Howl at the Moon HOME ON EARTH FOR
JOURNALIST, AUTHOR AND CAMPAIGNER 

Pat Thomas

Articles (What Doctors Don't Tell You)



01 Sep 1997

Menstrual Mayhen – When “Women’s Troubles” are Man-made

Menstruation was among the Victorian’s greatest obsessions. The term gynecology was coined early in the Victorian era to define the medical speciality of female disorders. Although we like to think that today’s medicine is a million miles from those days, in fact we have not progressed at all. Although we no longer diagnose “moon madness”, […]

Read full article

01 Jul 1997

Heart Attacks – An Ounce of Prevention

Half of all heart attack victims die after their first attack. The other half, more often than not, wander the earth in an imitation of life, popping pills and practising self denial. Heart attacks are scary, and the average victim doesn’t want a repeat. On this basis, many feel grateful for the bewildering array of […]

Read full article

01 Apr 1997

Antibiotics – Back to the Future

Antibiotics were the drugs -that were going to take the human race into the next millennium. Now, more than 60 years after the discovery of penicillin, we find ourselves back to the future. It may as well be 1930 again, because many of the strains of bacteria we sought to eliminate, and indeed for a […]

Read full article

01 Apr 1997

Second Opinion: The Genetic Food Fiddlers

We have all become the unknowing guinea pigs of an uncontrolled experiment with the food we eat. Today, through biotechnology, scientists are mixing and matching bits of DNA cutting a gene from one kind of organism and splicing it into another species hoping to make an improved plant or animal; corn genes in rice, chicken […]

Read full article

01 Feb 1997

Multiple Sclerosis – Poisoning in Slow Motion

Multiple sclerosis (MS) often follows a highly individual and unpredictable course, sometimes leading to chronic and occasionally devastating disability. MS is one of the most common diseases of the central nervous system and it can affect any part o MS occurs because of damage to the myelin sheath the thin protective layer of fatty membrane […]

Read full article

01 Dec 1996

Lupus Erythematousus – The Food Factor

Forty years ago, if you were diagnosed as having lupus, otherwise known as systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), the prognosis would not have been good. Odds were that you would have a 50/50 chance of dying within five years. Today doctors are most likely to tell you that, thanks to modern medicine, to greater awareness among […]

Read full article

01 Nov 1996

Electroshock Therapy – More than Shock Value

Every year in Britain 20,000 people are on the receiving end of 100,000 treatments. In the US 100,000 patients get more than half a million treatments a year. It’s not a new drug or revolutionary type of surgery but, amazingly, electroconvulsive therapy or ECT. In these days of holistic medicine, and particularly when the efficacy […]

Read full article

01 Sep 1996

Stroke – Take Two Aspirin?

Few disorders are as devastating and frightening for an individual as stroke. Often without warning, life can be torn apart by the sudden loss of basic physical or mental skills. Equally, no disorder is more confounding to medical science since stroke cannot be pinned down to one single, treatable cause. Instead, it is influenced by […]

Read full article

01 Aug 1996

Caesarean Operations – The Cutting Edge?

Question: When is an operation not an operation? Answer: When it’s a section. It’s only recently that caesarean operations (known inexplicably as “sections”) have become commonplace. Earlier this century, caesareans were used as a last ditch attempt to save the baby usually after the mother had died. Fifty years ago mothers were likely to die […]

Read full article

01 Apr 1996

Hysterectomy – Womb Snatching

There is a joke among medical practitioners confronted with a woman suffering from gynecological problems. The diagnosis: she is suffering from CPU or Chronic Persistent Uterus. The solution: Hysterectomy. In fact, hysterectomy, or more correctly female castration, is now one of the most widely applied surgeries for women, second in some countries only to the […]

Read full article