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The Cure Culture: Our Obsession With Cures That Are 'Just Around the Corner'

citadrianne writes: Cures for major disease always seem just a few short years away. We constantly read about promising new treatments for cancer, diabetes, HIV, ALS, and more. While the prognosis for these diseases has improved over the years — sometimes greatly — we still focus doggedly on the cure. "The idea of a cure is simpler, it's more appealing as a fantasy." This article takes a look at so-called "Cure Culture" — the focus on reaching for a cure when our scientific efforts may be better expended attacking a disease in other ways. It asks, "Why are we telling our children, our friends, and our family members that we are going to cure them? ... What does it mean to be cured of a disease that is encoded within your DNA from the moment you become a zygote until the moment you are dead? ... And why are we eschewing or overlooking treatments—real, honest-to-god treatments—that can let patients lead longer, more normal lives?

3 of 204 comments (clear)

  1. I'm not obsessed! by Lab+Rat+Jason · · Score: 5, Funny

    I haven't been obsessed with The Cure since the 90's when grunge took over.

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  2. Not just cures, but inventions too. by gestalt_n_pepper · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Story: New energy source based on [insert some form of unicorn fart here] may one day solve energy crisis!

    Story: New memory storage based on [insert excited hand waving] may one day replace current RAM!

    Story: New computing method based on [something, something, carbon, something] may one day re-instate Moore's law!

    Story: New AI algorithm based on [GAs, deep multi-layer neural nets, connecting organic brains together, a little man in a box that answers the questions and pretends to be a machine] may one day give us true artificial intelligence (whatever the fuck that means).

    At 57, I've been hearing this crap since I was 6. There's no magic energy source. Moore's law has been stopped by physics. HAL has yet to enter the building. There's no cure for cancer or alzheimers, and so on.

    Editors and writers with liberal arts or journalism degrees who can't evaluate the research anyway *love* this kind of filler shit because it attracts the eyeballs of the sort that read popular science magazine and take it seriously. It's the science literature equivalent of Reece's Pieces (meaning no disrespect for that fine candy).

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  3. Re:"cure for cancer" by Bovius · · Score: 5, Funny