Alternative Medicine
Throughout recorded history, people of
various cultures have relied on what
Western medical practitioners today
call alternative medicine. The term
alternative medicine covers a broad
range of healing philosophies,
approaches, and therapies. It generally
describes those treatments and
health care practices that are outside
mainstream Western health care.
People use these treatments and therapies in
a variety of ways. Alternative
therapies used alone are often referred to as
alternative; when used in
combination with other alternative therapies, or
in addition to conventional
therapies they are referred to as complementary.
Some therapies are far
outside the realm of accepted Western medical theory
and practice, but some,
like chiropractic treatments, are now established in
mainstream medicine.
Worldwide, only an estimated ten to thirty percent
of human health care is
delivered by conventional, biomedically oriented
practitioners ("Fields of
Practice"). The remaining seventy to ninety
percent ranges from self-care
according to folk principles, to care given in
an organized health care
system based on alternative therapies ("Fields of
Practice"). Many cultures
have folk medicine traditions that include the use
of plants and plant
products. In ancient cultures, people methodically
collected information on
herbs and developed well-defined herbal
pharmacopoeias. Indeed, well into
the twentieth century much of the
pharmacology of scientific medicine was
derived from the herbal lore of
native peoples. Many drugs commonly used
today are of herbal origin:
one-quarter of the prescription drugs dispensed
by community pharmacies in
the United States contain at least one active
ingredient derived from plant
material ("Fields of Practice").
Twenty years ago, few physicians would
have advised patients to take folic
acid to prevent birth defects, vitamin E
to promote a healthy heart, or
vitamin C to bolster their immune systems.
Yet today, doctor and patient
alike know of the lifesaving benefits of these
vitamins. Twenty years ago,
acupuncture, guided imagery, and therapeutic
touch were considered outright
quackery. Now, however, in clinics and
hospitals around the country,
non-traditional therapies are gaining wider
acceptance as testimonials and
studies report success using them to treat
such chronic maladies as back
pain and arthritis.
The number of
people availing themselves of these alternative therapies is
staggering. In
1991 about twenty-one million Americans made four hundred and
twenty-five
million visits to practitioners of these types of alternative
medicine; more
than the estimated three hundred and eighty-eight million
visits made to
general practitioners that year (Apostolides). The U.S.
Department of
Education has accredited more than twenty acupuncture schools
and more than
thirty medical schools now offer courses in acupuncture
(Lombardo; Smith).
As the number of Western medical institutions researching
alternative
therapies increases, the legitimacy of at least some alternative
therapies
will also increase.
Does all this recent medical establishment attention
mean that the
non-conventional therapies really work? Critics say a
definitive scientific
answer must await well-designed experiments involving
many patients. Up to
now, most of the studies have relied on personal
observation and anecdotal
testimony from satisfied patients. The official
position of the American
Medical Association (A.M.A.)--alternative
medicine's chief critic--is that a
patient's improvement or recovery after
alternative treatment might just as
well be incidental to the action taken.
This may be true for scientists and
researchers, but the fact is that the
people seeking alternative treatments
disagree. The solution is obvious:
more research needs to be conducted.
Some alternative treatments, such
as acupuncture and herbal medicine, have
impressive histories dating back
thousands of years. In America,
professional and public interest in the
field of alternative care has grown
to such an extent that, in 1992, the
U.S. government established the Office
of Alternative Medicine (OAM) within
the National Institutes of Health
(NIH). Its mission is to speed the
discovery, development, and validation of
potential treatments to complement
our current healthcare system. One of the
OAM's first tasks was to develop a
classification system for the dozens of
various therapies and practices. The
systems of alternative medical practice
the OAM has classified so far share
many common therapeutic techniques.
Traditional oriental medicine and
naturopathic medicine, for example, both
use herbal remedies, acupuncture,
and mind/body control. However, some
alternative systems, such as
environmental medicine and homeopathic medicine
are distinct and separate.
Following are some the more popular alternative
therapies Americans use.
Acupuncture
Acupuncture is an example of a therapy once
considered bizarre which has
some scientific basis. An integral part of
Chinese medicine for thousands of
years, it is based on the belief that
energy, which the Chinese call Qi
(pronounced 'chee'), circulates along
meridians in the body in the same way
that blood flows (Furman). A diagram
of the meridian system looks similar to
those of our circulatory and nervous
systems (Crute). When the flow of
energy becomes blocked, an imbalance is
created, resulting in pain or
disease. To restore the proper balance and
energy flow, acupuncturists
stimulate specific points of the body along
these meridians. Puncturing the
skin with a needle is the usual method, but
acupuncturists may also
stimulate the acupuncture points with
finger-pressure.
