I agree. But that conversation can't happen where appointments are restricted to 20-minute segments, and trust cannot be established within a system where patients are forcibly changed to different doctors / medical systems based on the business requirements of insurance companies.
The doctors I know (all ~10 I can think of off the top of my head) have left, or are trying to leave, direct patient care. They haven't been allowed to practice medicine, as so defined, for years.
(This is in the USA, by the way. If you live in a country with a different model, count your blessings and fight like hell to keep it.)
[Edit: Actually, two of my acquaintances included in the number above have switched (or thought about it - it's been a couple of years since I saw one of them, and I don't know if he pulled the trigger) to concierge care. Look it up, if you don't know what that means. It may be the last remaining rump of traditional medical practice, but it's not sustainable / scalable, and is arguably a prisoner's dilemma defection which hurts the system as a whole.]
And the frequency of visits. The recommended one visit every three years for 18-64 year olds isn't going to build much trust.
Pharma has shown itself untrustworthy too many times, and in general I don't trust big institutions with financial entanglements to have my best interest at heart.
I do have personal experience with some plant medicines being extremely effective at certain things. While most of the time it's hard to prove, some are so obvious that it makes me open to the possibility that the less obvious ones also may be helping. I use plant medicines all the time because they are free or cheap and relatively harmless like real food, in fact they often are food.
That said if I get in a car accident I will go to the hospital. It's not all or nothing.
Laymen also correctly have an intuition that the people doing these studies aren't entirely trustworthy. What they don't have is a clear picture of how much work goes into these studies, who's doing it, what their motivations are, etc.
In my opinion studies when they can, should record videos of all data and make it publicly available online. Watching somebody do 1,000 hours of research is more proof-of-work to lay-people than some semi-coherent summary-for-a-layperson article.
I don’t think that studies are bunk because of corporate money, I think they are bunk because of how many studies I read. I am not a very fun person so when I see news reports about studies, I try to look them up. I find it more peaceful than memes or celebrity events. Think “coffee is good/bad for you again” style studies we read about daily.
These studies always suck. Ok, maybe 90% if I’m not being hyperbolic. It’s small sample sizes sure, but it’s also faulty logic, unsupported claims from evidence, lack of looking for alternatives, lack of ruling out confounding factors. And don’t get me started on soft-science an arts theses, I don’t have time.
I know that science moves forward mostly in millimeters, and I would agree that we have more and better scientific knowledge now than we have had in the past. But it certainly isn’t for the amount of publish-or-perish, p-hacking, storytelling, or outright fabrication.
The most interesting papers are not going to get popular press releases because they are so many steps removed from the context that lay people understand. They can understand "coffee good/bad." They can't understand anything about the stories we are actually telling at the bleeding edge of a field, because even our undergrads working in our labs on these projects can scarcely understand them. Second year grad students struggle to understand them. How can a science journalist who only has a bs from communications department, or the lay public, possibly understand?
So, they don't reach for those papers when they seek to write articles for engagement. And the lay public doesn't learn the state of the art, and assumes the worst of the field from what they do read about.
This is the crux of it all. People want something to trust. If scientific institutions do not fuflill this role, peoppe migrate to pseudoscience, religion, pop stars, anything they can find. People will choose anything they can find to trust over remaining a sskeptic. Becsuse being a skeptic is a cognitive load that most are not really taught how to handle. It breeds anxiety, stress in people and causes/compound health/emotional issues that sometimes can then be solved better by supplying a lie to lower the anxiety and stress.