Blind-faith and unquestioning allegiance to expert authority deflects scrutiny and analysis. Few red flags are raised as this type of moral preening promotes misguided plausibility and complacency in the belief that these are indeed experts with good intentions. This needs to be addressed.
But if you look at any of the current “moral panics” that are being used to suggest random suspicion-less drug testing of doctors or promoting the Physician Health Programs as successful and replicable models, you will inevitably find a doctor on this list behind it. It is a given.
And the invitation goes out to Seppala to debate this in a public forum on a level playing field. Not gonna happen because it would be impossible for him to address and answer the questions rationally, directly and with any tiny scrap of evidence based data.
The Medical Profession, Moral Entrepreneurship, Moral Panics, and Social Control.
“Few, no matter how desperate, seek help of their own accord.” says Dr. Marv Seppala, M.D., Chief Medical Officer at Hazelden, one of the “PHP-approved” drug and alcohol assessment and treatment centers located in Center City, Minnesota. “Physicians are intelligent and skilled at hiding their addictions.”
“They’re often described as the best workers in the hospital,” he says. “They’ll overwork to compensate for other ways in which they may be falling short, and to protect their supply. They’ll sign up for extra call and show up for rounds they don’t have to do.”
In reality this is ludicrous–knee slapping absurd. If the results of this authoritative opinion were not so dire these statements would, in fact, be comical. Such is not the case, however, and opinions like Seppala’s have been taken at face value and, as a result, the aftermath has…
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Moral entrepeneurship (evidence): http://www.asam.org/education/live-and-online-cme/review-course-in-addiction-medicine/tabletop-exhibit-opportunities/tabletop-exhibitors
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