Ah, doctors and pills... a very interesting discussion indeed!
I do believe doctors are SO hasty to prescribe pills, BUT people are also hasty to GO on pills. It seems that people believe these days that there is (or should be) a pill to fix anything.
For example:
There was this really bad cold going around work. The symptoms were sneezing/runny/stuffy nose, coughing, sore throat, sweating, and overall weakness. A lot of my co-workers ran to the cold medications (which often don't really make the cold go away anyway, they just temporarily relieve the symptoms). I just made sure I was getting enough vitamin C, made sure I didn't eat/drink or anything to irritate my throat, drank plenty of green tea with little bits of honey, made sure I got adequate rest, and was done with it in three days. Everyone else took a week or more to recover... and they all relied on the cold medications.
Natural remedies and common sense can go a long way sometimes, but a lot of people think medications and/or pills will help so much more.
As for doctors loving to prescribe pills, I have an example for that, too:
My current doctor believes all type 1 diabetics should be on blood pressure medications and maybe cholesterol ones, too. The blood pressure meds are supposed to provide better cardiovascular health and the cholesterol ones are supposed to cause better kidney function.
He thought about putting me on blood pressure meds for preventative purposes, but I vehemently refused. My blood pressure while calm is never over 110/80 (with a general resting heart rate of 60 or so) and I am pretty sure blood pressure meds would cause my blood pressure to be unnaturally low and in turn would give me unnecessarily adverse side effects.
I also have a thing against pills (unless they are absolutely necessary for survival, function, or comfort, of course) because people tend to develop tolerances and dependencies to them. I don't want to develop a tolerance or dependency to any type of chemical provided in a pill unless my body is unable to produce it naturally.
From my experiences of extensive dealings with doctors and other people in the medical profession, I can tell them just as much about my body as they can (sometimes more) and I am right more often than they are. I could list several examples of how doctors have tested me for illnesses and pseudo diagnosed me just to have the tests show them what I told them all along.