Guest guest Posted January 31, 2004 Report Share Posted January 31, 2004 I can't get this link to work even cutting and pasting Case of Dr. Derry and old-fashioned diagnosing via symptoms not TSH... Anybody read this story? I think Dr. Derry is a GREAT doctor. Boy do I hate the modern endo-Nazis! http://216.239.37.104/search?q=cache:3ZwAvYT7V9oJ:www.bites- medical.org/dderry/media/sun020327.html+I+don% 27t+believe+in+thyroid+medication+ & hl=en & lr=lang_en & ie=UTF-8 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 31, 2004 Report Share Posted January 31, 2004 > I can't get this link to work even cutting and pasting > I'm sorry, here's the article: BITES Breast Iodine Thyroid Effectiveness Society Articles Summary of " In defence of an old-school doctor: Patients say a ban preventing Dr. Derry from prescribing thyroid medication jeopardizes their health " History of the situation Before July 2001, the College had [routinely] reviewed Dr. Derry's practice twice, and they had found no negligence or malpractice. [in July 2001] Dr. , a Vancouver endocrinologist, complained to the College about the dose Dr. Derry prescribed after his patient, Georgia Parry, left him to go to Dr. Derry. Georgia Parry has also complained to the College about Dr. . The College appointed two doctors to investigate Dr. Derry. The two doctors did not interview any patients, but only looked in patient files to get their information. Their report about Dr. Derry's treatment contained the description " unconventional, medically inappropriate and dangerous. " About 50 patients [and other supporters] came from as far away as Toronto for the hearing with Dr. Derry and [his lawyer ] Doyle. The patients were ready to testify about their treatment, but a security guard prevented them from entering. (However, the final hearing, in which it will be decided whether or not Dr. Derry can keep his medical licence, will be open to the public, deputy registrar Van Andel said in a later interview.) Two days later, the College temporarily banned Dr. Derry from prescribing thyroid medication. Patients were extremely upset. The College said that other physicians can still fill the prescriptions, but up to seven doctors or walk-in clinics have refused to prescribe the high doses that [some of] Dr. Derry's patients are on. Reasons for this refusal were to avoid getting in the middle of the dispute, or because the doctors couldn't take any more patients. Gram quotes Barry Hile's wife e: " We are trembling [with anxiety]*….We were finally seeing the light at the end of the tunnel and the light is being taken away. This is impossible. We will do anything possible for Dr. Derry. He is revered as a very warm, concerned doctor. There are not many like him. " The ruling was appealed to the British Columbia Supreme Court [in December 2001], but the judge deferred to the College. The claim for Dr. Derry's appeal to the British Columbia Court of Appeal lists " 11 points of procedural unfairness, including a charge that opinions were made without ever assessing the health of the patients, or interviewing them. " The appropriateness of the treatment In response to the question about why patients were never interviewed, Van Andel said: " Why should they be? Testimonials do not make guidelines. No matter what the treatment, there are always patients who feel better. It is a very inaccurate method of measuring well-being. " He also says that " it is not appropriate to use an unproven treatment on unsuspecting patients…. " Doyle quotes the Helsinki Accord: " The physician, with informed consent from the patient, must be free to use unproven or new prophylactic, diagnostic, and therapeutic measures, if in the physician's judgement if offers hope of saving life, re-establishing health or alleviating suffering. " Canada is a signatory to this international agreement on health care. Dr. Derry says that he monitors his patients carefully, and that he would have reduced the dose if the patients had had overdose symptoms. The Ontario situation In 2001, a number of Ontario physicians who felt that their College had unfairly targeted them commissioned a report by Code, a former deputy attorney-general and law professor. Code wrote in his report that " he found extensive irregularities in the way the college had targeted 10 physicians….[and he] found a strong bias against doctors working in innovative ways and an abuse of the Ontario college's powers in the way it treated physicians. " Dr. Derry says that he is being targeted in a similar way. The last words Dr. Derry to Gram: " I'm not giving up. " * These brackets were in the original article. To receive email notifications whenever this site has additions or updates, and to join BITES, see the Join page. Copyright © 2002 Breast Iodine Thyroid Effectiveness Society (BITES) unless otherwise specified. All rights reserved. Legal Disclaimer and Notices Supporting Freedom of Choice for Patients and Doctors Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 31, 2004 Report Share Posted January 31, 2004 Oops sorry I copied page TWO of the article before page ONE - here is page ONE BITES Breast Iodine Thyroid Effectiveness Society Articles Summary of " In defence of an old-school doctor: Patients say a ban preventing Dr. Derry from prescribing thyroid medication jeopardizes their health " An article with the above title by Gram appeared in The Vancouver Sun on March 27, 2002. The Sun did not give BITES permission to reproduce the article at this site, so instead, here is a summary of the article. The original article appears to have had some informational details edited out for space reasons; minor details have been added in square brackets to this summary only to fill out the context. The section about hypothyroidism was not included because an explanation is already at this site on the Hypothyroidism page. ~~~~~ The latest action: complaints to British Columbia's ombudsman Patients of Dr. Derry have recently sent in numerous complaints about the College of Physicians & Surgeons of British Columbia to British Columbia's ombudsman, Kushner. The College Executive Committee has temporarily banned Dr. Derry from prescribing thyroid hormone [see the History page for more details], and the patients' complaints against each of the doctors on the Executive Committee stated that " the committee's action seriously jeopardized their health. " Background Dr. Derry diagnoses and treats patients with hypothyroidism the way he was taught 40 years ago in medical school, which is different