Definition:
Alternative Medicine (Changes)
(Modified
Revision as of 22:48, 24 Jun 2004)
Alternative medicine
broadly describes methods and practices used in
place of conventional medical
treatments. It may also be described as
"diagnosis, treatment, or therapy which can
be provided legally by persons who are not
licensed to diagnose and treat illness"
although practitioners are frequently so
licensed. . (Stricken hostile
comments, that clearly contradicts themselves.)The
definition of what is and is not 'alternative'
changes with time, generally as the result of
research and public acceptance. This
change in status can work in either direction. (States
the obvious)
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(Restored the Infobox.)
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Branches of alternative medicine
The most often used branches
of alternative medicine in the United States are
(Eisenberg et al., 1998):
- acupuncture
- biofeedback
- Chinese
medicine
- chiropractic
- homeopathy
- hypnotherapy
- massage
therapy
- naturopathy
Psychologists provide alternative medical services
when they use biofeedback, hypnotherapy, or cognitive
behavior therapy to treat a medical condition.
A relatively new field in psychology is health
psychology.
Diagnostic specialties of alternative medicine
include:
Other branches of alternative/complementary medicine
include:
Criticism and support for alternative
medicine
Criticisms
Some people define alternative medicine in a
derogatory way. Richard Dawkins,
professor of the Public Understanding of Science at
Oxford, defines alternative medicine as "that
set of practices that cannot be tested, refuse to be
tested or consistently fail tests"
(See Diamond 2003). Some feel that the very term
"alternative medicine" is misleading, on the
belief that these treatments are not a true alternative
to regulated conventional medicine. (NOTE: This quotation is obviously not
true since many research studies have been published.
And, of course, some alternative treatment methods have
been shown to be effective by these published studies.)
There is no strict definition as to
what constitutes "conventional" or
"mainstream" medicines, as opposed to the tag
"alternative." One possible definition is that
"conventional medicine" is that which is
recognized as valid medicine by the majority of the
scientific and the health community in the Western world,
which aims for standards of proof of efficiency based on double-blind
studies and explanations as to the workings of drugs
based on biology and biochemistry.
Another is that "conventional medicine" is what
is licensed as valid medicine by the local governing
authority. (Stricken
hostile off-topic comments.)
There is a concern that patients may delay
seeking conventional medicine that could be more
effective, whilst they undergo alternative therapies,
potentially resulting in harm.
Lack of proper testing
Many forms of alternative medicine are
rejected by conventional medicine some
physicians because the efficacy of the
treatments has not been shown through double-blind randomized
controlled trials in their opinion. Where
alternative methods provide temporary symptomatic
relief, this has been explained by Barry L.
Beyerstein, Ph.D as being due to the placebo effect, or to
natural healing, or to the cyclic nature of some
illnesses. Beyerstein's criticisms apply as
much, if not more, to conventional medicine than they
do to alternative forms of treatment. (Corrected the first
statement. And, responded to Beyerstein's
criticisms.)
Poor diagnosis
One of the most important
concerns of mainstream medical doctors is that
alternative medical practitioners sometimes fail to
correctly diagnose illnesses, and therefore
do not provide safe therapies every time. William T.
Jarvis, Ph.D contends in the web article "How
Quackery Harms Cancer Patients" that
"Dubious therapies can cause death, serious
injury, unnecessary suffering, and
disfigurement" and gives an example of how an
unlicenced naturopath caused a severe disfigurement
of a patient. [2].
(Medical malpractice
is NOT foreign to conventional medicine, either.)
Criticisms differ for the various
branches
Due to the range of Alternative medicine
few criticisms apply across the board. With
critisms of specific branches vary from the fairly
minor (conventional treament is belived to be more
effective in a particular area) to potential
vilotations of the laws of physics. (Stricken hostile
off-topic comments.)
Regulation
Practices terming themselves
"alternative medicine" have caused deaths
indirectly when patients have used alternatives in
attempts to treat such conditions as appendicitis and failed.
Proponents of alternative medicine say that people
should be free to choose whatever method of
healthcare they want. Critics agree that people
should be free to choose, but when choosing people must
want to be certain that whatever
method they choose will be safe and effective. People
who choose alternative medicine think they are
choosing a safe, effective medicine, while they may
only be getting quack
remedies. This can be a particular issue in the
treatment of children and animals. (Medical malpractice is
NOT foreign to conventional medicine, either.)
