The Demolition of the Principles of Good Clinical Practice

I was fortunate enough to have studied at Leeds University Dental Institute. For me, the most important lessons were in the ethics and principles of clinical practice. These foundations exist to protect the public and ensure that they can trust us to provide any necessary care.

So what in particular did I learn and what would have prevented me from being allowed to qualify and have a licence to practice?

I had to study physiology, anatomy and pathology in great detail and be continually tested on these subjects before moving on to practical surgical and technical skills. One of the key considerations I had to have in mind when making the transition from theory and applying this to practice was to understand that not all specifically diagnosed cases are the same and that the health status of a patient is never fixed. It can be ever-changing and dynamic, so a clinician needs to be reactive to this.

We were also taught about perspective when assessing a patient. I was once pulled up by the Professor in Radiology for dwelling too long on one particular area of a radiograph in my determination to reach a diagnosis. The valuable lesson was that by doing this, I risked finding artefacts and missing the bigger picture. When it comes to safety, airline pilots, sea vessel captains and motorists should know the perils of focusing too much in one area, especially in an emergency. For Covid the bigger picture includes the latest data that shows  99.9987% of the under 20s and 97.1% of the elderly survive Covid.

Examination questions were very often designed to see how well we could accommodate these variables in order to tailor-make individual treatment plans. The complete antithesis of providing safe, effective healthcare would have been to rush in and provide a blanket ‘one-size-fits-all’ treatment plan for every patient.

Not understanding and applying these principles would likely prevent you from qualifying as a dentist or a doctor. 

Apart from individualising treatment and monitoring for beneficial and adverse effects, further prescribing principles focused on the following: patient safety, identifying the most vulnerable, informed consent and prescribing within the limitations of your knowledge, skill and experience.

So, in the context of Covid, how well – how correctly and ethically – have we applied these basic principles in tackling the disease?

Individualised, tailor made treatment plans – Recommended treatment (e.g. vaccination) does not appear to have accounted for the huge difference in Covid risk profile with respect to each person’s age and general health status.

Monitoring effects – Patients have not been provided with simple, recordable post-treatment assessment forms. For instance, surely it would have been simple enough to provide patient questionnaires to return on second or further booster visits to help monitor and evaluate the effectiveness and safety of an embryonic vaccination programme.

Informed consent – Patients have been denied a full range of possible treatment options through closing down any debate on focused protection as per the Great Barrington Declaration, improving lifestyle choices to fortify our immune systems naturally and blocking alternative drugs or pharmaceutical regimes that, evidence suggests, have proved so successful in India. Patients have been coerced into acceptance of a single treatment plan (i.e., vaccination) and have no choice but to be vaccinated when their freedom to access services or even employment is threatened without compliance.

Prescribing within the limitations of knowledge, skill and experience – Many issues are now coming to light with regard to the lockdown/vaccination strategy. For instance, the latest studies on how Covid vaccines affect blood clotting, heart muscle, the menstrual cycle and other sites or organ systems remote from the injection site which were, on roll-out, initially discounted.

In terms of safety, where has there been a consideration to pause or stop prescribing for the young, the fit and healthy, including athletes with extremely low Covid risk? There is no clear evidence that these asymptomatic subjects spread symptomatic disease to the vulnerable; the vaccinated elderly and vulnerable are protected from severe illness and it is virtually impossible to stop a virus from spreading in any case.

I’ll keep firing principles at you. The following are the five ‘rights’ that clinicians should aspire to achieving – the right patient, medication, dose, route and time. Lockdown and vaccination protocol has not reached out for these ‘rights’. In particular vaccination has been delivered indiscriminately and regardless of antibody status and evidence of pre-existing immunity and the dose and timing have been experimentally adjusted by mixing vaccines and shortening the booster intervals.

Finally, the pillars of medical ethics in the simplest terms:

  • Autonomy – respecting the patient’s right to self determination;
  • Duty to do good;
  • Duty to not do bad;
  • To treat all people equally and fairly.

