I once referred briefly to Dr. Andrew Jones in a previous post as an example of one of the warning signs of quackery, the claim of secret knowledge that mainstream science and medicine doesn’t want you to have. Of course, his marketing activities include lots of other characteristic features of alternative medicine propaganda, including unfounded accusations about the harm done by conventional medicine and unproven or outright false claims about the safety and efficacy of alternative methods. In many ways, he is a fine example of many warning signs of quackery.
It turns out, the veterinary medical licensing authorities in Canada, where Dr. Jones lives, have more backbone than most of those in the U.S., and for years they have been warning Dr. Jones that unfairly denigrating his colleagues and making false claims is unprofessional and incompatible with the standards licensed veterinarians are expected to uphold. He repeatedly claimed he would abide by the marketing and advertising guidelines all other veterinarians are subject to in his jurisdiction, and repeated broke those commitments. Finally, the British Columbia Veterinary Medical Association (BCVMA) imposed significant fines, and Dr. Jones has chosen to give up his license so he can market his veterinary self-help products without interference.
His supporters, of course, are trying to paint him as a victim, but the evidence is clear that he is yet another alternative guru with a messiah complex making money not only off peddling ineffective or unproven remedies but discouraging pet owners from seeking real medical care for their pets.
The details of the proceedings against Dr. Jones are included in the BCVMA reports available here:
BCVMA Investigating Committee Report
College of Veterinarians Council Final Decision
(note-these links are no longer working. For now, the ruling can be found here)
In 2003, 2004, and 2005, Dr. Jones was asked to stop using advertising language for his practice and products that implied he provided better care or was less concerned about money than other veterinarians. He advertised his own services as “affordable” and “superior” compared to other vets and said things like:
“You will find us honest, convenient, affordable, and above all caring”
“We use only the best materials and labs”
Some of this language was relatively innocuous, and his supporters have made a point of this to suggest that there is no real issue but competition and professional jealousy here. However, it should be obvious why advertising oneself as better than ones colleagues, especially with no evidence but that of one’s own ego to support such a claim, is both offensive and unprofessional. In any case, the only sanction imposed on Dr. Jones was to stop using such language, which he repeatedly agreed in writing to do. As we shall see, he not only broke these promises but engaged in far more egregiously inappropriate behavior.
Dr. Jones went on to form “Dr. Jones Inner Circle Forum,” a web-based service which charged pet owners a subscription fee to receive his “secret” knowledge and wisdom that he repeatedly claimed would make most visits to the veterinarian unnecessary. On this forum, he repeatedly accused conventional veterinarians of naked greed and a lack of interest in the well-being of their patients:
1) P.P.S My goal is to give you the most up to date, unbiased dog and cat health information to allow YOU to keep your pet in top health. I want you to be an empowered pet owner, and You will be one as part of my exclusive Dr. Andrew Jones’ Inner Circle. [I can’t help notice that hucksters and quacks have a great fondness for CAPITAL LETERS. I wonder why that is…]
2) At the end of the day it boils down to money. If the public are not lining vets pockets with unnecessary visits, purchasing processed foods from which vets also take a percentage, that’s quite a reduction in income.
3) I am “positive” that many ‘conventional” veterinarians think that Veterinary Secrets Revealed is a bunch of “hocus pocus” and should be shut down.
What does this mean?
It means that other veterinarians are upset about my website, ebook, and Complete Home Study Course.
After all, I’m showing people how to treat their own pets and save money on Vet bills [at least some of the money they save, of course, will go to Dr. Jones]
4) You should check out my Complete Home Study Multimedia Course. I guarantee that you will treat your pet’s illness and ailments confidently, competently and for less than it would cost if you relied exclusively on professional Veterinary services.
5) This issue: The 6th Secret – The 6th key to extending your pet’s life is knowing when to AVOID you Veterinarian.
In his posts on the Inner Circle forum, Dr. Jones repeatedly claimed alternative or “holistic” methods were safer and more effective than scientific medicine and that the only reason that conventional veterinarians object to them is that the “Secret Society of Veterinarians” was afraid they would lose money if people learned how to keep their pets healthy without professional medical care. When challenged for proof of his claims, Dr. Jones resorted to the time-worn and thoroughly meaningless arguments of longevity, popularity, and personal experience or anecdote:
‘There is no proof…’
But how do you think that most animals in the world are treated? It’s with natural medicine…
Most people in India or China can’t afford to even see a vet or buy medication.
They use herbs, acupressure, massage, supplements, homeopathic treatments.
The animals get better, because the treatments work.
I have seen thousands of pets recover with home remedies.
That is proof.
As if we are seriously expected to believe that the cats and dogs in the third world who do not have access to real veterinary care are healthier than the pets in the developed world. Just like the people who are too poor to have access to science-based medicine are healthier than those of us in the developed world, despite the minor problems of high infant mortality, low life-expectancy, and rampant infectious and parasitic diseases most of us have never seen, I suppose? Arrant nonsense.
The list of absurd, untrue, and unprofessional accusations and claims, all made in an effort to sell books, videos, and subscriptions to the “secrets” of his “Inner Circle,” is extensive. Here are just a few examples:
1) I firmly believe in holistic medicine for pets.
We are killing them with the most of the terrible dog foods on the market along with pesticides contained in flea and tick medications and also medicines the vets want you to purchase. [a letter supposedly from a reader that Dr. Jones reprinted because it reflected his views]
2) “…you should be leery of any LARGE pet food manufacturer- they re[sic] in the business to profit first”
3) HERBAL THERAPY. A number of herbs are used in diabetes. These include Gymnema, Bitter Melon, Fenugreek, and Ginseng. These herbs can be found in specific diabetic herbal combinations. Ginseng is the most effective of these herbs. It has been shown to lower blood sugar in people, and is believed to do the same in animals. The dose is 30 mg per lb of body weight twice daily of the dried herb, or 1 drop per pound of body weight twice daily of the tincture.[implying people can treat their pet’s diabetes alone, with unproven herbal remedies, is especially egregious because it will undoubtedly lead to suffering and death for animals with this serious disease who are not properly treated]
4) Pay Close Attention – today, I’m going to show you why conventional veterinary medicine is harming your pet and step-by-step what you must do to prevent it.
