Why are there no “perfect drugs” that work well without side effects?

1.32K views

It seems like the more potent a drug/medication is, the more risks are involved with it, where as drugs with very little risk don’t help nearly as much.

In: Biology

35 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

Everything is connected in your body. Imagine giant dream catcher except all the strings are just one long string interwoven and perfectly symmetrical. If you pull at a string somewhere, something else moves. The bigger the change, the more something else is shifted. An illness is the dreamcatcher being uneven, and medication tries to fix the alignment.

Unfortunately thats why we have drugs to counteract other drugs. You want everything to be symmetric but if you move something you need to counteract it. somewhere else.

You are viewing 1 out of 35 answers, click here to view all answers.