Thursday

16


July , 2020
“Science is NOT infallible!” says the COVID-19
11:46 am

Dr. Sarfaraz J. Baig


 

The men practising the science of medicine are an esoteric lot who commanded a lot of respect. Till recently. 

Then the virus struck!

It exposed the weaknesses of the white coat industry. The public at large ultimately see us as a vulnerable lot, not at the top of things. A few may even have been disappointed at the chaos we generated. The highest body for health, the World Health Organisation (WHO), has not shone either and may also have suffered a hole in its credibility. 

So, in this war between man and disease, have we lost the game? Has medical science claimed more than it could deliver? Have our achievements and experiments been in the wrong direction? 

These questions would push experts, policymakers into a lot of introspection and research to answer it comprehensively. 

But there is one thing we could all agree about the true nature of science. It is indeed trials and errors that has been propelling it. There are more failures in the history of medicine than success. All students of medicine who read history know that. For every antibiotic that worked there are dozens which got nowhere beyond the lab. For every medical appliance that was tried, not all stood the test of time and safety. 

But that is not what the public knows. 

In the last few decades, we have been overdosed with half-news comprising essentially of successes. Failures are hardly reported.  

Let’s take an example. 

Most of us would remember reading more than two decades back that a sheep has been cloned. That’s good news for many including patients waiting for organ transplant! Right? 

Where are we today with the cloning?

Nowhere. We have not seen or heard much about cloning in clinical practice. 

Why? 

Because the news did not tell us that these in experimental stages, are basically a trial and error endeavours, have huge technical issues and may not take off. Failures, of course, are not reported. At least, not in the mainstream media. 

The same is broadly true for many anti-cancer therapy, surgical procedures, biologics, robotics, artificial intelligence and the list continues.

This is the only field where news is made only around successes.

Take an example- if a rocket project went haywire, how long do you think the TV and newspapers will talk about it. Days and weeks perhaps.

Questions would be raised —

What happened? 

Who is to blame?

How much money was lost or squandered? 

Who was running the project? 

Have you ever heard of a medical project or a trial about a drug or a treatment that failed and millions were lost?

Somehow, failures of medical trials do not cut any ice with the news makers. And therefore, the public at large has huge and unrealistic expectations from this sector.

This is also one of the reasons why patients expect so much from the clinical practitioners. And possibly why there is so much litigation, resentment and even mob violence in some parts of the world. 

COVID 19 has been a great leveller bringing reality to the forefront and eclipsing the incorrectly perceived supremacy of the white coats!

This equilibrium and balance should be welcomed!

It has the potential to restore sanity and see things as they are. Science is a logical attempt to rationalise this huge creation! It is approximate, frequently non-linear and hypothetical, always in evolution, and definitely not the

final answer to everything.

But it tries. More than anything else. 

If we look around, huge efforts have started to combat the virus. The search for antivirals, vaccines, and rapid tests are all underway.

2020 may have been the worst year of the century so far but for the virologists, this may be the year when they started conquering yet another deadly disease. 

It may also be the year when people started tempering their expectations from medical science and looked at doctors as humans who try!

 

Add new comment

Filtered HTML

  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <blockquote> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.