I’ll let you consider whether those ethical pillars have been adhered to in the context of the backlog of non-Covid care (including cancer diagnosis, mental health, impact on education); the blanket medical treatment of low or near zero risk patients; the economic consequences that are eventually bound to impact mostly on the poorer in society; the blatant coercion and stigmatising of non-conforming or sceptical individuals; and the gross lack of a determination to record medically or publicise in the media adverse consequences of an experimental lockdown-and-vaccination strategy. It seems that all the above rules have been tramped on by a hypocritical political elite that parties-on whilst tired-out healthcare professionals wearily acquiesce.

It is only with Covid, it seems, that we have allowed the demolition of safe, ethical clinical practice.   

Dr. Mark Shaw is a retired dentist.

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PatrickF
PatrickF
4 years ago

Would any GP be able to explain the differences between Pfizer, Moderna etc, as these do different things in the body, let alone name three ingredients in each concoction?
I doubt it, yet I would need and want to know before I agree to be jabbed.
No jabs for me, thank you doctor: pointless and a risk to my health.

watersider
4 years ago
Reply to  PatrickF

Great article Dr Mark Shaw and thank you.
One question – what is the definition of a vaccine?

D J
D J
4 years ago
Reply to  watersider

That depends on the date, as I expect you know.

watersider
4 years ago
Reply to  D J

Nice one DJ thank you about Vexines – you sly dog!

Yes it is tragically true what you say about lack of care.
I will be four score next week DV, and thankfully due to a fairly rigid low carb diet and plenty supplements I can still carry my set of clubs over 18 holes three times a week.
So fortunately I have not bothered the NHS recently as they are too absorbed in needle sticking.
But the real secret is I choose my parents very carefully.
On the subject of the reluctance of medicos not going public with their concerns, it would be unfair to single them out.
Just look at the greatest scientific fraud since Gallelo.
No working scientist is allowed to debunk the unproven hypothesis of Carbon Dioxide controlling the weather. Yet millions of poor people are still cooking with dried dung in Africa a continent rich in God given grown up Carbon based fuel sources.
It’s time to get my clubs out

TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
4 years ago
Reply to  D J

Denier!

The future is fixed the past was merely incorrectly documented and is continually corrected.

HicManemus
4 years ago
Reply to  PatrickF

Doctors are not biochemists…only the brightest students would take a separate BSc in biochemistry in conjunction with studying to be a doctor. Biochemistry would, of course, make up part of their training. My father taught biochemistry for over 35 years at a London teaching hospital and this was always his comment. Interestingly, he was against attenuated vaccines and insisted that I had the classic “dead” polio vaccine. This is the sort of vaccine that is being developed by Valneva and that Javid decided to cancel. Doh.

crisisgarden
4 years ago
Reply to  HicManemus

Apparently in the Netherlands, they are planning to offer this one to hardcore refuseniks. I mean, everyone’s got to get on some sort of schedule for the purposes of the digital ID system they want.

twinkytwonk
4 years ago
Reply to  PatrickF

I am not a GP but i am a PhD molecular biologist. The pfizer (30 ug) and moderna (100ug) differ in the amount of mRNA per application. In addition, the moderna has a lightly longer 3UTR (untranslated region). This region contains regulatory elements which determine the rate of mRNA decay and the amount of spike proteins that will be produced from each mRNA strand.

The full sequences of both pfizer and moderna mRNA transcripts can be seen here:https://github.com/NAalytics/Assemblies-of-putative-SARS-CoV2-spike-encoding-mRNA-sequences-for-vaccines-BNT-162b2-and-mRNA-1273/blob/main/Assemblies%20of%20putative%20SARS-CoV2-spike-encoding%20mRNA%20sequences%20for%20vaccines%20BNT-162b2%20and%20mRNA-1273.docx.pdf

Milo
Milo
4 years ago
Reply to  twinkytwonk

I wonder if I was to take this to my GP and ask him, based on this, whether I should have the jab, what would he say? would he even have a clue about what its content meant? or would be be thinking about the payment he would get for jabbing me and tell me everything would be fine – it is “safe and effective”

BS665
BS665
4 years ago

Unrelated: a smidgin more maskless on the Piccadilly line this morning.

