Health Robbers Cover

The Health Robbers

A Close Look at Quackery in America

Edited by Stephen Barrett, M.D. and William T. Jarvis, Ph.D.

Prometheus, 1993, 500 pp, recommended reading, index, €34,60, ISBN 0-87975-855-4. Counter page views.


About the Book

While medical science has never had more to offer, many people are turning to "alternatives" such as chiropractic, homeopathy, "organic" foods, vitamin supplements, herbs, chelation therapy and occult "healers". Millions of Americans who are unenlightened, seriously ill or desperate have fallen into the clutches of TV promoters, nutrition hustlers or other con artists whose offerings are ineffective or dangerous - and sometimes lethal. But quackery is not confined to individuals who fit the popular mage of a quack. Significant numbes of well-trained physicians have strayed from science into "fad diagnoses" and unproven treatments that lack a rational basis.

The Health Robbers, featuring more than twenty highly respected authorities, explains the dangers of quack medicine, "alternative" cncer remedies, health fads, and "miracle diets". It argues for stronger laws and more vigorous policing of the amrketplace. And it answers such questions as: "Are 'organic' foods worth their extra cost?" "Will vitamin B12 shots pep me up?" "Can diet cure arthritis?" "Will spinal adjustments help my health?" "Will amino acids 'pump up' my muscles?" "Where can reliable information be obtained?" and "What's the best way to get good medical care?"

Even if the answers to some of these questions seen obvious, the details in this volume, written in an informative, highly readable and easy-to-understand style, will astound you. Quackery often leads to harm because it turms ill people away from legitimate and trusted therapeutic procedures. However, its heaviest toll is in financial loss not only to those who pay directly, but to everyone who pays for bogus treatments through taxes, insurance premiums and other ways that are less obvious.

Chapter titles include: "The Food Fear Epidemic" ("Beware of chemical con men"), "The Overselling of Herbs" ("More hype than help"), "Quackery and the Media" ("Should we believe what we see and hear?"), "The Holistic Hodgepodge," "Dubious Dental Care," and "How Quackery Sells".

About the Editors

Stephen Barrett, M.D., a retired psychiatrist, is a nationally renowned author, editor and consumer advocate. His thirty-four books include Health Schemes, Scams, and Frauds; Vitamins and "Health" Foods: The Great American Hustle; and the college textbook Consumer Health - A Guide to Intelligent Decisions. In 1984 he won the FDA Commissioner's Special Citation Award for Public Service in fighting nutrition quackery.

William T. Jarvis, Ph.D., Professor of Health Promotion and Education at Loma Linda University, is an expert on the psychology and epidemiology of quackery. He founded and is president of the National Council Against Health Fraud. He is a scientific advisor to the American Council of Science and Health and a member of the American Cancer Society's committee on questionable methods.

Contents

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