It actually does. Medical science is continually coming around to the side of the mind/body connection. This is why people experience the placebo affect.
You’re mixing up 2 things here.
It’s a medical truism (truth being different from fact) that if you believe you’re going to be fine, you usually will be. It’s freaky, and awesome, and wicked cool... and we don’t entirely understand the mechanisms involved. But, yes, it’s how placebos work, in some cases, for limited periods of time, for some people. It’s
also how we had a massive spike of gunshot deaths in the 1950s & 60’s. When there was infinitely LESS actual gun violence... People were dying left and right from completely non-fatal GSWs. There was no rhyme or reason to it, and it absolutely baffled the scientific community, until Hollywood (and the wild popularity of cowboy films & TV) was considered. Bang! You’re dead! Had -apparently- crept into the public conscious. (As determined by sociologists who found that in high crime areas -and returning veterans from WWII & Korea- & other similar cohort groups where people were used to violence, death rates stayed the same, but in the general population deaths were through the roof). The major studios were actually
begged by the scientific community to make their fictional people harder to kill. To reduce the number of real deaths. Weird piece of entertainment history - this is why not only the heroes but also the villains and bystanders have become
much harder to kill. And why we removed
bang you’re dead from cartoons & TV for decades. (Not from a moral standpoint, and characters were allowed to LooneyToons die/comeback/die/comeback without interruption. But the massacres that you see in the wake of violence ended all because of An impassioned plea from doctors and scientists to executives and artists. Quirky, right?
Believing you’re going to be okay? Is different from believing there’s a cure.
If you have (had! I’m cured!) non hodgekins lymphoma? And you spike a fever? Well, you do what anyone does who spikes a fever. You take a couple Tylenol to lower it, and call in sick to work, and spend a few days recuperating at home. And die. 3 days later. Because if you didn’t believe you were cured, you would treat a sudden fever spike as a reason to haul ass to the ER, not a reason to take Tylenol and go to bed.
If you have (had! I’m cured!) malaria & spike a fever? Instead of getting on the appropriate
anti-parasiticals , let’s waste a month or two in the ICU at Harvard Med school on antibiotics, antivirals, steroids... pretty much every medicine known to man that has zero effect on the tropical disease you’re currently experiencing. ((Actually, even if you wave a flag and shout “I have malaria!” In the US, it can still take weeks for your case to actually be kicked up the food chain to a tropical disease specialist, who is like “Oh. Malarial relapse. No biggie. Here you go!” You have to be insaaaaaaaanely proactive with Malaria in the states, making sure all your doctors are aware & on board, & you have treatments at home you refresh periodically... and
still you’ll be taken ill the one time you leave the state on business, or when your doctor is on vacation & waste weeks on idiots, and you’ve got someone who doesn’t understand the basics of malaria. I’ve actually been told on numerous occasions by northern doctors that you can’t “get it again” :banghead: Idiots.)) But -to be fair- once you’re in fever psychosis, it’s difficult to get anyone to take anything you say seriously. They may understand malaria perfectly well, and just not understand that what you
meant to say was “I’ve got malaria” instead of “your ceiling tiles are sparkling”.
Believing there’s a cure, when there isn’t one, means that people DON’T seek (or receive) appropriate treatment.