“Regular” veterinary care has lost it’s [sic] effectiveness over the years, and in some cases is causing illness in our pets.
5) The entire Pet Health Industry has a vested interest in discrediting alternative medicines which can safely, naturally and effectively allow pet owners to care for thei pets at home. [a nice example of the conspiracy-theory aspect of quackery]
6) Most veterinarians just choose to ignore the research because either they still feel the benefits of vaccines outweigh the risks, or that they don’t want to lose income from giving booster shots to all those animals each year.
Apart from such false and unproven accusations and claims, Dr. Jones engaged in inappropriate hucksterism, offering “money-back guarantees” and “cures” when such claims can never be anything but lies in medicine.
Despite all of this, the licensing board did not intend to drive Dr. Jones out of practice. He was fined substantially, both for the numerous violations of ethics laws and, even more importantly, for acknowledging in writing that he understood and intended to abide by them and then reneging on these promises in order to continue to profit from unethical and deceitful advertising. However, when he offered to give up his license, the board specifically indicated it did not consider this an appropriate or necessary punishment for the violations. Dr. Jones decision to give up his license is entirely his own.
Unfortunately, it is likely he will continue to profit from spreading lies and misinformation about the veterinary profession, and from offering dangerous advice and unproven or false treatments. He will have to walk a fine line since without a license he cannot legally practice veterinary medicine, but of course the benefits of a free society are great enough that he must be allowed to spout his nonsense as long as he does not cross the line into liable, slander, or the practice of medicine. Sadly, it wouldn’t surprise me at all if he ends up in the U.S. where regulatory authorities have proven far less willing to challenge such snake oil salesman taking advantage of pet owners and profiting from fear and ignorance.
You researched? Please cite credible research that states those methods are effective against fleas.
Coconut oil. Bogus. In humans and pets. Latest fad. Soon to fade out just like the majority of human fads that people like to apply to their pets for no reason other than to boast dubious claims.
Banana peels. What? In their beds? Gross! I’d love to see a RCT and peer review on evidence suggesting this is even the least bit appropriate.
The problem with this critique is that there is not a single pet owner experience. Dr. Jones’s diet change and supplement is working so far for my cat’s recently diagnosed diabetes, although I am using a supplement by another vendor. Either way his recommendations are working. ‘This research, that research’ is no substitute for personal experience. As far as pharmaceuticals are concerned I don’t understand the controversy. You can read about adverse effects and lawsuits about drugs that have damaged humans and were produced with that knowledge by companies who omitted that info from their disclosures. Why would it be different for animals? We should use the same caution with conventional meds for animals. For anyone who reads this vet’s opinion, I recommend that you base your use of Dr. Jones’s methods and recommendations on your experience with using them on your pet, rather than critiques. You know your pet. You will know when something is working and when something is not working.
I understand why you feel this way, but unfortunately you are absolutely wrong about the reliability of personal experience. We see what we want and expect to see all the time, and personal experience has supported every ineffective and dangerous treatment ever tried. The reason we live longer and healthier lives now that any human beings in history is that our species learned to mistrust how things appear and to test them with science. Here are a collection of articles (and a touch of humor) with much more detail about why anecdotes simply don’t work:
Why Anecdotes Can’t Be Trusted
I appreciate your comment but how can you know that I am absolutely wrong about personal experience if you cannot relate to it? Furthermore, what experience do you have with alternative medicine? In any case, science can be no substitute for personal experience.
I have a neighbor whose 7 year old has terrible IBS. Doctors have prescribed all kinds of drugs, including steroids. It made things worse, the kid was beside himself. They stopped the meds. They’re now trying holistic remedies and he’s doing significantly better than he was on the meds and better than he was when he wasn’t on anything at all. That doesn’t mean that everyone with IBS will have the same success as my neighbor’s child with alternative remedies but they discovered their success from personal experience. Sometimes traditional medicine does not work. I will not say ‘sometimes science does not work’ because alternative medicine is science as well. Trial and error is not exclusive to those in lab coats with degrees. You know how your pet responds to remedies, you know yourself, just as my neighbors know their kid, that part is not rocket science.
If you look at the articles I linked to, you will see some of the reasons why i can be so sure that scientific research is more reliable than personal trial and error. For one thing, there is nothing ever tried, from ritual sacrifice to bloodletting to astrology to magic that people haven’t believed worked based on their own observations. If we have to trust in anecdotes, then we have to believe every story, and that means that everything must work and we might as well give up trying to separate effective and ineffective treatments.
Usually, when people say we should trust personal experience, they really mean we should trust their experiences or others they believe. If someone has seen aliens abduct them with their own eyes or killed a chicken in a voodoo ritual and seen someone’s cancer go away, your logic means you have to take their experiences just as seriously as your own or your neighbors.
That path is the one we followed for thousands of years, and in that time half our children died before adulthood and we could rarely expect to live past our 40s. Believing we can see for ourselves and don’t need science to tell us what works is a dangerous and outdated idea.
And if we were speaking ritual sacrifice, blood letting, astrology or voodoo, you may have a point but we’re not. Blood letting was actually used in scientific discourses back in the day.
