I would venture to guess that a great many people who suffer from any kind of illness are always on the lookout for a treatment that helps.
Whether that treatment is based in science, anecdotes, naturopathy, dietary changes, or rumour, all people want to do is feel better.
Because of this desperation, people who are ill are preyed on by companies to sell whatever promise they've decided to spout.
I have no clue what is an actual cure and what is not. I have no real scientific background. My personal experience is only that - personal. What happens to me is not the example of how everyone else will respond. I am an anecdotal example.
The reason I usually believe in scientific research and peer-reviewed studies is that there ARE NO false promises. It tells you on every information pamphlet that results vary, that symptoms may be helped or eliminated, that your doctor is having you try this medication to help this or that but to make sure you pay attention to how your body responds and to keep in contact with your doctor. Whenever a new medication is prescribed, it is followed-up with appointments, bloodwork, scans, and other tests to determine whether or not it is helpful.
I like that.
It is honest. It is not sugar-coated. The only time I allow myself to get excited is when I actually feel better AND the tests show improvement... this is because there are LOTS of medications (like Prednisone and pain relief meds) that can help mask the symptoms but don't actually improve the disease.
The best part is that it is clear from the outset what a treatment is supposed to accomplish. I am not deceived or lied to (for the most part). There are no promises of 100% cures or recoveries, only to be devastated.
I have had some good fortune with other types of remedies - like diet, which can have a huge impact - and other treatments that are not based in Western Medicine.
Would you like to know the reason I did not stick with those treatments?
1. I was promised a cure. Not a slight improvement in symptoms, but an actual and miraculous cure.
2. The treatments did the same as many others, it helped with a few symptoms but had no effect on the disease itself - and the improvements were not earth-shattering enough to continue paying a ridiculous amount each month.
3. When my disease was not cured/improved, the blame fell squarely on me. It wasn't that the treatment did not work for me, it was that I did something incorrectly that would not allow for the treatment to work - despite following ALL directions with no 'cheat days'.
The reason I stick with certain medications has to do with efficacy, transparency, and of course finances have a part to play. Basically, if I have a pretty good idea of what the treatment will and will not do, if I am not given false promises or deceived, and if the medication doesn't work as much, the attitude is not that it's my fault, but that it wasn't the right option for my body. So instead of giving up and making me feel like somehow all of this is my own fault (which it 100% is absolutely not), the attitude is: 'okay, that didn't work. Let's see if we can try and find something else that does work'.
There are issues and problems everywhere.
We have a long way to go in several aspects of health, so I am going to do what works for me. And you can do what works for you. I won't push my way onto you, and I expect the same courtesy.