Although Western physicians and researchers do not
truly understand the
concept of Qi, there is evidence that acupuncture can
influence the movement
or release of many chemicals in the body. Research
conducted by Dr. Bruce
Pomeranz, a neurophysiologist at the University of
Toronto, established that
acupuncture releases naturally produced,
morphine-like substances called
endorphins (Crute).
In addition to
releasing endorphins, doctors and clinicians know that
acupuncture can
provide at least short-term relief for a wide range of pains
by inhibiting
the transmission of pain impulses through the nerves.
Furthermore, recent
studies also show acupuncture to be effective in
alleviating bronchial
asthma, bronchitis, and stroke-induced paralysis
(Apostolides). "I'm a
healthy skeptic," says Johns Hopkins psychiatrist Mary
McCaul (Apostolides).
"But look, we don't have all the answers. Patients who
choose acupuncture
feel calmer. Even if it's a placebo effect, placebos are
powerful things."
Mind-Body Healing
Relaxation techniques like meditation and
biofeedback--which teach patients
to control heart rate, blood pressure,
temperature and other involuntary
functions through concentration--have also
given respectability to
alternative medicine and are routinely taught to
patients and medical
students. The basic premise of mind-body medicine is
that the power of the
mind can be used to help heal the body by improving
the person's attitude
and also, as recent research has shown, by direct
effects on the immune,
endocrine, and nervous systems (Epiro and Walsh).
Although many of the
biochemical and physiological mechanisms remain to be
identified, an
increasing body of evidence is showing that the healthy mind
is indeed
capable of mobilizing the immune system-and that the troubled mind
can
dampen the functioning of the immune system and contribute to physical
disease.
There is little doubt that state of mind and physiological
processes are
closely linked. The connection between stress and immune
system response,
for example, is well documented (Epiro and Walsh). Some
scientists suggest
that the power of prayer and faith healing, like some
forms of meditation,
might also be physiological in that they may protect
the body from the
negative effects of stress hormone norepinephrine. In
addition, experience
shows that relaxation techniques can help patients
enormously. "Medicine is
a three-legged stool," says Dr. Herbert Benson of
Harvard Medical School
(Epiro and Walsh). "One leg is pharmaceuticals, the
other is surgery, and
the third is what people can do for themselves.
Mind-body work is an
essential part of that."
In addition to preventing
or curing illnesses, these therapies provide
people the chance to be
involved in their own care, to make vital decisions
about their own health,
to be touched emotionally, and to be changed
psychologically in the process.
Many patients today believe their doctor or
medical system is too technical,
impersonal, remote, and uncaring. The
mind-body approach is potentially a
corrective to this tendency, a reminder
of the importance of human
connection that opens up the power of patients
acting on their own behalf.
Homeopathy
Homeopathy, despite the American Medical
Association's characterization of
it as a pseudo science, is a popular
alternative that is drawing increased
attention. Founded in the eighteenth
century by German physician Samuel
Hahnemann, it is based on the idea that
"like cures like" (Kees); that
micro-doses of substances, known in large
amounts to cause illness, can
treat that illness by stimulating the body's
own natural defenses and
curative powers. In some respects, treatment with
homeopathic medicines,
nontoxic compounds derived from plants, animals and
minerals, is akin to
immunization or allergy treatments in which similar
substances are
introduced into the body to bolster immunity.
A
substantial number of American doctors--among them Wayne Jonas, a family
practitioner who is director of the National Institutes of Health's Office
of Alternative Medicine--have been trained in homeopathy, as have countless
nurses, veterinarians, chiropractors. While critics contend that homeopathic
remedies are no better than water at worst and placebos at best, a survey of
studies published in the British Medical Journal a few years ago indicates
that some are actually more effective than placebos, and a number of reports
document their efficacy in treating hay fever, respiratory infections,
digestive diseases, migraine and a form of rheumatic disease. "I do what
works best for my patients," says Dr. Jennifer Jacobs of Edmonds,
Washington, a family practitioner and member of the NIH Alternative Medicine
Advisory Committee (Squires). "There are certainly situations where modern
medicine is appropriate and lifesaving, but perhaps the pendulum has swung
too far toward technology and standard pharmaceuticals and not enough toward
some of the early healing methods that have a track record in many
cultures."