If a doctor prescribes me various medicines to help move my bowels but I find they don’t work as well as prune juice, personal experience obviously outweighs science in that situation. By virtue of the fact that scientific discourses are managed by humankind illustrates that it will not always be right. Humans in science make errors and poor judgments no less than humans relying in personal experience. It will not always be reliable. Personal experience may not always be reliable either but one’s instinct about one’s self is a better option be it with traditional medicine or alternative medicine. Traditional medicine told me that the best way to deal with my menstrual pain and anemia was to take Midol, prescribed narcotics, and iron. I know my body and I knew what was happening every month was not normal. I switched doctors and told that doctor “something is wrong, it is not in my head and it is not a normal female process, please provide me with imaging to confirm.” She did. I was right, I had uterine fibroids but even then the recommendation was to take iron, narcotics, the scientific solution was to manage it and follow-up with imaging in 12 months. I swiftly found a surgeon who actually heard me when I said, I do not want to treat my symptoms I want to resolve the problem that is causing them. I had surgery to remove the fibroids and my life was functional again. It was my personal experience that lead me to the scientific remedy of surgery, not science. Science is as flawed as the people behind it. Science once deemed women who engage in disobedience to men as having a psychiatric disorder. Science can be just as foolhardy as personal judgment. It cuts both was but either way the path you take based personal experience and judgment may be the better one.
Science can be just as foolhardy as personal judgment>>> I googled that statement and the first hit was a religious book selling for 35 dollars attacking science.
Science is absolutely flawed and imperfect because, as you say, it is just a process enacted by human beings. But the whole point of the process is that it helps to compensate for the specific limitations of our observations and memory and judgment. To say that it is no better than personal experience is to entirely miss the point and ignore the quite clear history of the last 300 years. The point of bringing up bloodletting, voodoo, astrology, and so on is that the folks who believe in those things, based on their personal experience, are no dumber and no smarter than you or I. We have no basis for claiming our personal observations are any more likely to be true than theirs. So without science to check us, we either believe everything anyone claims to have seen for themselves or we arbitrarily choose to believe some anecdotal evidence (usually our own or that which agrees with our experiences) and disbelieve the rest. This is just choosing what to believe, and it doesn’t work very well.
Again voodoo, astrology is not even remotely comparable. Bloodletting was part of scientific discourse back in the day so I am not sure why you even included that. And yes we do have much more basis to claim that our personal observations about ourselves and those patients to whom we are closer than say, a doctor or a scientist. I’m speaking about tangible feelings of one’s self, not of the zodiac, or voodoo. I’m speaking of my friend’s daughter who took her newborn to 4 different emergency rooms saying their was something wrong with her son’s head and being repeatedly told by doctors based on science, that her son’s head shape was normal for a newborn and it would change with time. By the third ER they were accusing her Munchausen by Proxy. The fourth ER doc was equal in his dismissal of her feelings about the issue but at least he offered to order imaging of her son’s head to “Put her mind at ease.” The boy had a bleed in his brain. There was no voodoo, no astrology, there was just experience already being a mother of 2 and gut maternal instinct that told her something was wrong with his head and that the shape of his head was not right.
When I worked in admissions at a university, the Public Health department brought up a recommendation to admit an applicant into their Masters Public Health program, that initially perplexed me. The applicant was a Buddhist monk, no formal training, no GPA, only education was within his faith but he had been living in various African countries, in particular villages, helping the the sick amongst other duties. As I read his statement of intention and his remarkable background, I realized if an epidemic needed to be tracked and researched in these particular places, I’d go to this monk before I went to the CDC. All this monk wanted was a framework to apply his knowledge. I passed his application onto the Dean and yes, he was admitted. There was no voodoo, or astrology or even Buddhism. It was this monk’s personal experience, not science that made him so knowledgeable about the health issues and challenges of these villages and it will be science to help him better apply it.
Not everyone will be correct in their experience. Steve Jobs insisted on alternative medicine to treat his pancreatic cancer. It obviously did not work and cost him crucial time needed for traditional treatment but there was no guarantee that would work either. There will always be exceptions on both sides of this argument but for me I have had too many experiences of the ones that were not exceptions so I will always use my personal experience as the foundation of any treatment I consider.
What frustrates me is wondering why I take my dog to the vet for an annual wellness visit – and am bombarded with materials on signing up for regular monthly chemicals or drugs in a healthy dog – and can even receive a bonus for signing up (more free drugs) and a bonus for referring more customers. Why is “Zoetis Petcare Rewards” even a part of my vet’s practice?
I love science. I think that science can and does save lives. I like business and innovation. I think our world benefits from entrepeneurs and businesses that offer employment and necessary goods and services. HOWEVER – I question why the Big Business of Animal Pharmaceuticals (of any namebrand) is DRIVING the medical model of veterinary schools and practices.
So far the comments above are battling in the wrong arena. We are asking the wrong questions! Who is ordering the studies that “we” rely upon? Who is conducting meta- studies that examine the bigger relationships of what is found or omitted? Are there ANY peer reviewed journals that encourage thinking about thinking and asking good questions about traditional practices vs. alternative ones? Sometimes the vaccine is the lifesaver and sometimes the killer: who (beyond Dr. Internet and well meaning but sometimes hysterical advocates armed only with personal anecdotes) is evaluating the impact of increased vaccination, automatic vaccination, vs. thoughtful vaccination (ie. the practice of whether to vaccinating against lyme in areas not plagued by lyme), and even the controversy of non-vaccination?
At what point does the number of personal anecdotes become relevant?
Who is looking for the root cause underlying the increase of disease in our pets? Diabetes, asthma, cancer, skin conditions depression, arthritis… more. Prescribing pills to mitigate may mask a symptom, be good business for vets and companies, and calm the concern of pet owners conditioned by tv ads to seek a “magic pill.” It seems to me (a frustrated pet own and human being with the same questions for traditional medical model for humans) that these meds do not resolve the common thread that seems to be Inflammation at various point of the body.
