So many people I have talked to have no idea what tinnitus is and have never experienced it.
Short answer; there's certain companies that don't want a cure out there.
I love a conspiracy theory! Who do you think these companies are?
TRT companies. It's not some sort of conspiracy theory it's just common sense. Do insulin producing companies want a cure to diabetes? When you add 2 and 2 you have a remarkable tendency to get 4.
Can you name a single "TRT Company" powerful enough to sabotage medical research?
They are, in a way. But how is that slowing down (or stopping) research and finding a cure?No because it's The whole industry, and I didn't say they were sabotaging research. They're competing with research.
They are, in a way. But how is that slowing down (or stopping) research and finding a cure?
No problem.Sorry, I didn't get your notification for some reason.
1. This may be an unintended side-effect, but I don't think it would slow down research in any significant way. First off, if those who have habituated are no longer interested in a cure, then that's a good thing! It means they can continue their lives like normal. And I would speculate that they would still be interested in a cure, when one arrives. It's still better to have two legs instead of getting by with a prosthetic leg.Anyways for two main reasons:
1) people who pay for TRT would rather not spend much more money on tinnitus. This is speculation but considering part of "habituation" that they sell is to try to get over it, and people after that would prefer not to get involved and wait for a cure when the time comes.
2) the main one, tinnitus is the biggest complaint vets have medically. The US military mostly pay for TRT for them instead of giving that money to research. Good for the short run but in the long run it's putting a bandage on the bigger problem.