Testing and studies
The scientific community
Some argues that
many studies carried out by alternative medicine
promoters are flawed, as they often use testimonials
and hearsay as evidence, leaving the
results open to observer bias. They argue that the
only way to counter observer bias is to run a double
blind experiment, where neither the patient nor the
practitioner knows whether the real treatment is
being given or if a placebo has been administered.
This research should then be reviewed by peers to
determine the validity of the research methodology.
The response to these criticisms is that these
critics are promoting medical scientism rather than
science. (Corrected
the first statement. And, responded to criticisms.)
Testimonials are especially
useless in this procedure, because by chance alone
some people will get cured and will be able to
testify that the method really helped them.
Furthermore, if the majority of people using a method
do not notice any benefit or even get worse, there
will still be a minority that can testify that the
method really helped for them. [3] (Stricken off-topic
comments about research methods.)
Nonetheless, many mainstream doctors and
scientists are open to revising their views of any
specific new treatment, if new peer-reviewed
evidence comes available. A review of the
effectiveness of certain alternative medicine
techniques for cancer treatment (Vickers 2004), while
finding found that most of
these treatments are not merely "unproven"
but are proven not to work, notes that
several studies have found evidence that the psychosocial
treatment of patients by psychologists
is linked to survival advantages (although it
comments that these results are not consistently
replicated). The same review, while
specifically noting that "complementary
therapies for cancer-related symptoms were not part
of this review", cites studies indicating that
several complementary therapies can provide benefits
by, for example, reducing pain and improving the mood
of patients. (Stricken
hostile off-topic comments.)
Some argue that less research is
carried out on alternative medicine because many
alternative medicine techniques cannot be patented,
and hence there is little financial incentive to
study them. Drug research, by contrast, can be very
lucrative, which has resulted in funding of trials by
pharmaceutical companies. Many people, including
conventional and alternative medical practitioners,
point out that this funding has led to corruption of
the scientific process for approval of drug usage,
and that ghostwritten work has appeared in major peer-reviewed
medical journals. (Flanagin et
al. 1998, Larkin 1999).
(Stricken hostile
off-topic comments.)
Support
Advocates of alternative medicine point to a
number of different arguments that tend to support the
validity of using alternative methods of treatment to
treat specific medical conditions.
Some conventional doctors support CAM
Some physicians who talk about
alternative medical treatments methods do so in a
more positive way. In a recent newspaper interview,
Dr. Russell Greenfield, said: "I tell them
'I'm one of you' and that we have the data - we have
the studies, we're not making this up,"
when talking to other physicians. Dr. Greenfield was
referring to published studies on the beneficial
effect of saw palmetto on enlarged prostates, and how body work, or
massage therapy, is
effective for treating lower back pain. Another
example from this interview is physician Dr. Karen
Koffler who said : "I've learned how to
balance the intellectual processes of medicine with
an intuitive understanding of what this person, this
patient really needs to gain strength for healing.
That is never taught in medical school and is lost
entirely from medicine now." (See McClain
2004).
Alternative medicine is not dangerous,
if it is complementary
The primary objection of the medical
community to alternative medicine is that it is done
in place of conventional medical treatments. As long
as alternative treatments are used alongside standard
conventional medical treatments, most physicians find
complementary medicine acceptable (see comments about
alternative versus complementary medicine in Vickers
2004).
Those physicians that practice
complementary medicine must obviously believe they
see some added value in alternative forms of
treatments for their patients. Further, the boundary
lines between alternative and mainstream medicine
have changed over time. Methods once considered
alternative have later been adopted by conventional
medicine as physicians gradually incorporate
effective branches of alternative medicine of
treatment into their conventional medical practices.
Supporters of alternative methods suggest that much
of what is currently called alternative medicine will
be similarly assimilated by the mainstream in the
future.
Scientific research on alternative
therapies
A search on PubMed reveals that there
are over 370,000 research papers classified as
alternative medicine published in Medline-recognized
journals since 1966 in the National Library of
Medicine database (such as Kleijnen 1991, Linde 1997,
Michalsen 2003, Gonsalkorale 2003, and Berga 2003). There
are no publicly available statistics on exactly how
many of these studies were controlled, double-blind
peer-reviewed experiments or how many produced
results supporting alternative medicine or parts
thereof. (Stricken
hostile off-topic comments.)