Instead of increasing sunshine, fresh air, interaction and work and play, healthy fats, and an organic natural prey whole-foods type of eating – traditional vets recommend a pill, a shot, and a prescription wheat/corn/soy kibble found in the special bag on their shelves.
The only other alternative for pet owners is to look to “alternative holistic practitioners” who can be well meaning and wise, or questionable quack-ish folks pushing their own lines of supplements and foods and specialty marketed items. The choice should not be painted as science vs. quackery. There is a better way.
Pediatricians once automatically prescribed a large antibiotic for each case of an ear infection. Cleared the ear, killed good bugs in the gut and helped create potential superbug situations. New protocols call for “watch and see”. That most ear inffections clear within a few days and have no side effects. Less meds, healthier bodies. Save antibiotic use as “big guns” for more critical infections. In this manner, questioning and revising a standard protocol has improved health for babies and children.
Is it too much to ask for Vet schools, Vet associations, Vet practices, and individual Vets themselves – to critically reflect upon their professions and missions?
Like the TPR report and middleman staffing joke inquiry in the old movie “Office Space” – what exactly is it that you DO do? Are you a savvy prescriber of meds and an automatic issuer of shots? Is your main job to encourage health or to mitigate disease? Do you consider each dog or cat or breed and genetics or state of living before you prescribe or act? Do you read through the history of practices past and the effect on pet health (positive or negative)? Do you play devil’s advocate when meeting with your local drug reps who routinely visit (or whom you meet at the Huge, Disney-esque trade shows) and question the benefits and ask for evidence of the trials and numbers before adding to your practice? Do you subscribe to a journal that asks good questions and invites your professional participation – or is your office filled with magazines that are supplied by the major pharmaceutical or dog feed companies?
I am not sure why I feel like a freak in having these questions or expectations. A dog’s life is simple. Trusting in the professionals who offer to shepherd our pets’ health should be a simple matter, too.
If veterinary medicine were driven purely by science, experience, wisdom, collaboration, communication – this debate would be moot. But the businesses who most profit from pet illness and disease and consumer purchasing – seem to be driving the health industry: from schools to financing to scientific studies to advertising to practices.
I charge the DVM’s and PhD’s and all practitioners to consider these questions and open some good conversations at work, online, among themselves and their families.
There are some good points and many, many false assumptions and myths in your comment. Certainly, bias associated with funding is a serious issue, and contrary to what you seem to think, it is one that is recognized and discussed frequently in veterinary medicine. How studies are funded, conducted, reported, and critically analyzed incorporates this potential source of bias at every level. While the result is undoubtedly imperfect, and more work needs to be done, the evidence generated is still enormously better and more reliable than any number of anecdotes or personal experiences, each one of which has no control for bias at all.
The concern about the influence of industry on veterinary education and practice is valid. However, the notion that veterinary medicine is “DRIVEN” by industry is nonsense. The rhetorical questions you ask and the language you use are completely dominated by an ideological bias against science and science-based medicine and infused with the mythology of anti-science ideology. The nonsense about “chemicals” (everything is a chemical, and the evidence is overwhelming that flea and tick preventatives reduce suffering and disease with generally very little risk), the implication that the risks and benefits of vaccines are somehow equivalent (“sometimes the vaccine is the lifesaver sometimes the killer”) when there is no reasonable question that vaccines have far more benefit than risk and that most of the risks people worry about are not real, the tired old slander that money drives practice when veterinarians get paid far less than nearly any other healing profession that puts even close to as much time and money and effort into their education and practice, the complete nonsense about diets and dietary ingredients you repeat, and so many other examples show that you are in the grip of a truly anti-science point of view, whether you think so or not.
I challenge you and all the alternative medicine advocates to ask yourselves equally hard questions. How is it that you seem to know important truths about health and disease that are simple and obvious but that the vast majority of people in science and medicine don’t accept? Are you really that much smarter, more of a critical thinker, less subject to outside influence than everyone else? Or are you simply picking and choosing the facts to suit what you believe and explaining away disagreement in others as merely bias or ignorance? Why is it that we live longer and healthier lives than any time in history if past generations had all the sunshine, fresh air, and unprocessed food they could ask for? Why is it that vaccines and pharmaceuticals and the mainstream understanding of health and disease have wiped out diseases, dramatically reduced infant and maternal mortality, and doubled our average life expectancy if they are so dangerous, mistaken, and driven by greed and a desire to perpetuate illness? Why, if alternative medicine offers such miraculous treatments so much better than conventional medicine is it so seldom able to prove this scientifically? Why are you worried about the conventional food and medicine industry but not bothered by the fact that alternative medicine practitioners make money from their treatments and books and products, that billions of dollars are made every year selling herbs and supplements, and treatments never proven to be safe or effective? Why does the supposed bias and greed on one group bother you and you are blind to the bias and greed of other groups?
It seems to me you are pretty confident you have everything figured out, yet you aren’t interested in taking a hard look at your own assumptions or biases or those behind the alternative medicine narrative.
My German Shorthair Pointer, Gracie Mae got deathly ill within two weeks after receiving her rabies vaccine (along with five other vac.) After numerous visits to our vet and losing 20 pounds they had no other options other than surgery to see what was wrong with small intestine. She was emaciated, dehydrated and cramping up and having seizures. After hundreds of hours of research online I gave her intrinsic B12, probiotics, digestive enzymes, L Glutamine, fish oil, multivitamins and restricting her diet of all store bought dog food she has put her weight back on and thriving! Another vet basically sent my cat home to die with an UTI (no crystals) and I started him on cranberry pills. Within 24 hours he was acting like a kitten again! Only after these life experiences was I drawn to Dr Jones and his way of treating pets. I believe if he was my vet Gracie would never have been on her deathbed or he would never send my cat home to die without telling me about cranberry!
