The Check Doctor Credentials Theory

Written by Hugo Gallegos


Camas, WA - Nov 25, 2004 - The behindrepparttar scenes check doctor credentials booming business. Who really suppliesrepparttar 114594 doctor credential information?

In 2003, there where more than 890 million doctor visits inrepparttar 114595 U.S. according torepparttar 114596 (CDC) Center for Diseases Control and Prevention. "More now than ever consumers are not only researching their doctor, but are also demandingrepparttar 114597 highest quality of health care" says Hugo Gallegos, President of MDNationwide.org.

Check Doctor Credentials: Doctor information (reports) such as check doctor credentials, medical doctor ratings, doctor background checks , and check surgeon quality, just a few years ago scarcely existed. Most doctor credential information pertaining to disciplinary actions and so on, where kept onrepparttar 114598 hush side. Now, all that has changed, consumers understand that experience varies from doctor to doctor. With more companies offering doctor credential information consumers are spending more time researching their doctors.

* A doctor background check can be accomplished in a variety of ways depending whatrepparttar 114599 consumers wants. Example: If a consumer wants to find out if his or her doctor has ever had disciplinary actions issued against them,repparttar 114600 Federation of State Medical Boards (excluding National Practitioner Data Bank) has more doctor disciplinary report information than any other establishment in America, andrepparttar 114601 cost is $9.95 per report. Pros: 1. They arerepparttar 114602 undisputed heavyweights of doctor background checks for disciplinary actions. Cons: 1. They only specialize in disciplinary doctor reports.

* If consumers want to view medical doctor ratings on particular doctors, their are different choices available. It is not clear what their methodology is based on, however, a popular choice seems to be Health Grades Inc. They have a wide selection of doctors nationwide to choose from, however with such an enormous database, you might want to double check your info for accuracy. Pros: 1. A huge medical doctor ratings database, bigger selection of doctors Cons: 1. Methodologies are not clear 2. Database is so big that keeping updated information is nearly impossible.

The Pharmaceutical Drug Cartel and the FDA

Written by Jack Kettler


According torepparttar Los Angeles Times,repparttar 114593 California Association of Physicians and Surgeons, and evenrepparttar 114594 Center for Diseases Control’s own admission, well over 100,000 people in this country die each year from “properly” administered prescription drugs. This is absolutely shocking!

One study has shown that more than two million American hospitalized patients suffered a serious adverse drug reaction (ADR) within a 12-month period and of these, over 100,000 died as a result. Likewise, roughly 36,000,000 adverse drug reactions are reported annually, resulting in more than 33.6-million admissions or hospitalizations all from drugs thatrepparttar 114595 FDA has pronounced “safe effective.” Sources for these statistics can be found at: http://www.cancure.org/medical_errors.htm.

The media is not doing a very good job of reporting this ADR crisis. Instead, we hearrepparttar 114596 constant media drumbeat aboutrepparttar 114597 dangers of firearms, which are currently politically incorrect yet represent a miniscule fraction ofrepparttar 114598 deaths in this country. Doctors who want to politicize gun deaths should clean up their own glass houses first. The real crisis isrepparttar 114599 failing health care or more accurately described asrepparttar 114600 sick care system. There are numerous reasons for this crisis.

One reason is that conflicts of interest represent a very real problem for public servants and those entities which have relationships with various government agencies. Numerous researchers have reported thatrepparttar 114601 FDA receives money fromrepparttar 114602 very entities it is suppose to be regulating and one consequence of this isrepparttar 114603 suppression rather than advancement of disease cures. Considerrepparttar 114604 following:

“According to a USA Today study, more than half ofrepparttar 114605 experts hired to adviserepparttar 114606 government onrepparttar 114607 safety and effectiveness of medicine have financial relationships withrepparttar 114608 pharmaceutical companies that will be helped or hurt by their decisions. These experts are hired to adviserepparttar 114609 Food and Drug Administration on which medicines should be approved for sale, whatrepparttar 114610 warning labels should say and how studies of drugs should be designed. The experts are supposed to be independent, but USA TODAY found that 54% ofrepparttar 114611 time, they have a direct financial interest inrepparttar 114612 drug or topic they are asked to evaluate. These conflicts include helping a pharmaceutical company develop a medicine, then serving on an FDA advisory committee that judgesrepparttar 114613 drug.

The conflicts typically include stock ownership, consulting fees or research grants.

Federal law generally prohibitsrepparttar 114614 FDA from using experts with financial conflicts of interest, but according torepparttar 114615 article,repparttar 114616 FDA has waivedrepparttar 114617 restriction more than 800 times since 1998.” (1)

The corruption of undisclosed financial ties torepparttar 114618 pharmaceutical companies by supposedly unbiased researchers along withrepparttar 114619 staggering cost involved in bringing new drugs to market, which conveniently eliminates competition from all butrepparttar 114620 cartel heavyweights has been sparingly reported inrepparttar 114621 mainstream press. Consider one exception to this silence:

Inrepparttar 114622 book a “World Without Cancer” by G. Edward Griffin. Griffin describesrepparttar 114623 politics of cancer therapy, in which he blowsrepparttar 114624 lid offrepparttar 114625 all powerful international chemical and drug cartel that has dominatedrepparttar 114626 direction of health care since early inrepparttar 114627 Twentieth Century inrepparttar 114628 United States. Griffin argues that not only hasrepparttar 114629 Rockefeller-Farben cartel (2) been instrumental in fostering chemical based drug treatment asrepparttar 114630 basis for health care and they have beenrepparttar 114631 dominant adversary against safer non-drug treatments. If Griffin is correct, who isrepparttar 114632 FDA protecting and serving? Clearly, notrepparttar 114633 consumer!

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