The History of Medical
and Alternative Treatments
A thesis written by Pat
Alves
To understand how I can make that claim,
it is important to understand what both medical and alternative
treatments are. There are medical treatments that can offer a
"cure" to the disease based on chemotherapy (drugs) and
radiation as primary treatment. These treatments fall under the Food and
Drug Administration’s guidelines of medical treatment. However, if
vitamins or dietary supplements are used, it falls under Section 403(r)
of the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act of 1994 which states,
"A statement under this subparagraph may not claim to diagnose,
mitigate, treat, cure, or prevent a specific disease or class of
diseases" ("Dietary Supplement 5-6"). Medical
practitioners look towards the guidelines of the FDA and the American
Medical Association for guidelines for cures to many such diseases. This
has not always been the case. Based on information from the Alternative
Medicine Sourcebook, (to be referred to herein as Sourcebook)
alternative medicine once had its place in history (Note 1). It has just
been since 1847 when the AMA was organized that any guidelines were
established. Prior to that, medicine included practices in homeopathics,
acupuncture, naturopaths, and botonics, and those parameters are now
referred to as alternative medicine. By the mid 1800’s the medical
system as we know it now was referred to as biomedicine. Biomedicine was
defined in two areas:
(1) Specific organic entities which
included bacterial and pathological damage, and
(2) Antibiotics and vaccines which would
ward off pathogens.
Both of these categories were based on
warding off infectious disease and to perfect surgical procedures (Cook
8). The establishment of the National Cancer Institute (NCI) in 1937
under the National Cancer Act became the only federal institution with
exclusive responsibility in cancer research (Epstein, The Politics 200).
NCI defines alternative medicine as "...it is often called alternative
when it is used instead of conventional [biomedicine]
treatment" ("Questions & Answers" 1). NCI further
clarifies whether the evaluation between alternative and conventional
medicine is the same. NCI approaches conventional treatments as having
been studied for safety and effectiveness by scientific processes, which
include clinical trials using large numbers of patients. And yet they
state that, "Often, less is known about the safety and
effectiveness of complementary and alternative methods. Some of these
complementary and alternative therapies have not undergone rigorous
evaluation" ("Questions and Answers" 2). Finding a
scientific explanation for principles behind alternative therapies is a
most difficult issue. Herbal remedies have been used for centuries in
China with no backing from universities, hospitals, statisticians or
full-time research staffs. Drug companies are not likely to invest in
researching herbal success because there can be no financial patent
rewards on natural products; therefore, funding is scant. And these are
the very elements that create research environments (Woodham and Peters
17).
In 1847 the American Medical Association
was organized, and it sponsored and lobbied for the enactment of state
licensing laws. As a result there was a quick decline in competition
from other schools of medical practice. In 1910 Abraham Flexner, a
United States educator and founder of the Institute for Advanced Study
in Princeton, New Jersey, compiled convincing evidence and wrote a
report entitled, Medical Education in the United States and Canada. His
report, funded by the Carnegie Foundation, helped to upgrade medical
education. "It also enabled medical schools with a greater
orientation towards biomedicine research to receive preferential
treatment from the large philanthropic foundations that were then
awarding money for medical education" (Cook 9). Indirectly, this
was the demise of the alternative medical institutions. Based on Flexner’s
report, many competing alternative medical schools lost the much needed
funding to survive. And ironically, Flexner had no first hand knowledge
of medicine or medical science, yet after his report was published even
he became disenchanted with the rigidity of the education standards. In
1907 there were approximately 160 medical schools in the United States
and four years after the report was released there were one hundred
schools that were able to survive the lack of financial support.
Biomedicine became the standard in health and illness. The Sourcebook
also states that, "As a result, for the next half century it
overshadowed ‘less scientific’ paradigms, and those who adopted and
practiced biomedicine accumulated great power and prestige" (Cook
9). The end result was that rival alternative healing professions
gradually disappeared which brought biomedicine to the forefront of the
medical industry. This, too, changed the confidence in the patient who
leaned more to biomedicine. But chronic illnesses (i.e., arthritis,
allergies, hypertension, cancer, depression, cardiovascular disease, and
others) and deaths relating to those illnesses started to replace simple
infectious disease, which was, of course, how biomedicine had originally
been classified (Cook 8-23).
Pat
Alves is a resident of north eastern Ohio. She is a wife, mother,
businesswoman, and the regional coordinator for The Cancer Prevention
Coalition which promotes cancer-safe consumer products and awareness of
industrial and commercial sources of cancer causing materials.
Pat was able to successfully deliver her
father from cancer by using alternative means.
Alternative
Cancer Treatment Articles
Welcome
to my website. My name is Bob Davis and this is my cancer
success story!
_____________________
During
the past 100 years, medical practice has been conformed to the restraints
brought about by legal intervention to exclude many former practices and to
limit therapies to those that conform to the standards of the FDA and other
agencies. Prior to this time, many alternative protocols were openly
available. Some of these treatments are highly effective but are illegal to
prescribe because they don't conform to the current legal requirements.
It is therefore necessary for this site to limit its offering to information
only. We are not allowed to prescribe, so all decisions and outcomes are the
responsibility of the patient. If you have any doubts as to the validity of
this information, it is your responsibility to make your own choice and to
be responsible for the outcome of following your choices.