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Answer Overview

Response rates from 260 Right voters.

42%
Yes
58%
No
36%
Yes
47%
No
5%
Yes, this will decrease the amount of misinformation patients receive
5%
No, but the doctors should be required to disclose that the advice contradicts contemporary scientific consensus
2%
Yes, and the doctors should also lose their medical license
5%
No, only when the advice was proven to harm the patient
1%
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 260 Right voters.

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Historical Importance

Trend of how important this issue is for 260 Right voters.

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Other Popular Answers

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

 @9ZRFRY4answered…1wk1W

Yes, in issues where there is a clear consensus and the doctor should lose their medical license. However, for issues where a method or process is new and still being investigated and discovered, they should only be penalized if it is not disclosed that the advice contradicts contemporary scientific consensus.

 @9Z997FSanswered…3wks3W

No, but only after first providing health advice in line with contemporary scientific consensus.

 @9NPQ5W6 answered…6mos6MO

 @99LBZB6answered…2yrs2Y

Sometimes a good doctor will not only know an old remedy but also when it can be prescribed appropriately.