The Doctrine of Doubt: Unmasking Medical Scepticism Toward Plant-Based Healing
Abstract
Despite decades of mounting scientific evidence, plant-based diets (PBDs) remain one of the most polarizing topics in medicine, so polarizing that physician debates around them often resemble religious arguments. Despite the data's compelling nature, skeptics still demand randomized clinical trials (RCTs) of biblical proportions, echoing the refrain: "Show me God, and I will believe." Meanwhile, Artificial Intelligence (AI)—with access to millions of data points and decades of research—has already reached its verdict: PBDs consistently emerge as the most effective strategy for preventing, managing, and reversing chronic diseases. At Bethsaida Hospital in Indonesia, under the leadership of Prof. Dasaad Mulijono, this theory has become a reality. Over seven years, real-world data has shown dramatic reversals of coronary artery disease (CAD), type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), hypertension, hyperlipidaemia, obesity, and a groundbreaking reduction in restenosis rates to 2%—a figure far below the global average of 10–20%. Yet many physicians remain unconvinced, hindered by cultural bias, entrenched economic systems, and outdated educational paradigms. This article examines the psychological, institutional, and systemic causes of disbelief, highlights the revolutionary outcomes at Bethsaida, and proposes bold solutions—including leveraging AI—to transform modern medicine from disease management to genuine, evidence-based healing.

