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Notes -
I mean to some extent the fundamental problem is that patients are idiots (also, people are idiots).
For example it is pervasive common sense in the U.S. that doctors in general (and notably for this forum - psychiatrists in specific) are pill pushers first and foremost.
Meanwhile every doctor is trained to and will tell you to make lifestyle modifications and live a healthy life first. If they do not it's not because they don't believe it's because they've given up because nobody listens.
Then patients say they want to do X supplement or go to the chiropractor or whatever in order to maintain health instead of taking medication which the pill pushing doctor wants them on...
Ultimately you do what you can but people will ignore you and believe whatever they want and be resistant to being told what is or is not common sense and what is or is not good evidence.
Convincing people of stuff they don't want to believe is not something that doctors are more magically equipped to do than anyone else, but that is what would be required.
I do think public health is directionally wrong on some of this stuff, but insisting "okay but this time when people are wrong or confused you have to be more careful" isn't helpful.
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