I live in Cape Town, South Africa. We all agree that want the same thing, the best veterinary care for our animals, but here, the reality is, if you don’t have money then a private Veterinary Clinic will refuse the assist you. They will simply refer you to a Government Vet like the SPCA which is very over crowded and all based in townships and will only treat animals in extreme situation.
All the private Veterinary practices fees are similar making impossible for the average person to visit them or get advice on alternative medicine without paying a normal visitation fee.
I respect what Dr Jones is doing as even though far from where i live he has provided me with more options than any Veterinary in Cape Town were willing to do.
It is unfortunate, then, that you are forced to choose between care you cannot afford and the often unscientific and unreliable advice of someone like Dr. Jones who makes his living by denigrating other vets and mainstream scientific medicine. You should have better options.
A very interesting discussion. I think there is value in both layman observation and the scientific method. Historically, doctors were responsible for puerperal infection because they hadn’t made the link between handling infectious corpses and going straight to an obstetric delivery without adequate hand washing. Look at the effects of thalidomide, prescribed by doctors to pregnant women. The medical profession, which classes itself as scientific, gets it wrong sometimes just like ordinary people who trust anecdote. I trust the scientific method in its purest form, but people are acting within the professions out of self interest just as much as any other individual. We should never abandon common sense. Nevertheless, in an emergency I would not call for a herbalist, I would want a highly trained and registered medical practitioner. To the Skeptical vet, who asks how is it that we are living longer. That must be a combination of diet, environment (housing, clean water etc), and poverty reduction that has made the biggest difference for many people before you would then have to add in surgery and penicillin. I am not a fan of alternative therapists referring to what they do as a ‘medical’ practice of any kind, as I think this is misleading, but I do think making an effort to self-care through non-medical measures should not always be dismissed as quackery. There are treatments still in use in the medical profession that don’t come with a thorough understanding or explanation of why they are useful but doctors believe they have value so they continue to use them.
Bravo Bridget!!
Last year our pet boxer tore her ACL. The vet we took her to told us she needed surgery. The surgery was not an option due to the outrageous cost of the procedure. I found Dr. Jones on his web site and took his professional advice what to do at home. We bought his supplement he recommended and followed his instructions as to what to do and eight weeks later our boxer (Millie) was up and running around like nothing had happen. To date she remains healthy Thanks to Dr. Jones.
More likely, thanks to natural healing on its own. Most dogs with cruciate ruptures have acceptable function with time even without treatment, though those treated surgically do have a better recovery rate. Supplements have nothing to do with it. And why is the price “outrageous?” It may be higher than your can afford, and that’s unfortunate, but does that automatically mean its excessive?
Thank you for your comments. I am First Nations and in our culture we have medicine men/women The wisdom and knowledge has been in place for centuries and it takes years before he/she can practice. Many of our medicines the white man uses now and has marketed it into pharmaceutical drugs. Of course their is a need for western medicine and emergency care. Unfortunately, holistic medicine doesn’t recognize it as much as we would like, especially with veterinary services. We are. all not quacks.
When the white man came to North America they got scurvy. Without the knowledge of not only medicine men and the aboriginals theses men would have died. The Willow bark used for analgesics is another example. This is just a few to name.
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I appreciate your perspective, but the reality is that folk medicine, whether European or Asian or First American, or from any other culture, is consistently unreliable because it is based on anecdote and trial-and-error, which are prone to many kinds of mistakes. We don’t chew willow bark now because purified aspirin is a safer and more consistent source of salicylic acid, and other synthetic NSAIDs are even safer and ore effective. We also don’t use Willow bark for Yellow Fevere, Malaria, or all of the many other types of fever it was traditionally sued for because it never worked for those.
Scientific medicine is not the product or province of any culture, and scientists from every part of the world and all cultures contribute to a global scientific community that makes our health better. Scientific medicine is, however, safer and far more effective than folk medicine, which is why we live much longer and healthier lives than any humans in history.
This article just makes me respect Dr. Jones even more! I have nothing against conventual medicine when it’s really needed. I am however retired and really can’t afford conventional medicine. Every DVM I’ve ever seen has made me feel like a terrible pet “Mom” because I have to turn down any extras, simply because I can’t afford it. I also don’t believe my pets need shots more than 3 times in their lives.
I’ve done much research and I know “vaccines” can do harm! I also had a cat that had a terrible reaction to a topical flea med and haven’t used any since. Thanks to Dr Jones I now use natural remedies and I haven’t seen a flea in years!
I have 2 dogs that I make toothpaste for and since I’ve been doing this they have had no mouth troubles, I solved an ear mite infection thanks to Dr. Jones. My one dog gets a yeast infection every spring but we now easily control it, thanks to Dr. Jones!
I can not say enough good about this Dr. and I recommend every dog owner I meet to consult his videos.
Dr. Jones is a wonderful source to help people, like me, to help our pets prevent many problems so we can afford to go to our dvm when we need to. I say we need more people like him!
If anecdotes like these proved our beliefs true, life would be simpler. Unfortunately, that isn’t how the world works. Dr. Jones may make you feel better about doing something when you can’t afford to do what science-based medicine recommends (which is, of course, nothing you should be blamed for), but when there’s no real evidence that what he recommends actually works, the fact that it meets a need doesn’t make it any less dishonest. And the fact that he drums up business by trash talking and lying about conventional veterinarians is nothing to respect.
Here is some more information on why anecdotes mislead us.
Why Anecdotes Can’t Be Trusted
I’ll never understand pet owners who go down the road of woo and ineffective (and sometimes dangerous) “natural” products, can never prove they have worked (because it’s only anecdotal and subjective on the owner’s part ), yet they will turn around and see the conventional vet when their pet “really needs it”. Trust me, your pets likely really needed to see their conventional vet in the beginning.
