Guest guest Posted October 12, 2004 Report Share Posted October 12, 2004 I think through this two ways...the younger newer doctors have an energy that older, tried, and true doctors have lost, but the newer doctors lack the experience the older doctors cherish. YES, MOST DEFINITELY, mito is surfacing as never before and SOON is going to actually be taught in med school because it is the basis for many, many, problems. It has stayed in the background because few hospitals/labs and no doctor's offices have the equipment to test for weird or unusual symptoms. When one patient comes in and every system has something wrong the poor doctor has no idea where to start looking. I think of myself as healthy until I fill out a health survey...then I am tempted to just write " lost cause " across the whole thing. There are physicians in all fields that are interested in research and will spend PRIVATE time looking for an answer. It is a precious relationship when a doctor recognizes his/her patient as a human and not a client! Once this relationship is built then the physician can rely on the patient's ability(mito patients know their bodies well and accurately) to assist in treatment. I had one very young doctor ask if I was certain I had Lupus as it has been used as a catch-all the past few years...no joke, it is looking like I was one of those mis-diagnosed and I got Lupus pulled out of the hat. Debra Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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