Lipitor can destroy your liver.
Back surgery can leave you paralyzed.
People who take Chantix might kill themselves.
You may never wake up from a simple surgery.
These statements are all true. They also are very confusing to many of my patients when I am prescribing drugs or recommending surgery. What should they do when they hear such bad things about drugs, surgeries, or procedures? How much do they risk when they follow my advice?
It’s a hard world out there, with the attorneys advertising on TV about drugs my patients have taken, with the websites devoted to the harms brought on by a drug or an immunization, with Dr. Oz and other seemingly smart people telling them things that are contrary to my advice, and with friends and neighbors who give dire warnings about the dangers of following my advice.
There are so many voices out there competing with mine, that I sometimes spend more time reassuring than I do anything else. A doctor in our practice believes that Dr. Oz ought to issue a statement to doctors whenever he voices another controversial opinion as gospel fact so that we can be ready with our counter-arguments.
What can doctors do? We can’t quiet the other voices that speak against us. In truth, those voices have an important role in preventing us from becoming comfortable and dogmatic in our beliefs. So how do I combat such a heavy current against our advice?
By talking about seat belts.
Seat belts can kill you, you know. You can be trapped inside your car by your seat belt and not be able to get out before your car explodes. It’s not a fable; it can really happen.
You may be sealing your fate to die terribly every time you buckle your seat belt.