I have no doubt that when a pet health issue resolves from a method I have implemented “at home”, it is safe to say it is EFFECTIVE. I am likewise certain that when a protocol I have been given to follow and implement by a veterinarian results in no improvement, it is safe to say it is INEFFECTIVE. That is all the “evidence” I need.
The evidence of ‘what works’ and ‘what does not work’ becomes apparent in our pet’s response to the remedies that we choose to provide based on following guidance from a trained professional. Whether anyone likes this Vet’s practice or not is a moot point … he is still a trained professional. Natural products are an amazing alternative for any pet owner who makes the choice to adhere to them. Simply ‘agreeing to disagree’ is more than enough in this regard.
That’s sad to hear, since that kind of reliance on anecdotes failed us miserably for thousands of years, and th use of scientific ev idencwe has relieved so much unnecessary human and animal suffering.
Here is some more information on why anecdotes mislead us.
Why Anecdotes Can’t Be Trusted
Of course, I don’t agree. It’s not about what one “likes” or not, it’s about how we decide what works. The kind of reliance on trial and error and anecdote that you favor failed us miserably for thousands of years. Science is an alternative that has relieved enormous suffering in humans and animals, and there is ample reason to believe that it works better at evaluating medical treatments. And “agreeing to disagree” doesn’t accomplish anything. It doesn’t change the fact that Dr. Jones promotes himself by misleading the public and trashing other veterinarians, and it doesn’t change the fact that there are facts, not only opinions, and some ideas are right while others are wrong. The best way to manage such disagreement is to debate them substantively, with arguments and evidence, not to pretend they don’t matter.
Here is some more information on why anecdotes mislead us.
Why Anecdotes Can’t Be Trusted
I’m a nurse and I believe in alternative medicine. Truthfully, a lot of modern medicine we have now, was formulated or stemmed from natural “home remedies.” Aspirin, for instance, was originally ground Willow bark, and was then synthesised, and made into aspirin. I do believe that natural remedies do work, if you research and know what you’re doing. A veterinarian is needed for surgeries and other major complications obviously. There IS lots of government backed, scientific research on the used of essential oils and other herbs ect curing or treating illness and disease. You just have to know what to look for. For example, lemon grass essential oil, was found to be a very effective anti fungal, and antiviral in scientific research. Olive oil was found in scientific studies to prevent skin cancer when applied shortly after UV exposure. So, do I believe there is natural treatments that can be used at home, absolutely. What doctor Jones is saying isn’t completely unfounded. If he hadn’t given up his practice, he could have conducted his own scientific studies, to prove other wise. There is a lot of side effects to our conventional medicine, due to preservatives ect being added. Same with food, for both humans and pets. Look at all of the recalled food, and medicine that was thought to be safe for use in pets, but later was found to cause serious injury or death. Just Google recalled pet medicine, or food and do your own research. I believe the less ingredients the better.
You have a lot of beliefs, and you are entitled to them, but unfortunately you’re simply mistaken about the scientific evidence for alternative therapies. You also talk about risks for scientific medicine but ignore all the harm that alternative treatments have been proven to cause. This blog contains ten years of articles looking at specific therapies and the research about them, so I hope you will make the effort to look through them and learn a bit more.
Brilliant. I worked in veterinary medicine for 30 years. There is much that needs to change including the over dependence on large corporations for health advice.
Dr. Jones’ advice on the treatment of hot spots (Acute moist dermatitis) with home remedies was so much appreciated! Saved us tons of time and money and just as effective – if not more so – than our previous experience with the vet. Yes, obviously vets are required when severe injuries or disease processes are involved but we’ve used Dr. Jones’ recommendations several times with great success. My last visit to the vet Involved kennel cough and an acute ear infection. I first viewed
Dr. Jones’ site and he described ear fungus which matched our dog’s symptoms for which he recommended using a generic antifungal cream that contained Clotrimazole (used for Athlete’s Foot) which we found for around 2 dollars – a small fraction of the recommended vet med. We ventured to the vet who looked at the ear, performed a culture twice and verified the fungus had been eradicated. Just a bit of residue had been left which had not been rinsed out. Quite frankly, the cost of our last visit to the vet I spoke of involving Kennel Cough I felt was exorbitant – not so much for the vet services but the meds themselves. Off the charts! We need people like
Dr. Jones and so much appreciate him. He’s a true professional in his own right.
I am here because I was trying to check up on Dr. Jones, because I want to try out his “Ultimate Feline Supplement” on my cat, who is in early stage kidney disease (15 year-old male cat). I have only since February (my cat’s diagnosis, which caused me to research internet info for days after, to help my cat) learned about Mars Candy buying up vet practices, including the one I used. I read a lengthy article by Lisa Pierson on kidney disease, and in it she stated the vet-prescribed food I had my cat on for two years (Purina UT) due to a single UTI (which could have been caused by the vet not looking at his urine sample soon enough) actually hastened, if not outright caused, my cat’s kidney disease. In conjunction with the kidney disease diagnosis, my vet recommended a dental, which I okayed. The anesthesia has changed my cat, and he seems a hundred years old. His “slight” arthritis has been exacerbated by that anesthesia, I believe. If anyone could comment on Dr. Jones’ “Ultimate Feline Supplement”, I would appreciate it very much.
I followed everything that Dr. Jones has said. And my veterinarian is losing thousands of dollars. Thanks to Dr. Jones being right.
Well said Jay Bee. It truly doesn’t matter what skeptics say because they will always play devil’s advocate even of it is staring them in the face. Experience is truly the best medicine.
Here folks,
Layman’s terms.
We used to call upon a large animal veterinarian that kept a pager on vibrate to keep from spooking the animal that he was attending to…
Once finished, he would check the pager and ask the resident if he could use their telephone to return the call…
Landline service.
