I dont understand your thought pattern sorry, dont know how to answer this..
I have a feeling you don't understand what science is.
By describing someone as a "lab rat", I'm assuming you're saying he/she is a subject of an
experiment.
The point of doing an experiment is to know something. There is nothing mysterious or nefarious about this - it is simply an extension of the process everybody uses to deal with the outside world. For instance, this is the way you learned to walk. Without knowing anything about gravity, you tried different ways to stand and move forward; some worked and others did not. Your walking today is a result of these early experiments. In medicine, the same process was and is used to know what works and what does not.
Therefore, an "experimental treatment" is a treatment about which we don't know whether it works or not.
An experimental treatment is not defined as "something pointy-headed scientists do". It's simply an unproven treatment, no matter who is providing it. You are an
experimental subject if you submit yourself to an unproven treatment, no matter who is doing it. If the person doing the experiment is not recording anything, then he/she is a sloppy experimenter and you're submitting yourself to a useless experiment - one from which the experimenter will not learn anything.
There is no evidence that a psychic will heal you. Claims are not evidence. Anecdotes are no data. Belief proves nothing.
In contrast, a legitimate experimental treatment must have some preliminary evidence going for it before a doctor is allowed to try it on humans. Things like encouraging results on animals, for example.
You would be willing to be an experimental subject ("lab rat") for a psychic, but not for a doctor. In other words, you would go for the treatment option that has less evidence going for it, the one that statistically has the least chance of working.
To me that is like choosing to play Russian roulette with all chambers loaded, hoping for a misfire, versus playing with only one bullet.