Ripples of reaction from the recent atomic blasts in Downing Street?

Emerald Fox
4 years ago
Reply to  BS665

“They know it’s all over.”

January 14th 2022 today. When did this start? March 2020?

BS665
BS665
4 years ago
Reply to  Emerald Fox

At least we can observe the collapse (if it’s real) and garner first hand knowledge about how regimes transition back to some kind of sanity. If you ever wanted to be there in France in 1814 or Germany in 1945 here’s your chance!

huxleypiggles
4 years ago
Reply to  BS665

Calm before the storm.

zners
zners
4 years ago
Reply to  BS665

I’ve always found the tube the best poll on these things

bOrgkilLaH1of7
4 years ago
Reply to  BS665

I have no doubt BS665 amongst younger Brits, due to social media influencers waking up … and that brilliant heavy punch Rogan podcast… the ripples of which are still leaching out…

Sanity is starting to return [long overdue]….however this 25-35 group yearn to still internationally travel… therefore will lean toward the boosting program [under duress] if snowboards to bosoms are clutched…hence French alp bookings flying.

This is a KEY issue… the vaxx passports have to go for good for us to be collectively free of this ghastly global Reset, forget the virus its always been a red-herring of no consequence… its in fact irrelevant.

Older people [being over 60 I am one] if unlike me [I hiked 12m moorland yesterday] they are riddled with comorbidities – the have always died up here in Northern latitudes every winter…what’s new? Nothing in fact.

The elephant in the room question is why are so many doing so in increasing numbers?

https://www.zerohedge.com/medical/nationwide-surge-deaths-among-people-aged-18-49-state-state-overview

For sure this will be the same data set across all lockstep Govt controlled nations… lockdowns, economy destructions, familial social contact limitations…all drivers for sure… vaxx damage too I’m in no doubt.

As you were…

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D J
D J
4 years ago

Thankyou from another doctor.
I have been left furious by a 19y old suffering from Bell’s Palsy after her vaccination. 5 months of taping her eyelid shut at night and she was told by her GP that it was still better than risking Covid infection based on a Lancet article.
I have seen glaucoma patients blinded because they were not tested for two years and yesterday saw 27y old with an untreated 9mm lower lid basal or squamous cell carcinoma who had been diagnosed with a ‘chalazion’ early last year.
My wife’s cousin was not seen by a GP for a back wart, which turned out to be Grade 3c melanoma.
Doctors have been turned into liars, and those opposed to policy, like me,face being sacked despite working face to face through the pandemic.

RTSC
RTSC
4 years ago
Reply to  D J

It’s a tragedy that more of your colleagues weren’t/aren’t prepared to speak out.

Good luck.

Emerald Fox
4 years ago
Reply to  RTSC

Speak out -> lose job and get laughed at by colleagues -> can’t pay mortgage on house -> become homeless -> eat rat for supper if you’re lucky enough to catch one.

Go along with ‘the agenda’ -> get to keep job -> can pay mortgage -> comfortable life.

SAGE knows how humans work. And they’re not going to give up their well-salaried positions.

TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
4 years ago
Reply to  Emerald Fox

GPs are overpaid for the rarity of skills, the extra pay is hush money IMHO

John001
John001
4 years ago
Reply to  RTSC

If you have enough patients able to pay, consider leaving the NHS, like Dr Sarah Myhill (Knighton) did.

I think she was basically forced out after relations with conventional medics. became too frosty and untenable. She has an overflowing patient list I believe.

Maybe Dr. Sam White will do the same.

Sad though to see sound medical advice again reserved for those who are able to pay.