He returned the call and asked how we were, and we asked him about his mother that he was living with and taking care of…
Then, of course he would ask us what we needed and which goat was sick, or which horse was about to foal…
And I will be there sometime tonight and it’s going to be really late, because he had a few more stops to make…
It was usually around 3 am, when we saw the headlights in the misty cold morning as we had heard every night creature call out and settle down and retire… and the beauty of those headlights shining through the mist, in the stillness of the night, and the smiles and the apologetic tone of being so late and apology for having to call…
And sleeves rolled up and having a look see…
Before the sun was soon to rise again…He would write a bill on something that looked like a guest check that a waitress would use in a diner…in short order, and we knew that he was going to be just in time to get home to get some shuteye and fix breakfast for his mother and make sure that she took her medications.
This whole story that I tell you, is related to the fact that I can’t afford to pay for a veterinarian for my 14 year old cattle dog that has a Urinary tract infection and I already know that she needs a 6 day regimen of antibiotics, and I sure wish that Doc Martin wouldn’t have worked himself to death caring for everyone that needed his help…
Because he would be returning my beep on his pager, and writing a prescription on the guest check…
That is why people are seeking alternative solutions for their furry children.
It does noone any good to refer to allopathic medicine as ‘traditional’. What you mean is ‘allopathic’. Traditional medicine is care methods that are passed down through generations – generally using easily sourced materials. Allopathic medicine – according to NIH – is “A system in which medical doctors and other healthcare professionals (such as nurses, pharmacists, and therapists) treat symptoms and diseases using drugs, radiation, or surgery. Also called biomedicine, conventional medicine, mainstream medicine, orthodox medicine, and Western medicine.” Alternative medicine I suppose is everything else (chiro, acup, infrared sauna, massage, etc.) If a situation is not acute, don’t we owe it to the patient to start with the least invasive method? Our best tool is attention – so a condition can be handled when it is still in mild stages. It breaks my heart when I see pet owners telling the vet that the animals has had the condition for several weeks!
Actually, “allopathic” is a term invented by Samuel Hahnemann, the inventor of that quintessential quack approach homeopathy. It was intended to refer to what is also often called “heroic medicine,” the bleeding, purging, and other unscientific practices that were common in his time. It is often used to refer to science-based modern medicine by proponents of alternative therapies, usually in a pejorative way, but that is just part of the marketing campaign for these therapies.
There are problems with lots of your other tears as well> “Western medicine” is an ethnocentric term that misleadingly assumes that science-based medical techniques are somehow the cultural property of the Western world, even though they are not only the dominant form of healthcare in every part of the world, but scientists from Asia, Africa, and other parts of the globe contribute significantly to the development of science-base medical techniques. Again, this is a marketing term intended to imply that alternatives have some sort of claim to a different and better cultural sources. It is true that some alternative therapies, such as TCM and Ayurveda, have roots outside of the West, but many are just as Western as anything in science-based medicine. Homeopathy was invented by a German and chiropractic by an American, and many herbal and acupuncture techniques are heavily influenced by Western folk traditions and modern adaptations.
The point that we should use the least invasive possible at the earliest stage of disease sounds greta, except that it assumes that alternative therapies are less harmful and just as or Moree effective than scientific medicine, and neither of those assumptions is true.
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So gracie wouldve gotten rabies perhaps ? Utis are also treatable, if you see one wrong vet you cant just blame them all and use it for an excuse to go to yet another “vet”. Jones is a snake
I’m grateful for Dr. Andrew Jones and his helpful suggestions over the years. It doesn’t mean you have to give up your vet visits. Although I have found very few good vets. Many of them are greedy and self serving. But holistic treatments can also be valuable. Dr. Jones’ suggestions regarding proper nutrition are also spot on. I trust his judgment.
Though I am a new pet parent but I am following Dr Jones for natural holistic medical cure for my fur baby. Yes during emergency I need to visit my nearest vet but how to care and keep my baby healthy for that I prefer to follow the advice of Dr.Jones without a doubt.
Yes, it easy to be a “septic,” and it shows by all the septic tank hollow and illogical conclusions that fringe subscribers are prone to.
I’m quite sure that most, if not all of those promoting Andrew Jones (no relation) also believe in lots of things. Ghosts, heavenly spirits, the power of prayer, karma, positive healing energy, copper bracelets, homeopathy, powders from the orient, and an endless list of conspiracies and other hoaxes.
They’re unaware that all that eastern alternative medicine comes from those doing by far the most damage to animals. The baby seals being clubbed to death are being bought by the Chinese because they want their penises. They think it offers them medicinal health. The Chinese black market is who’s paying the poachers to kill elephants, tigers, bears, rhinos, etc. They think if they grind down claws and rhino horns and eat it, that they’ll have larger penises. It’s true.
Chinese markets mirror what Chinese health “officials” promote to Chinese hospitals and the public. Billions are made at the expense of plants and animals. (They’re buying most their ginseng from Appalachian-based USA poacher/diggers. Same with animals, they’re importing everything now as they’ve wiped their own out.)
These old customs persist because too many westerners unwillingly glorify “eastern medicine,” validating it, making it lucrative, thus inadvertently finance those same cultures that torture animals, milk bear bladders (they think it cures Covid19), eat live monkey brains right in front of the poor struggling monkey, etc. This is why rhinos, tigers (they boil their bones and eat thinking it will bring medicinal benefits), and many animals are endangered. It’s not trophy hunting. It’s the Asian black market. All silly medicinal myths.
But yet, people will trust the alternative market with its eastern medicinal myths. Dogs and cats? Any idea what many SE Asian nations believe and how those beliefs cause things like Yulin to exist? Even stolen pets are deliberately tortured by design because they believe pain endorphins will create food (dog and cat meat) that offers virility and fertility. These poor animals suffer for these antiquated notions. These cruel customs persist because too many westerners unwillingly glorify “eastern medicine” and inadvertently finance those same cultures that torture animals not knowing that these practices are all part of the same belief systems.