Specific alternative treatment methods
have been shown to be effective for specific medical
conditions in recently published research (such as
Michalsen 2003, Gonsalkorale 2003, and Berga 2003).
Favorable research has been published in research
journals recognized by Medline.
Alternative medicine as an alternative
for the public searching for complementary services
Alternative medicine can provide the
buying public with services not commonly available
from conventional medicine. This argument covers a
range of areas, such as patient empowerment,
alternative methods of pain management,
treatment methods that support the biopsychosocial model
of health, cures for specific health concerns, stress
reduction services, other preventative health
services that are not typically a part of
conventional medicine, and of course complementary
medicine's palliative care which is
practiced by such world renown cancer centers such as
Memorial
Sloan-Kettering (see Vickers 2004).
The placebo effect
The placebo effect
is a problem only when conducting research. In the
treatment of patients, the placebo effect always
benefits the patient (Benedetti et
al. 2003). Alternative medicine
tries to capitalize on the positive effects of the
placebo effect When a patient
benefits from alternative medical treatment, the
benefit can be accounted for by a number of different
factors: the placebo effect, the treatment itself, or
from a combination of both. Hence, the placebo effect
is really only a problem when conducting research,
because when a patient benefits from it, it is
obviously a positive factor that aids a patient's
recovery. Furthermore, the "close
interaction of the health care provider with his or
her patient is likely to enhance the perception of
the treatment that is being performed."(Benedetti
et al. 2003). Alternative medicine strives to
capitalize on this effect, while medical doctors
generally consider the placebo effect only to be a
negative factor that should be minimized during
treatment.
Contemporary use of alternative medicine
Edzard Ernst wrote
in the Medical
Journal of Australia that "about half the
general population in developed countries [use]
complementary and alternative medicine (CAM)"
(Ernst 2003),
A survey
released in May 2004 by the National
Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine,
part of the National Institutes
of Health in the United States, found that in 2002,
more than one-third of Americans used some form of
alternative therapy - a category that included yoga,
meditation, herbal treatments and the Atkins diet. If prayer was counted as an alternative
therapy, the figure rose to almost two-thirds. Consistent
with previous studies, this study found that the majority
of individuals (i.e., 54.9%) used CAM in conjunction with
conventional medicine (
page 6).
Increasing numbers of medical colleges have
begun offering courses in alternative medicine. For
example, the University of Arizona
College of Medicine offers a program in Integrative
Medicine under the leadership of Dr. Andrew Weil which
trains physicians in various branches of alternative
medicine which "neither rejects conventional
medicine, nor embraces alternative practices
uncritically." [4]
In the UK a number of universties offer
courses in areas of alternative medicine including
homeopathy and acupuncture.
Issues of regulation
In countries where healthcare is
state-funded or funded by medical insurance,
alternative therapies are often not covered, and must
be paid for by the patient. Further, in some
countries, some branches of alternative medicine are
not properly regulated. So there is no governmental
control on who practices, and no real way of knowing
what training or expertise they possess in these
countries.
The current regulatory system and
alternative medicine
Many alternative medicine advocates
chafe at the restrictions of government agencies
which approve medical treatments (such as the
American Food and Drug
Administration) and the agencies' adherence to
experimental evaluation methods. They claim that this
impedes those seeking to bring new ideas and methods
to the public more rapidly, and protest that their
contributions and discoveries are unfairly dismissed,
overlooked or suppressed. The alternative medicine
industry argues that health fraud, when it occurs,
should be dealt with appropriately.
Other issues
A point often overlooked by some critics
of alternative medicine is that their criticisms need
not apply to all the different branches it is
not valid to lump all the branches together.
Several health research authors have
voiced criticisms of evidence-based medicine (Tonelli
2001, Downing 2003), in effect supporting the value
of eclectic branches of alternative medicine which
place great value upon the clinical experience of the
practitioner.
Alternative medicine may provide health
benefits through patient empowerment,
by offering more choices to the public, including
treatments that are simply not available in
conventional medicine. Any positive effects that such
alternative medicine treatments offer, even if they
are only based on placebo effects, still
provide benefits to overall patient health that
traditional medicine might not have provided.