JASA
JASA
4 years ago
Reply to  John001

Indeed. She’s a very good complementary medicine doctor. One of my mother’s (in her 80s) friends is a patient of hers and he was prescribed Ivermectin, which cleared things up quickly.
As we all know here, none of what has happened was necessary, even in the vulnerable group.

RickH
4 years ago
Reply to  JASA

even in the vulnerable group”

… and never forget that additional reminder – too often the vulnerability trope is used as an excuse for covidiocy.

Annie
4 years ago

It’s only retired professionals who ever speak out against these crimes. For practising ones, the only principle most of them seem to recognise is ‘Keep your job.’

BS665
BS665
4 years ago
Reply to  Annie

And their job is care/heal/do no harm. So they are crap at their job.

D J
D J
4 years ago
Reply to  Annie

Not quite true. See my comment below.

TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
4 years ago
Reply to  Annie

As long as you keep your mouth closed and ignore the abuse you can keep your sinecure.

This is why as little as possible should be provisioned by the state.

JohnK
4 years ago
Reply to  Annie

What a surprise. Groups of partners trading as a branch of the NHS will have an eye on their balance sheet, no doubt. Money talks.

RTSC
RTSC
4 years ago

Not quite right at the end: This sums it up better “Tramped on by Scientists and Behavioural Psychologists who stand to benefit personally in various ways and had a political agenda to advance; cowardly Ministers; supine MPs and an NHS stuffed with acquiescing medical personnel who “forgot” their oath to “first do no harm.”

HicManemus
4 years ago

What a superb article. Thank you Dr Shaw for giving us such a different perspective on the Covid debacle and the danger of a “one size fits all” approach.

crisisgarden
4 years ago

I’m afraid my trust in doctors and allopathic medicine itself has plummeted these past two years and I would now be extremely reluctant to seek medical advice if I or my children needed it. Extreme, and possibly self-defeating I know, but I’m a hardliner: Anyone who could not see through this obvious fraud and allowed themselves to be carried on a wave of propaganda at the expense of their patients’ needs should not be practicing medicine. When it comes to the covid ‘vaccines’ the warning signals were absolutely there; these were novel technologies being manufactured by corporations with a long record of criminal malfeasance. There was in fact no reason to trust them. When the scale of the damage that’s been done comes to light, there will be thousands of doctors unable to look in the mirror. It was their responsibility to examine the data dispassionately and it looks to me like only a tiny minority did.

miketa1957
miketa1957
4 years ago
Reply to  crisisgarden

100% agree, except that my trust in doctors has been going down for longer than that.

“Heroic” medicine, yes, if I break a bone or chop a finger off or something like that, I trust them to do a good job on it. But for more chronic conditions, much less so. It feels to me that doctor’s experience and expertise has been replaced by checklists and tick-boxing.

But, the last two years has really killed it for me.

DevonBlueBoy
DevonBlueBoy
4 years ago
Reply to  miketa1957

Before it became the Covid Health Service, it was the Emergency Health Service

Deborah T
Deborah T
4 years ago
Reply to  crisisgarden

I feel the same about doctors. Trust and respect has pretty much evaporated. But if one of my local doctors ‘came out’, and said they hadn’t been vaccinated, and was opposed to mandatory/coerced vaccination in any sphere, I’d be trying my very best to get onto their list. I will always remember a doctor at my local practice had produced a video for patients on what to do in the ‘pandemic’, and he was wearing a b_____ mask – in a video FFS!!

crisisgarden
4 years ago
Reply to  Deborah T

I saw my own GP in Tescos wearing a mask when there was no legal requirement to do so. Thereby revealing the following:

  • Failure to enquire, access and read freely available published studies.
  • Failure to think for himself, separating empirical truth from propaganda messaging.
  • Failure to recognise the social, emotional, psychological and physical harms caused by masks.
  • Failure to recognise the scientifically preposterous idea that flimsy bits of woven cloth could have an impact viral transmission.

Was he trying to model responsible behaviour? Lead by example? If he was that’s even worse. I would have thought these were all prerequisites of practicing medicine. Unforgivable, I’m afraid.