Why would “alternative vets” promote this nonsense and why would caring pet owners trust it?
Moreover, many alternative medicine junkies are antivaxxers (right up until they’re in the hospital begging for traditional medicine to save them) and subscribe to a series of primitive myths put into ancient doctrine 2-5 years ago. They’ll even swear that people were cured by the thousands of simultaneous prayers going on for the cause. Many are superstitious and believe in good luck charms, too. Yet, they feel they should have equal-footing with the scholarly, credible and well-filtered authors of skeptvet. It’s not just off the mark, it’s preposterous.
I’ve had bad experiences with traditional vets, too. They’re unregulated and I’ve lost a precious pet on bad advice. Medical malpractice makes many law firms substantial incomes annually. This isn’t denied. But we’re dealing with humans after all and they come in all scales. That should never validate fringe culture that is more about unmitigated marketing than true veterinary science.
During the course of researching ways for me to treat, or prevent more sebaceous cysts on my dog, I came across “Dr.” Jones. The fact that every video was of him hocking some home remedy immediately raised warning bells, so my research switched to “Is Dr. Jones a Quack”, which led me here.
Thanks for your in depth analysis.
I can confidently select the option “don’t recommend channel” on Veterinary Secrets and forget that snake oil salesman exists.
Wait until your dog gets heartworm disease without its ” monthly chemical”
Im glad I found this blog. Im a veterinarian and I work in my small clinic treating many dogs, cats and small mammals. I always have a profound need to research for to improve my knowledge and educating myself. When I found Dr. Jones Y.chanell I thought its could be sth new sth interesting to merit for my practice. Instead I found almost every video being a propaganda to promote holistic medicine and to bash / trashtalk conventional veterinary practicies / medical Treatment. I myself use and recommend numerous natural remedy / products. But to totally replace for ex. NSAIDs when they are needed or not to vaccinate animals because of some (0,1% or even 0,01%) probability to severe allergic reaction, or to not to use ultrasonic dental scaling… its just all misleading owners, dicrediting veterinarians, possibly harming even more the animals and just simply disrespecting the science of Veterinary Medicine! So Dr. Jones , you should really find balance between veterinary medicine and holistic medicine and this way you could help I believe to many many patients. But forgetting and not respecting your title, the basically promise you gave when you graduated as a vet its just sad. Im glad that you decided to turn in you license, because simply this is not veterinary medicine.
This is some sort of alternative / holistic medicine based on some experiences but without any scientific background. This way you can promote what you want and desire, but please do NOT call yourself a Veterinary Doctor!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Greetings, Stefan Feterik, DVM (Jessheim, Norway)
I’m sorry but you will never convince me that alternative options do not help, I have seen it with my own eyes, one of my dogs was rushed to the emergency animal hospital, she was at deaths door due to renal failure, her blood work results were through the roof, BUN 282, phos 20, Creatnine 22, she was placed on IV fluids for 3 days and then they sent her home saying her prognosis was grim , they gave her 3 days to live because the IV fluids did not bring her numbers down, I found a vet online who is an integrative vet, I followed her protocol, organic chicken legs, mashed potatoes, and green beans along with natural supplements, and sub-q fluids, my dog lived another 12 months, the traditional vets offered zero hope and all told me she would not last a week. I’m eternally grateful for that vet’s help. Dr. Jones is a huge help too, he offers wonderful options for our pets.
I’ve read every comment on here, and all I can say is my one-year-old mini schnauzer has had nothing but stomach issues since I have had him. I have researched and researched, and finally made the decision to take off of dry dog food, after opening a bag of Hills Science and him not wanting to eat it, then finally eating it and getting sick. Since on natural diet has had no problems. I have read story after story, after story-how people have changed over to natural diet and dogs have gotten better or healed. I don’t think anyone has bad intentions to our animals, and I believe in natural and science. I watched my mother who let cancer go, be healed by natural medicine living 5 years after they told her she would die within weeks. What finally got her was going in for surgery after it had shrunk to nothing after natural diet and remedies. I have watched videos of dog’s sick sick from using flea and tick medicine, just facts. I believe vets love animals they would have to. But huge companies selling cooked dog food have to get it out to sell, I used to work in restaurants, and can’t hardly eat in them today, I saw what went on behind closed doors. Just they way it is.
I get it, it’s Canada but if the charges don’t involve his medical practice i don’t see how a licensing “authority” has any right to go after someone for advertising & marking practices unless they are provably false & dangerous. Limiting a vets speech to what is authorized by the state is a MAJOR issue
You raise an interesting, and complex, issue. On the one hand, substantive and civil criticism of other vets and their methods should, in my opinion, be allowable because it can help consumers identify problematic individuals and claims or practices. On the other hand, untruthful and hostile attacks can only do harm, and promoting oneself by making false claims about others benefits only the attacker and harms everyone else, so that shouldn’t be permissible. The differences and grey area between these is, like all matters of speech, debatable and subject to different interpretations.
The regulatory authority found that Dr. Jones’ marketing was potentially harmful to the reputation and livelihood of other vets and intended primarily to promote himself, and he twice promised to stop violating the rules and then did so again. Is this brave speech that benefits the community and should be protected, or is it self-serving lying that should be suppressed?
In any case, the regulator didn’t take away his license, they just fined him for repeatedly and deliberately violating the law. He could have paid the fine, changed his behavior before he was fined as he said he would, or lobbied to get the law changed. Choosing to give up his license and making a living selling bogus ideas and unproven products using the same kind of marketing approach suggests he was more interested in sticking with a successful business strategy than in continuing to practice medicine.