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The Doctor Made Me Do It
Stanley M. Sapon, PH .D.
When people do something shockingly out of character, they sometimes
blame the influence of a supernatural, malevolent and irresistible
force. To give the devil his due, however, it is only fair to
acknowledge the existence of other forces – natural, well-intentioned,
and perhaps even more irresistible.
When I was three years old, I underwent a tonsillectomy complicated
by severe blood-loss. That surgery was followed by a persistent
anemia that was seen as life-threatening. My pediatrician sent
my mother to see a prominent specialist in the treatment of childhood
anemia. He informed her that if she wanted me to recover, she
would have to feed me calves’ liver and bacon.
As
an observant Jew, she was in an anguishing dilemma, but preserving
her child’s life left her no choice; she purchased a special set
of cookware, dishes and silverware to prepare and serve me bacon.
I can only imagine what it was like for her to enter a non-kosher
butcher shop and buy something that had been religiously shunned
all her life–something that had been– by Divine precept– forbidden
for her and her ancestors for millennia. I recovered from the
anemia, but the violence done to a lifestyle and the damage done
to relationships within the family and the rest of the Jewish
community was severe and long lasting. It became impossible to
scrupulously keep the kosher and non-kosher parts of the kitchen
separate, and the model of a kosher home ultimately crumbled.
The physician, to be charitable, may have truly believed that
there was but one remedy for the anemia. There is no uncertainty,
however, that he was conscious of the fact that he obliged my
mother to choose between preserving her religious values or her
child’s life. Whose beliefs would be validated, whose beliefs
would prevail, whose would be surrendered? Would a doctor who
obeyed Jewish dietary laws have insisted on the same solution
to the anemia? Would a physician who was a vegan have prescribed
the same remedy?
This episode happened almost 75 years ago, but its persistent
echoes of pain call attention to a problem that not only is still
with us, but that has acquired importance on a much larger scale.
Beyond personal concerns
The issues go well beyond personal or parochial concerns. Consider
the experience of Mohandas Gandhi. In 1931, Gandhi was told by
his doctors that his failing health (abused by years of imprisonment,
extended hunger strikes, fasting near-unto-death, etc.,) could
only be restored if he would agree to drink goat’s milk. He reluctantly
complied with the doctors’ orders, but he was outspoken in his
remorse for having surrendered to medical advice. Calling his
dependence upon goat’s milk “the tragedy of my life,” he wrote:
"I believe that in the limitless vegetable kingdom there
is an effective substitute for milk, which, every medical man
admits, has its drawbacks, and which is destined by Nature not
for man, but for babies and young ones of lower animals. I should
count no cost too dear for making a search."
As recently as 1998, the Dalai Lama, who had lived as a vegetarian
all his life, was advised by his doctors that his failing health
required him to eat flesh. He resolved his moral dilemma by consuming
meat only on alternate days. Although the media keep us informed
about world-famous people who have surrendered or compromised
their vegetarianism on the advice of their doctors, there are
countless people — not considered newsworthy— who face the same
dilemma.
A universal problem
We are looking at an issue that spans generations and national
borders. One has to wonder what scientific and medical sources
convince physicians that good health is fundamentally, “naturally”
and necessarily dependent on the consumption of flesh and other
animal products.
The thrust of this essay is not to denigrate the medical profession,
but rather to explore and discuss some historical, cultural and
behavioral elements that contribute to the current confusion and
ambiguity regarding plant-based diets.
In Voices From the Edge, John Robbins reminds us that “the average
MD in four years of medical school gets two and a half hours of
coursework in nutrition — and even that is wrong!” This marginalization
of nutritional science in the medical school curriculum has resulted
in grievously widespread misinformation. There is cause for great
hope, however, in the work of physicians such as Michael Klaper
and Neal Barnard—distinguished medical scientists, advocates and
models for sound medical/dietary practice and compassionate living.
The physician, as a human being, does not grow up devoid of a
full spectrum of values that are in harmony with the mainstream
of her/his culture. Thus, although there may be no “value structure”
built into medical science or clinical practice, a physician cannot
fail to be a participating member of his/her culture. Since the
patient cannot dispute the doctor’s medical knowledge and clinical
experience, when there is a dissonance between the values of the
doctor and the patient, the physician’s medical authority puts
the patient’s value system at a disadvantage.
Custom
defines culture
An anthropological perspective reveals that there are many strong
value systems that characterize a culture. Dietary norms and customs
are deeply embedded, and in many cultures they are proudly held
as distinctive and defining properties... “as American as apple
pie,” for example, or The Haggis as an emblem of Scottish culture.
What is unhappily common is that another country’s food preferences
may be seen as so bizarre as to provoke mocking and derogatory
references. The use of the term “Frogs” as a disparaging term
for French people, for example, derives from their consumption
of frogs’ legs. Equally negative and scornful attitudes are generated
by observing other cultures’ enjoyment of foods that we might
consider disgusting or offensive: animals’ eyeballs, sheep’s testicles,
worms and grubs, termites, hogs’ intestines, snakes, scorpions,
etc.
Solidly ingrained – and unconscious — cultural dietary norms
would make it highly unlikely for an American physician to prescribe
- or a patient to consume - a daily bowl of earthworm soup as
a rich source of B-complex vitamins.
Who’s in charge here?
Our culture has bestowed upon physicians a level of authority
that borders on that of a deity. The examples of famous figures
who have surrendered to that authority represent only the tip
of a massive iceberg of prestige and power.