from what the medical establishment currently accepts. He diagnoses hypothyroidism far more often, and the dosage he prescribes is sometimes three to four times the [current] standard doses of thyroid hormone medication. Instead of synthetic medication, he prefers to mostly use natural, desiccated thyroid, which is more complete, he says. His supporters describe him as warm, caring, and " the victim of a closed-minded and heavy-handed regulatory body determined to protect the interests of conservative specialists. " According to the College, Dr. Derry's treatment puts patients at risk because modern lab tests often indicate that the patients don't need these doses. The College is investigating his treatment. They and local endocrinologists say that the College " is acting in the public's interest, even if the public doesn't realize it. " Dr. Derry believes that thyroid dysfunction is the cause of numerous health problems, including arthritis, breast cancer, chronic fatigue syndrome, depression, fibromyalgia, and multiple sclerosis and some other autoimmune diseases. Gram writes: " He says he has made thousands of people feel healthy for the first time in years. " The patients Phyllis son of Vanderhoof [british Columbia] had been on synthetic thyroid medication since having iodine radiation therapy to treat her overactive thyroid 20 years ago. However, she needed pain medication to get through the day or to sleep because of her muscle and bone pain, and cysts in her breasts were a constant problem. At her first visit to Dr. Derry last January, he switched her medication to desiccated thyroid and increased her dose considerably. She now sleeps well, and her fatigue, pain, and breast lumps are gone. She told Gram: " I feel 10 times better. I live on a farm and now I am doing outside work and I don't take pain killers. " At the end of January this year, she drove [about 880 kilometres] from Vanderhoof to Vancouver to protest the College's treatment of Dr. Derry in front of the College office on January 31 [and February 1]. ~~~~~ Barry Hile of had had a lifelong weight problem. A few years ago, he weighed more than 350 pounds. He also had [the hypothyroid symptoms of] fatigue—needing 14 to 16 hours of sleep a day—severe leg cramps, and the inability the concentrate or remember things. A number of specialists over the years had diagnosed him with various ailments and prescribed treatments that didn't make any difference, he said. Three years ago, Barry first went to see Dr. Derry, who diagnosed hypothyroidism and prescribed a low dose of desiccated thyroid, gradually increasing it until Barry felt consistently better. He has lost 100 pounds, he has a clear mind, he doesn't have leg cramps any more, and he feels refreshed in the morning after seven hours of sleep. The daily dose required to relieve his symptoms is 850 milligrams, which is considerably higher than a standard dose. The controversy Because Barry's thyroid levels were in the normal range, the College says that Dr. Derry should not have given Barry thyroid medication. Dr. Derry says that if he hadn't, Barry would probably be dead by now from a heart attack caused by his extra weight. Before the 1970s, the doses that Dr. Derry prescribes were standard. Although medicine has advanced in the past 40 years, he says, there have been no studies indicating that the previously standard treatments are dangerous. In addition, he says that because doctors today are taught to rely on the TSH test, which does not properly diagnose many people who have thyroiditis [or hypothyroidism], most doctors don't recognize the symptoms of this condition. According to Toronto endocrinologist Dr. Volpe, " The TSH is a very sensitive indicator of hyperthyroid, even within the normal range. " He continues, " You have to have significant abnormalities on the TSH test before you can attribute it to problems with the thyroid. " Dr. Volpe says that Dr. Derry's patients feel better because of the placebo effect. " This attitude infuriates the patients, " writes Gram. Mainstream endocrinologists also believe in the TSH test, and believe that high doses of thyroid medication could be dangerous for the heart. While Dr. Derry agrees that the TSH test is sensitive, he doesn't agree with what is normal according to this test. He says that many people who have low thyroid symptoms such as depression, dry skin, fibromyalgia, hair loss, and heavy menstrual periods have normal TSH levels. When physicians took a detailed history of the patient and listened, Dr. Derry says, they used to recognize the many classic symptoms that are related to the thyroid. Based on this diagnosis, they would prescribe a small dose of thyroid medication and raise it gradually until the patient improved. Today, however, if the TSH test results are in range, doctors tend not to believe that the thyroid could be the cause of the symptoms. Dr. Don of Indiana uses the same approach as Dr. Derry, and he also believes that it is not good to rely on the TSH test. Traditionally, he says, doctors' diagnoses are based 85 percent on patient history, 10 percent on examination, and five percent on the results of lab tests. Today, however, the common practice is for doctors to depend completely on lab test results for thyroid problem diagnosis. " In my opinion, " he told Gram, " that is malpractice. " continued on the next page › › › To receive email notifications whenever this site has additions or updates, and to join BITES, see the Join page. Copyright © 2002 Breast Iodine Thyroid Effectiveness Society (BITES) unless otherwise specified. All rights reserved. Legal Disclaimer and Notices Supporting Freedom of Choice for Patients and Doctors Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 31, 2004 Report Share Posted January 31, 2004 Jamy, You have to put the whole link in to get it to work and remove the space before the " http " thingy. I had to do that in two parts because the line had been truncated by the email program and made into three separate lines, but only one of them had the highlight of a " link " . Dianne At 06:53 AM 1/31/04 -0800, you wrote: >I can't get this link to work even cutting and pasting > Case of Dr. Derry and old-fashioned > diagnosing via symptoms not TSH... > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 31, 2004 Report Share Posted January 31, 2004 thanks Case of Dr. Derry and old-fashioned > diagnosing via symptoms not TSH... > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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