When Healthcare Becomes an Industry Machine

Overprescription, Public Subsidies, Dirty Hospitals, and the Urgent Need to Put Human Dignity First

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Modern medicine has saved millions of lives. Vaccines, antibiotics, surgery, diagnostics, emergency care, and advanced treatments have transformed human history. Yet alongside these triumphs stands a growing public concern: what happens when healthcare begins to serve systems, shareholders, bureaucracy, and inertia more than patients?

This concern is often expressed emotionally through the phrase “Big Pharma.” Behind that phrase lies a serious debate about overprescription, excessive dependence on pills, corporate lobbying, misuse of public subsidies, declining trust, hospital-acquired infections, and ethical fears surrounding end-of-life decisions. These are not fringe concerns. They reflect real anxieties about whether healthcare remains centered on healing.

The answer is not anti-science hysteria or blanket distrust of medicine. The answer is reform, accountability, modernization, transparency, and putting dignity back at the center of care.

The Overprescription Problem

One of the clearest complaints in many countries is simple: too many pills, too quickly.

Instead of addressing lifestyle, nutrition, stress, pollution, sleep, social isolation, or preventive medicine, many systems default to prescriptions. This can happen for understandable reasons:

  • Doctors are under time pressure.

  • Patients often want quick relief.

  • Pharmaceutical marketing influences awareness.

  • Prevention takes longer than writing a prescription.

  • Healthcare systems reward treatment more than prevention.

The result can be dangerous.

Overprescription contributes to:

  • unnecessary side effects

  • dependency risks

  • drug interactions

  • antibiotic resistance

  • rising public costs

  • patient frustration

Medication is often necessary and life-saving. But when pills become the first answer to every problem, medicine risks becoming mechanical rather than human.

A healthier model would ask first:

  • Can this be prevented?

  • Can behavior change help?

  • Is there a non-drug option?

  • Is this prescription truly needed?

  • How long should it continue?

That shift alone could save money, improve outcomes, and rebuild trust.

Public Subsidies and Private Profits

Another public frustration concerns state subsidies.

Many pharmaceutical breakthroughs rely on publicly funded universities, taxpayer-backed research grants, and public procurement systems. Yet once products reach market, prices may become extremely high, while profits are privatized.

Citizens naturally ask:

Why does the public pay twice?
First through taxes, then again through inflated prices.

This does not mean profit itself is evil. Innovation requires investment. But public funding should come with public benefit.

Reasonable reforms include:

  • transparent pricing models

  • fair return clauses for taxpayer-funded research

  • generic competition after patent periods

  • anti-monopoly enforcement

  • public-interest licensing in emergencies

  • open reporting of lobbying activity

Healthcare should reward innovation without allowing exploitation.

The Ethical Red Line: No Coercive Euthanasia

End-of-life care is one of the most sensitive moral questions any society can face. Laws differ across countries, cultures, and beliefs. But one principle must remain absolute:

No person should be pressured, manipulated, economically nudged, or deprived into death.

If an elderly, disabled, poor, depressed, or isolated person feels like a burden, society has already failed before any legal process begins.

True dignity means:

  • pain relief

  • palliative care

  • companionship

  • informed consent

  • mental health support

  • family counseling

  • freedom from coercion

Any “euthanization” against a person’s will would be a grave abuse of human rights and medical ethics. Consent, capacity, transparency, and independent safeguards are essential.

Medicine exists to care for vulnerability, not exploit it.

Dirty Hospitals and the Hidden Scandal of Infection

Many citizens are less worried about futuristic ethics debates than about something immediate:

Why do hospitals sometimes feel unsafe?

Hospital-acquired infections remain a serious issue worldwide. Superbugs resistant to antibiotics and emerging fungal threats can spread in environments where sanitation systems, ventilation, staffing, training, or infrastructure lag behind modernization.

This is not the fault of cleaners alone. Frontline cleaning staff are often underpaid and understaffed. The real issue is institutional neglect.

When modernization is delayed, problems multiply:

  • outdated wards

  • poor ventilation

  • overcrowding

  • weak isolation capacity

  • understaffing

  • inadequate infection surveillance

  • procurement failures

Drug-resistant organisms are a global health threat. The WHO and many health agencies have repeatedly warned that antimicrobial resistance could undermine modern medicine itself.

Clean hospitals are not cosmetic. They are core healthcare infrastructure.

Superbugs and Superfungi: Tomorrow’s Crisis Today

Antibiotics once felt miraculous. But bacteria evolve.

Overuse in medicine, agriculture, and global systems has accelerated resistance. Some infections now require stronger drugs, longer hospital stays, or have fewer treatment options.

Likewise, certain fungi such as Candida auris have raised concern because they can spread in healthcare settings and resist multiple treatments.

This is where overprescription and dirty infrastructure collide:

  • too many antibiotics create resistance

  • weak infection control spreads resistant organisms

  • vulnerable patients suffer most

The future of medicine depends not only on inventing new drugs, but preserving the power of current ones.

What International Law Teaches About Human Limits

You mentioned the Geneva tradition regarding warfare and chemical attacks. That is an important reminder.

The 1925 Geneva Protocol prohibited the use of poisonous gases and bacteriological methods in war, later strengthened by the Chemical Weapons Convention, which bans chemical weapons more broadly. These treaties emerged because humanity recognized that some tools of suffering cross a line. 

That principle matters beyond battlefields.

Even in peace, institutions should reject practices that cause unnecessary suffering, neglect human dignity, or treat people as disposable. Healthcare should embody the opposite of chemical warfare logic: protection, healing, restraint, and humanity.

Why Trust Is Falling

When people see:

  • endless prescriptions

  • corporate scandals

  • hospital infections

  • long waiting lists

  • confusing billing

  • poor communication

  • rushed appointments

…trust declines.

Once trust breaks, even good medicine suffers. Patients delay care. Conspiracy theories spread. Public health campaigns weaken.

Trust is infrastructure. It must be maintained like roads, water systems, and electricity.

A Better Model of Healthcare

Real reform does not require rejecting medicine. It requires improving it.

1. Rational Prescribing

Audit unnecessary medication and support deprescribing where appropriate.

2. Clean, Modern Hospitals

Upgrade ventilation, sanitation systems, digital monitoring, and infection control capacity.

3. Transparent Funding

Show citizens where subsidies go and what outcomes they buy.

4. Human-Centered Care

Longer consultations, better communication, informed consent, compassionate treatment.

5. Strong Ethics Safeguards

Protect vulnerable patients in all end-of-life decisions.

6. Public Interest Science

Reward innovation while ensuring affordability.

The Core Question

Healthcare can become one of two things:

A healing commons built around dignity.

Or an industrial machine built around throughput.

The first treats people as human beings.
The second treats them as cases, codes, and revenue streams.

Citizens sense the difference immediately.

Final Thought

Medicine is one of civilization’s greatest achievements. That is exactly why it deserves criticism when it drifts off course.

The goal should't be anti-medicine but better medicine. When healthcare remembers its mission, society becomes healthier in every sense.


References

  1. Geneva Protocol (1925) overview. (Wikipedia)

  2. Chemical Weapons Convention overview. (Arms Control Association)

  3. ICRC summary of humanitarian protections in war. (ICRC)

  4. Global public health literature on antimicrobial resistance and healthcare-associated infections.


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Reclaiming Medicine From the Industry Machine
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