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Answer Overview

Response rates from 520 Right voters.

39%
Yes
61%
No
37%
Yes
44%
No
1%
Yes, this will decrease the amount of misinformation patients receive
7%
No, only when the advice was proven to harm the patient
0%
Yes, and the doctors should also lose their medical license
7%
No, but the doctors should be required to disclose that the advice contradicts contemporary scientific consensus
3%
No, scientific consensus can quickly change and patients should be allowed to try unconventional ideas

Historical Support

Trend of support over time for each answer from 520 Right voters.

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Historical Importance

Trend of how important this issue is for 520 Right voters.

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Other Popular Answers

Unique answers from Right voters whose views went beyond the provided options.

 @9VRCJWVanswered…1mo1MO

Some doctors have their own way of thinking about what kind of treatment is the best. It has always been a tradition to follow the ancient way of curing the patient's health. As technology advances year by year, there are more choices for different treatments. I think the doctors should learn about these treatments so they could be professionals in this field of medicine.

 @9V3ZDKCfrom Saskatchewan  answered…2mos2MO

No, only penalize when there was proven harm to a patient - scientific consensus can quickly change and patients should have the right to be allowed to try ANY unconventional ideas, and doctors should be required to disclose that this advice may contradict at the moment, but regardless patients should have a right to try

 @9RCH3XQfrom Manitoba  answered…4mos4MO

It depends on the situation. If they can prove the health advice was unreasonable and caused harm, then yes, they should penalize those doctors. But if the advice was reasonable and did not cause harm, then the doctor should not be penalized. Particularly with rare diseases, there may not BE any scientific consensus and doctors need to be free to discuss alternative treatment options.

 @9QZGVSTfrom Michigan  answered…4mos4MO

Doctors should be required to disclose that the advice contradicts contemporary scientific consensus, and only be penalized if the advice was proven to harm the patient.

 @9QQKXVQanswered…5mos5MO

If they say something that can cause danger to the patient then they should be penalised but the overall consensus isn't always correct and if they feel that they have proper medical experience on why they think this health advice is true and actually helps the patient it shouldn't. It also depends on how big of a consensus they are going against.

 @9H64585answered…12mos12MO

I am unsure as there is a lot of mix ups and constantly changing information as well as weaponisation of science to push agendas

 @9G9M53Lfrom Ontario  answered…1yr1Y

yes, but only if they are penalizing the patient for not following. also if they are doing so in their own office.

 @9LHLKDCfrom Ontario  answered…7mos7MO

No, as long as they discuss this advice first with healthcare officials first and have gotten approval.