It's almost impossible to understand drug-drug interactions or drug-food interactions because of the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic complexity. So FDA trots out drug approval upon drug approval without any requirement for understanding these potential conflicts. And like Zona said above, very little pharmacology is part of their education process.
So yeah, I believe the same docs that said Covid shots were safe and reliable did so because they believed what they were told from government and suppliers, because the safety data was not available.....you and I went at this several years and hundreds of pages ago.....and just last week the EU admitted it lacked the safety basis for the Covid mRNA shots. You could look it up.
So, it's not a large logical step to understand that overworked MDs may not do all the homework that their patients believe they do, and instead those MDs may rely on the sales reps in shorts skirts as mentioned above. That is confirmed by my understanding from those formerly in those short skirts, happy to buy lunches, dinners and junkets for CME.
It's also clear that western nations, led by the US, are over-prescribed with drugs. This is well understood. How could that happen with responsible healthcare?
So yeah, docs prescribe drugs that have side effects that they are unaware of, damaging the health of those they are charged with protecting.
You can easily verify this by researching how many deaths each year in the US are caused by medical errors; not a trivial amount. This doesn't include those misdiagnosed/over-precribed who survive an unfortunate MD experience, so even if you take the low end of the range, the public health concerns are significant.