References (Removed hostile links and
references)
- Kleijnen, J., Knipschild, P., ter Riet, G.
Clinical trials of homoeopathy. BMJ. 1991 Feb
9;302(6772):316-23. Erratum in: BMJ 1991 Apr
6;302(6780):818. PMID: 1825800 Abstract
- Linde, K., Clausius, N., Ramirez, G. Are the
clinical effects of homeopathy placebo effects? A
meta-analysis of placebo-controlled trials.
Lancet. 1997 Sep 20;350(9081):834-43. Erratum in:
Lancet 1998 Jan 17;351(9097):220. PMID: 9310601 Abstract
- Michalsen, A., Ludtke, R., Buhring, M. Thermal
hydrotherapy improves quality of life and
hemodynamic function in patients with chronic
heart failure. Am Heart J. 2003 Oct;146(4):E11.
PMID: 14564334 Abstract
- Gonsalkorale, W.M., Miller, V., Afzal, A.,
Whorwell, P.J. Long term benefits of hypnotherapy
for irritable bowel syndrome. Gut. 2003
Nov;52(11):1623-9. PMID: 14570733 Abstract
- Berga, S.L., Marcus, M.D., Loucks, T.L. Recovery
of ovarian activity in women with functional
hypothalamic amenorrhea who were treated with
cognitive behavior therapy. Fertility and
Sterility , Volume 80, Issue 4, Pages 976-981
(October 2003) Abstract
- Eisenberg, D.M., Davis, R.B., Ettner, S.L. Trends
in alternative medicine use in the United States,
1990-1997. JAMA. 1998; 280:1569-1575. PMID:
9820257 Abstract
- Ernst, E. Obstacles to research in complementary
and alternative medicine. Medical
Journal of Australia. 2003 Sep
15;179(6):279-80. PMID: 12964907 MJA
online
- Zalewski, Z. Importance of Philosophy of Science
to the History of Medical Thinking. CMJ 1999; 40:
8-13. CMJ
online Downing, A.M., Hunter, D.G. Validating
clinical reasoning: a question of perspective,
but whose perspective? Man Ther. 2003
May;8(2):117-9. Review. PMID: 12890440 Manual
Therapy Online
- Tonelli, M.R. The limits of evidence-based
medicine. Respir Care. 2001 Dec;46(12):1435-40;
discussion 1440-1. Review. PMID: 11728302 Abstract
- Gunn, I.P. A critique of Michael L. Millenson's
book, Demanding medical excellence: doctors and
accountability in the information age, and its
relevance to CRNAs and nursing. AANA J. 1998
Dec;66(6):575-82. Review. PMID: 10488264 Abstract
- Flanagin, A., Carey, L.A., Fontanarosa, P.B.
Prevalence of articles with honorary authors and
ghost authors in peer-reviewed medical journals.
JAMA. 1998 Jul 15;280(3):222-4. Abstract
- Larkin, M. Whose article is it anyway? Lancet.
1999 Jul 10;354(9173):136. Editorial
- Vickers, A. Alternative Cancer Cures:
"Unproven" or "Disproven"? CA
Cancer J Clin 2004 54: 110-118. Online
- Benedetti,F., Maggi,G., Lopiano, L. Open Versus
Hidden Medical Treatments: The Patient's
Knowledge About a Therapy Affects the Therapy
Outcome. Prevention & Treatment, Volume 6,
Article 1, posted June 23, 2003. APA
online
- Eisenberg DM. Advising patients who seek
alternative medical therapies. Ann Intern Med.
1997; 127:61-69. PMID: 9214254 Abstract
Other works that discuss alternative
medicine
- WHERE
DO AMERICANS GO FOR HEALTHCARE? by Anna
Rosenfeld, Case Western Reserve University,
Cleveland, Ohio, USA.
- Illich I. Limits to Medicine. Medical Nemesis:
The expropriation of Health. Penguin Books, 1976.
- Dillard, James and Terra Ziporyn. Alternative
Medicine for Dummies. Foster City, CA: IDG
Books Worldwide, Inc., 1998.
External links
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medicine mentioned in the above article. Our
version uses material from the main text of the
24 June 2004 version of the Wikipedia: Alternative
medicine article [List of authors, History of
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article is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.
Your use of all third party web sites is at your
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