What I've been pointing out, is that when you go to a local social doctor's surgery, they aren't telling you to use ANY herbal cures, they will prescribe engineered drugs that are only available through a prescription. When a herbal remedy, or available assistant non-prescription treatment may be efficacious they can only say "there aren't studies to prove it will work". That's part of the point.
To be honest though, I do believe that a doctor should only tell you to use drugs that have been proven in large scale tests. Unproven (in the sense that I used originally) drugs - whether chemical, herbal, whatever - should not be made available on the NHS, and should not be encouraged by doctors. This is mainly a moral point, but there would also be lawsuits left right and centre if patients suffered/died after taking unproven drugs that their doctors advised.
That American Indians, and other native cultures are known to have comparatively shortened lifespans is of course down to their lack of contact with modern medicine - what they know about the ancient remedies might be brilliant, and putting dock leaves on stings or chanting incantations with burning sticks might have some good effect - but it's not enough to save them from regular maladies they will get 'in the wilds'. That for sure. That's an alternative way of looking at their culture vs ours - they are the other extreme. No money is spent on medicine there, and the result is that they mostly are old-aged by 40!
Yep, fair enough. No argument from me here.
What your suggestion about herb/placebo suggests, is that more attention could be applied by science, to holistic remedies. If no tests are done, then nothing is found to suggest something can work.
Not really. My point is that science does pay holistic remedies attention. I'm not saying no-one has tested echinacea using large scale, properly double-blinded trials - I'm saying that no-one has done so and had positive results.
Simple fact that you agree with, and so I don't know quite why it's "nonsense" to realize when something does work "A caused B to happen", and it's worth looking into. If glucosamine and condroitin, or shark cartilage were found to assist greatly in the healing from a hip replacement for instance, then it's not ridiculous at all.
With all due respect, I think you've missed my point here. The logic that "A happened then B happened therefore A caused B" is fundamentally flawed. It is no more true to say "I took herbs then my cold went therefore herbs cured my cold" than it is to say "I wore my lucky boxers today then Brighton beat Sunderland therefore my lucky boxers caused Brighton to beat Sunderland", yet people do have superstitions about both.
Of course, herbs may have cured the cold (I am not meaning you personally here), the same as someone's "lucky boxers" may have influenced the Sunderland result. If you (anyone) wants to investigate further, they can do so. Compare Albion results to one person's boxer short choice over a long period of time and I'm pretty sure you'll realise that, actually, there is no correlation - it's just a perfectly normal (but illogical) human reaction to draw conclusions. Similarly, I am just as certain that comparing herbs to colds would reveal that people recover just as quickly whether or not they take herbs (or any particular herb).
I do agree though, that if a proper large scale trial gave solid evidence that glucosamine and condroitin, or shark cartilage helped with the healing you suggest, then they work. But it needs to be tested, and one example does not a test make.
(Sorry if the boxers analogy offends you as much as the cornflakes one. That isn't my intention, it's just used as a comparison)