agreed.

Repeated studies have shown that test subjects, even when they know they are on placebos have better health outcomes than those with nothing. Really interesting harvard study about it. So even if herbs are simply placebos, they can still have a positive impact on recovery. Of course it shoudnt replace modern medicine at all but, for example, I enjoyed my raspberry leaf tea in the lead up to labour. It did basically nothing but if it helps me feel I'm doing something and a good mentality is important too.

ThisSillyFox · 24/06/2025 21:30

RafaistheKingofClay · 24/06/2025 21:18

That’s not really the same thing though. There are good reasons why massage would relieve pain and anxiety. It would be an issue if people were claiming it could cure the cancer.

Same thing as to what? The post was about how alternative medicine is dangerous to western society. Massage therapy isn’t a western tradition but it’s used within healthcare.

BoldGreenDreamer · 24/06/2025 21:31

MrsTerryPratchett · 24/06/2025 20:58

Based on what? Mine is based on proper studies. Yours is based on the 6th form debating classic, “The Oxford English Dictionary defines placebo as…”

It has physical effects. You are wrong. Just own it. It’s an interesting and counterintuitive fact.

Honestly, I'm not sure how much you two are actually disagreeing.

The placebo, itself, has no active properties (e.g. nothing that causes any physical effect) - which is what I understood the PP to be saying.

I think thats different from whether the placebo effect can (as it does) result in measurable physical improvement - which (largely*) is of psychological origin.

(*There's also a subconscious element, which doesn't fall within "psychological" in the clinical sense if we want to quibble but, either way, I still think you're either misunderstanding the PP or engaging in extreme hairsplitting).

Thepeopleversuswork · 24/06/2025 21:35

@mathanxiety

I see many posts here on food/ daily diet topics where people use the word 'chemicals' in terror, as if these things are all alien and universally toxic. I roll my eyes. It's easy to spot the poorly educated.

It's so irritating this isn't it. I've had so many hippie friends over the years up in arms about "chemicals" in food/medicine. Anyone with the most rudimentary scientific education should understand that there are "chemicals" in every single element of the physical world. Including the herbal remedies/homeopathy and all the other alternative quackery.

I find it genuinely frightening that people finish school in a country which supposed mandates some scientific education up to GCSE and can't understand this.

AndImBrit · 24/06/2025 21:35

YourAmplePlumPoster · 24/06/2025 19:09

There are so many of them on the Internet. For a start, apple, cider, vinegar doesn't help you lose weight 🤔 😜

How do you know? I did the Zoe plan where I tracked my blood sugar through a number of different experiments, and my blood sugar responded differently when I had apple cider vinegar before a meal. Now I don’t care enough to have it consistently to lose weight (and I don’t know if would have that effect, but it’s certainly possible), but going for a walk after eating has changed how I metabolise sugar and the rate I put on weight - so I don’t think you’re being entirely fair.

I agree on the medicine point though.

ThisSillyFox · 24/06/2025 21:36

noworklifebalance · 24/06/2025 21:20

Yes, there a lot of “mild” conditions that are helped by various herbal/alternative treatments. Ginger, mint, turmeric etc - all used safely in cooking so no one is going have serious side effects by taking them for relatively minor ailments. Likewise using a hot water bottle for back pain, ice pack to reduce swelling.
Taking herbal medicines from a random shop or self styled expert is not safe and is not going to help the actual disease process, although psychologically you may feel your symptoms have improved.
I don’t judge anyone who desperately seeks out treatments especially when more conventional ones have failed them.

Plenty of natural products that people take as supplements are prescribed by doctors such as folic acid, vitamins, iron and Calicum are used to prevent illnesses.

Thepeopleversuswork · 24/06/2025 21:41

Bridgetjonesheart · 24/06/2025 21:11

You can’t be the thought police. People are allowed to have alternative thoughts and to voice them if they wish. What people choose to believe and take onboard is up to them.

It's all good and well to #bekind about these people until they start infiltrating the US government and setting policy on behalf of some 340 million people. And influencing health policy across the world.

So thanks but no thanks, I'd rather have evidence based medicine which can save lives even if it hurts the feelings of a few people who can't read or think.

Dora56 · 24/06/2025 21:43

This subject is very close to my heart as I have just gone through this with a family member.

I actually wanted to contact a journalist because the quack they saw is in my opinion very very dangerous.

I have recordings of the consultation and he advised them to not start any chemo or radiotherapy.
To take his special drugs (which were worming tablets), an assortment of other vitamins, vitamin injections (£120 a time) and a keto diet.

I begged and pleaded with them to go down the medical route and at first they refused. The tablets that they were taking damaged their liver and the oncologist told them to stop taking everything that the quack prescribed.

They eventually had radiotherapy and the tumour has gone. Just going through chemo now but should hopefully make a full recovery.

They believed everything this quack told them, how the Drs are all in on it and only give chemo to make money. Baring in mind he drives around in a Bentley !

This has caused my family so much stress and heartache. I can kind of understand how people are sucked in because they are desperate. My family member is very intelligent and wanted to believe this man could make it all go away.

I would like to get his practice shut down but I'm not sure where to start?

RafaistheKingofClay · 24/06/2025 21:48

Is he an actual doctor Dora56? Or a registered health professional of any sort? If so their registering body is a good place to start.

Sunrae28 · 24/06/2025 21:48

Have a look at universal medicine, they are an active cult in the UK practising a load of harmful nonsense