The phrase “medical advice” quickly becomes converted to “doctor’s
orders.” Among the synonyms for “orders” we find such words as
injunction, bidding, directive and commandment. Which members
of society have this kind of authority? Who can “order” someone’s
behavior? Judges can “order” compliance with their instructions
under pain of imprisonment or fine. A judge can even send a person
to the electric chair. But however much authority the judge may
possess, the accused can only stand trial if a physician declares
him to be adequately fit and mentally competent. And even at the
last moment of barbarity, the execution might be delayed if the
condemned man falls into a coma, and a physician declares him
too sick to be put to death.
Generally speaking, it is the physician in our society who has
the last word across the widest spectrum of contingencies: from
being admitted to kindergarten, the football team, or astronauts
training, to being excused from military service, jury duty or
gym classes. Through most of our lives “...a note from your doctor”
is the magical phrase that serves to open (or close) doors for
special opportunities or to exempt us from onerous obligations.
What is especially relevant to our discussion here is the question,
“Who in our society can grant absolution, pardon or the suspension
of judgment? Members of the clergy, the judiciary, the government
or the medical profession?” But when it comes to lowering the
contingencies for accountability, the doctor has absolutely the
last word.
It is a common experience for a vegan or vegetarian in a restaurant
to query the server - in detail - about the ingredients of menu
items. If you feel the need to explain to your companions, however,
that the reason for refusing the flesh entree or the cheesecake
dessert is your compassion for animals, you must be prepared for
critical - sometimes aggressive – commentary. If, however, you
say that you would just love to eat those foods, but your doctor
has forbidden it, and you mumble something about cholesterol,
coronary arteries, blood pressure or the like, your “plight” will
very likely evoke a compassionate, sympathetic and supportive
response; your special requests for menu alterations will be treated
with respect and concern.
“I am the doctor, you are the patient”
There has evolved a kind of culturally established and maintained
set of behaviors of reverential respect for “The Doctor,” tinged
with awe and flavored with fear of offending. It has become one
of the protocols of the profession to maintain a posture of detached
superiority to the patient, who is regularly reminded that s/he
is a “layman.” There are old traditions of writing prescriptions
in Latin and the use of descriptive terminology that distances
the patient’s language from the physician’s: my running nose becomes
rhinitis, my bruise becomes a hematoma, my headache turns into
cephalgia.
There are many verbal devices that further serve to create and
maintain distance on a superior/inferior dimension, e.g., addressing
the patient by first name, while referring to the physician in
the third person (“Just have a seat, Stanley, the doctor will
see you shortly”); exclusively limiting the appellation “doctor”
to a physician (Albert Einstein in the physician’s waiting room
would be addressed as “Albert,” “Al,” or at best, “Mr. Einstein”);
and requiring the patient to describe his complaint to the nurse
in simple words (“Mr. Einstein” would be expected to talk of “itching
all over,” which the doctor would subsequently “diagnose” as generalized
pruritis).
The perception of the patient as “child” and the physician as
“responsible adult parent” is a powerful social dynamic. It is
regularly strengthened in medical journal articles about “non-compliant
patients”— patients who do not take their medication, who are
“defiant,” or who “do not follow the doctor’s orders.”
These abbreviated snapshots point to a pattern of social and
psychological conditioning that (hopefully) enhances the effectiveness
of medical treatment by characterizing the physician as a superior
being, possessed of arcane knowledge. Whatever positive effects
this “image creation” may yield, the extraordinary empowerment
of the physician enfeebles the patient and magnifies his or her
vulnerability.
Respect
in the doctor’s office
There are physicians who take pains to honor the ethical or religious
commitments of their patients. Our family has been served over
the years by health care professionals whose attitudes have ranged
from sympathetic, to amused-but-tolerant, to amused-but-scornful,
to flatly annoyed and overtly hostile.
It makes a difference whether the patient’s requirements are
recognized as springing from a religious source that is recognized
by the doctor as a “genuine religion” or whether the doctor considers
the patient’s concerns the product of a frivolity or a fad. In
many quarters, ethical, philosophical or ideological interests
have not yet achieved full respectability.
Sanity and plant-based diets
We have taken a cursory look at the range, depth and impact of
the physician on efforts to change dietary behavior. To a growing
number of thoughtful and compassionate individuals, it has become
quite clear that if our planet and its inhabitants are to endure
and thrive, there is a compelling need for a mass return to agricultural,
economic, environmental, social and spiritual sanity. And a key
component of that sanity is the acknowledgment of the urgency
of a world-wide shift to a plant-based diet.
There is an old French adage – “Plus ça change, plus c’est
la même chose” – “The more things change, the more they
stay the same.” It may have a cynical ring to it, but it does
encapsulate a genuine truth: However much circumstances or cases
may change, if the basic values and attitudes of a culture continue
unchanged, its responses to challenges will remain as they were.
It is our responsibility to raise the consciousness of the physicians
we engage. If a physician prescribes Premarin as hormone replacement
therapy, for example, it is up to us to explain why a drug derived
from pregnant mares’ urine is unacceptable, and request one of
the vegan alternatives.
As empowered patients, it behooves us to insist on – indeed,
demand— acknowledgment and full respect for our ethical, philosophical
and ideological commitments.
We need to counteract pervasive ignorance and insensitivity by working
actively to disseminate the work of enlightened and compassionate
physicians. |