JohnK
4 years ago
Reply to  crisisgarden

A reasonable observation. Also, it depends what you understand by “legal”. In reality, it’s only ever been a recommendation, with arse covering via mealy-mouthed methodology for declaring exemption.

huxleypiggles
4 years ago
Reply to  crisisgarden

Nailed it again CG.👍

milesahead
milesahead
4 years ago
Reply to  crisisgarden

The quality of doctors has always been variable – the advice to always seek a second opinion has been around for decades (if not longer!).

Has anyone seen the Italian movie Dear Diary (Caro Diario)? In the final third of the movie, the director presents his own experiences with the medical establishment; it opened my eyes about second opinions 20 years ago!

What the last 20 months has done is shine a light on the conformity of the medical profession – it hasn’t been a pretty sight.

Oh, and yet again in the above (broadly excellent) article we have the statement ‘the vaccinated elderly and vulnerable are protected from severe illness’.

Are they?

crisisgarden
4 years ago
Reply to  milesahead

Is has not. And the wholesale and unquestioning acceptance of the vaccine campaign (with its preposterous justification!) reveals them to be little more than drug pushers.

thinkcriticall
4 years ago
Reply to  crisisgarden

fourpillars.jpg
steve_z
4 years ago

Throwing away the pandemic response plan was – and will be seen to be – a disaster. It was not ‘the science’. The science was the pandemic response plan. Lockdown was a novel idea applied in panic. The rest is arse covering.

The rushed out vaccine is a ‘post March 2020’ idea and can be ignored as can any other pronouncement or action after that date. The data that ‘proved’ lockdown works – from the ONS or PHE or anyone else is fraud.

steve_z
4 years ago

https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/politics-and-diplomacy/article-692532

Interesting article on the Israel Prime Minister

Regarding the lockdowns, Bennett opposed them when he was a minister, he wrote against them in his book, and – judging by the current policy of keeping the economy open even as the current variant is running rampant – he remains adamantly against them now. Lockdowns, in Bennett’s view, are the easy answer and evidence of failed policy.”

crisisgarden
4 years ago
Reply to  steve_z

That’s because he knows that lockdowns were just about getting everyone’s attention, and providing a ‘problem’ that needed ‘solving’ with the ‘vaccines’

crisisgarden
4 years ago
Reply to  crisisgarden

It’s not rocket science, is it.

DanClarke
DanClarke
4 years ago

I’ve needed some continual GP treatment for a while and at no time have I been asked for my jab status, even got an outpatient hospital referral within days. My GP was asked by a neighbour when she could have her jab and the reply was, ‘nothing to do with me’, the jabbing is done in a side room, there is a big notice across the front of the surgery, Get Your Vaccine, but that’s it. It appears like schools, shops etc, to depend on individual hysteria

loopDloop
loopDloop
4 years ago

Thanks for coming to the party, Dr, only you’re a little late, we’re just cleaning up the mess now.

Milo
Milo
4 years ago
Reply to  loopDloop

Mark Shaw has been writing on this site for quite a while now loopDloop. You might be the one who is late to the party if you don’t realise it.

Cecil B
Cecil B
4 years ago

BBC Breaking News New research finds that office parties may have saved lives Today Imperial College published a research paper that suggests office parties may have saved lives The research used data from a group of one hundred central London office workers. The workers were divided into one group of seventy and a control group of thirty The seventy were instructed to not attend office parties and make their way home each evening as per normal using peak hour public transport Using data from track and trace, GCHQ, and funding from a very generous MP the researchers were able to establish that this group were responsible for a total of 1.24m covid infections. It is estimated that these infections led to 240,000 deaths with covid worldwide The control group were instructed to party late into the night and then make their way home. The research suggests that due to there being fewer people about late at night the control group did not infect anyone. The researchers say evidence is emerging that the control group actually saved at least four lives including a child and a granny Imperial said they could not confirm the child and granny data as the original… Read more »

James Leary #KBF
4 years ago

It’s what I’ve been saying from the start. The James O’Brien method of squashing dissent to anything he says. Drown the questioner in minutiae. Tiny, separate little points that draw you away from the big picture. In the Covid case, the big picture is that it was NEVER any worse than a moderately bad flu season, and the deaths were never more than you would expect following three low-death seasons. NONE of this was necessary.

