Editor’s Note:
This blog post explores the philosophical divide in modern healthcare. It is not written to shame any profession or discredit the usefulness of emergency or life-saving medicine. Rather, it is a thoughtful invitation to examine the current system critically and consider whether it aligns with what is truly best for human health.
By Dr. Dwight Prentice
There are two prevailing philosophies in the world of health. One is rooted in evolution—the belief that the human body is a random collection of chemicals that somehow came together over billions of years. This worldview naturally treats the body as a machine that malfunctions due to chemical imbalances. Its remedy? Add more chemicals. This is the foundation of drug therapy, the cornerstone of modern conventional medicine.
But let’s pause. Suppose you get a headache. You go to the doctor. He prescribes an aspirin. Did you ask why the headache happened in the first place? Was it a deficiency in aspirin? Of course not. The pain is a signal—like the oil light in your car—alerting you that something deeper needs attention. What we often do is unplug the warning light instead of finding and fixing the real problem. Drugs, more often than not, don’t cure; they mask.
This brings us to the second philosophy: nutrition therapy. This is based on the belief that the body was created with intelligence and design. It tells us that healing begins not with masking symptoms but with restoring balance through proper nutrients, minerals, and lifestyle choices. Your body isn't deficient in chemicals—it may be lacking magnesium, protein, hydration, rest, or even emotional peace.
Here are two irrefutable facts about the system we trust:
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According to a study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, over 100,000 people die annually from correctly prescribed drugs. These are not overdoses or medication errors. These are the drugs taken as prescribed. That’s nearly double the number of U.S. soldiers who died in the entire Vietnam War—every single year.
The pharmaceutical industry profits from chronic illness. According to a 2023 Statista report, global pharmaceutical revenue topped $1.6 trillion, with the top earners being drugs for lifelong conditions—diabetes, high blood pressure, and depression. If these conditions were cured, not managed, billions would be lost in profit. That is not speculation; it is business reality.
So why do we continue to trust a system that profits more from managing sickness than restoring health? Could it be that the design of our current model rewards symptom treatment over root cause discovery?
Dr. Ignaz Semmelweis learned this hard truth in the 1840s. He discovered that handwashing saved lives. He was fired for it. He died institutionalized, mocked for promoting cleanliness. Ironically, this same practice is now a non-negotiable standard of care. It took science 3,000 years to catch up with what the book of Leviticus already instructed—wash after touching a dead body.
We are at a similar crossroads today. The evidence is clear: most diseases are deficiency-based. There are 16 essential vitamins, 60 minerals, and 3 essential fatty acids that the body needs daily. When we supply the body with what it lacks, it often does what it was designed to do—heal.
Conclusion:
This is not an anti-drug argument. It’s a pro-wisdom conversation. Modern medicine has its place, especially in emergencies. But if we ignore the root and merely trim the branches, the tree of disease will keep growing. It’s time to shift our focus—from masking pain to empowering healing.
Life is simple, there's no need to complicate it! SLMindset.


Well understood!
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