Chiropractic Treatment
Chiropractic science is
concerned with investigating the relationship
between the human body's
structure (primarily of the spine) and function
(primarily of the nervous
system) to restore and preserve health.
Chiropractic medicine applies such
knowledge to diagnosing and treating
structural dysfunctions that can affect
the nervous system. Chiropractic
physicians use manual procedures and
interventions, not surgical or
chemotherapeutic ones. In 1993, more than
45,000 licensed chiropractors were
practicing in the United States
(Krizmanic). Chiropractic specialty areas
are pertinent to other medical
specialties, such as radiology, orthopedics,
neurology, and sports medicine.
Current chiropractic research focuses on
back and musculoskeletal pain and
reliability studies.
Although chiropractic clearly has its drawbacks,
notably its stubborn
insistence that spinal misalignments cause or underlie
most ailments,
including those far afield from the backbone, its use of
vertebral
manipulation has proved useful in treating acute low-back pain and
other
muscular and neurological problems. Osteopaths, licensed physicians
whose
education is essentially the same as that of M.D.s, also include
manipulative therapy in their treatments. Studies at the University of
Miami's School of Medicine Touch Research Institute have found that
premature infants gain weight much faster after being massaged than babies
in an unmassaged control group (Cooper and Stoflet). Massaged infants cry
less and are calmer than those who are only rocked. It is surprising that
only now, in the late 1990's, are we discovering the fact that not only
infants but also children and adults respond favorably to the human
touch--both emotionally and physically.
Conclusion
Many
Americans flock to alternative practices either because their suffering
has
not been alleviated by standard medical or surgical treatment, or
because
the traditional treatments themselves are too expensive or
dangerous. These
patients often feel that the intrusion of increasingly
complicated and
impersonal technology has widened the gap between mainstream
caregivers and
patients. Too many doctors are thought to be coolly
professional and
emotionally distant, inclined to cure a specific disorder
narrow-mindedly
without comforting or caring for the patient. Americans have
made it clear
with their pocketbooks that they find this unacceptable.
The power of the
mind-body connection has been confirmed from many scientific studies. I think in
some conditions a person's belief alone can dramatically eliminate their
symptoms. There have been hundreds of popular remedies found that have proven to
be ineffective or sometimes even harmful. Herbal remedies and many folk remedies
have not survived scientific testing for many years now, and if they did they
would stop being "alternative medicines" and become a part of scientific
therapies. I think if a person is using a harmless remedy and they really
believe in it, then using it will help improve their condition. The bottom line
is that we just don't know what these substances are doing. They many be
inactive, or they may have activity independent of their powerful belief effect.
They could match up with their advertised uses, or they may be effective for
something entirely different. They could very well be harmful. Many unmodified
plant products do not have near the amount of predictability that regular
medicines have. People that are taking herbal remedies are engaged in a big
natural experiment with many untested substances. Before people turn to
alternative medicine it is important that they research it as much as possible
so they have some idea of what they are getting in to, and they really better
believe in it.
Works Cited
Apostolides, Marianne. "How to Quit
the Holistic Way." Psychology Today
Sept./Oct. 1996:
34-46.
Cooper, Richard and Sandi Stoflet. "Trends in the Education and Practice
of
Alternative
Medicine." Health Affairs Fall 1996: 226-237.
Crute, Sheree. "The Acupuncture Alternative." Heart & Soul Oct./Nov.
1996:
90-91.
Epiro, E. and Nancy Walsh. "Alternative Medicine--Part
Two: Mind Body
Medicine--Expanding Health Model." Patient Care 15 Sept.
1997: 127-145.
"Fields of Practice-Herbal Medicine."
.
(10 Dec.
1997).
Furman, Bertram. "Trendy Traditional Medicine for a Modern Age."
San Diego
Business
Journal 10 Mar. 1997: A7-8.
Kees, Michael.
"Alternative Medicine: Down the Slippery Slope." Modern
Medicine 1 Jan.
1997: 68-70.
Krizmanic, Judy. "The Best of Both Worlds." Vegetarian
Times Nov. 1995:
96-101.
Lombardo, John. "Alternative Medicine Gains
Credibility with Some Doctors."
St. Louis
Business Journal 30 June 1997:
16B.
Smith, Brad. "Alternative Treatments Gain Acceptance." Denver
Business
Journal 18 July
1997: 2B-4B.
Squires, Sally. "The New
Medicine." Modern Maturity Sept. 1996: 69-70.