David.in.Italy
4 years ago

Yes, I don’t phone ‘fake’ O’Brien as he’s the very example of ‘controlled-oppo’ I’d last about ten seconds on his show, even the Thursday Question hour…..

Question for you James O’B., why does Public Health Scotland release ‘fake-news’ about the fully vaxxed & boosted being worse affected than the unvaxxed? https://www.heraldscotland.com/news/19843315.covid-scotland-case-rates-lowest-unvaccinated-double-jabbed-elderly-drive-rise-hospital-admissions/

Sforzesca
Sforzesca
4 years ago

Again for the hard of hearing.
IT’S. NOT. ABOUT. A. VIRUS.

Clown World exists to impose a Worldwide State Surveillance System via digital ID.
And, err, that’s it.
All that there was, all that there is and all that there will be is trashed in the name of covid.

Beyond evil.
May they rot in Hell forever.

ComeTheRevolution
ComeTheRevolution
4 years ago
Reply to  Sforzesca

Well said, this is what its ALL about. And that Digital ID surveillance Beast system invovles everyone having tiny nanochips inserted into their body to ensure they are complying with the tyranny and so they can be hacked and controlled like remote control humans from HQ. The nanochipping of innocent well meaning people has already begun covertly via the jabs and who knows what other mechanisms – maybe the food – are they putting this stuff in the food. Its a legitimate question which NEEDS to be tackled. These people see the human race as a resource to be herded and managed and tagged like cattle. So the question is, is the human race going to let these lowlifes get away with this. The power lies with the people. We have to become like missionaries to inform our fellow man that they are being led to the slaughterhouse by the agents of evil. They have NO IDEA what is being teed up. The public funds this. That is a great starting point. They do this with PUBLIC MONEY. These are OUR SYSTEMS OF POWER. The power structures BELONG TO US. Time to Take Back Control – from the criminals to… Read more »

watersider
4 years ago

There is already an experiment ongoing in Sweden. Several thousand have volunteered to partake in having a tiny chip (like little “grain of rice”) inserted in the back of their hands.
This “allows” them to access their bank accounts ther social security services, medical status etc etc

Nessimmersion
4 years ago

.

1 (1).jpeg
kate
kate
4 years ago

https://jessicar.substack.com/p/the-female-reproductive-issues-in
The Female Reproductive Issues reported to VAERS. This is so important for our bloody species. I still cannot believe that this is what I am doing with my time – trying to convince humans why it’s a good idea to consider what is contained in a syringe that has been connected to an unprecedented number of adverse events in every adverse event collection system in the world.
The reason for the excessive proportion of events reported in 0-5 year olds comes about due to the small denominator – ‘only’ 11,791 babies aged 0-5 have been injected so far in the States. Of the 10 babies aged 0-5 in VAERS, 9 are in the Foreign data set (aka: the hiding place) and [warning – do not read this if you are prone to puking] a 5-month and a 6-month old baby succumbed to ‘Vaginal haemorrhage’. The 5-month old is referred to as having ‘Menstruation irregular’.Out of these 10 babies, only 3 recovered. That means that 7 died

morganlefey
morganlefey
4 years ago

good clinical practice has now been substantially destroyed by bizarrely distorted, irrational, and Procrustean ‘covid’ management guidelines. The response of many clinicians to the totalitarian trashing of fundamental principles of patient centered medical care has been invertebrate. I am a retired medical doctor.

Christiane
Christiane
4 years ago
Reply to  morganlefey

I am also a retired medical doctor. I agree with your post. Shame on our profession.