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3.1.4. Healthcare

Elze's picture

Where people can't care [any more] for themselves and need a helping hand, help it is only given when everything has been tried and it really fails. 

 In physical problems must always be looked at what still can. Likewise in mental problems.

Many mental problems have a physical origin or effect and many physical problems have a mental origin or effect. Most doctors, however, are hardly trained in the relationship between body and mind and do psychosomatic com­plaints [connection between physical and mental problems] as being 'between the ears', 'will pass'. Many com­plaints, however, can be traced back to stress. Stress slurps vitamins and minerals and put people in such a way that each exercise is too much. Prolonged stress can lead to various diseases. Different eating and living habits [otherwise deal with stressors and a good vitamin and mineral balance] and regular healthy exercises appear to reduce a lot of physical and mental problems in no time, or to remove. To enable doctors [including nurses] to draw ap­propriate links between mental and physical origin and effect, and reverse, psychology and knowledge of vi­ta­mins and minerals, stress and lifestyle have to represent a much more important part of medical education. In psy­cho­lo­gi­cal training, vitamins and minerals, stress, lifestyle and medical connections have to anchored better.

On General Practice Services standard  a doctor, psychologist, nutritionist, phy­si­o­the­ra­pist and nurse have to be present at.