Alternative Medicine Is
Just As Popular as Traditional Medicine Pat
Alves
The Sourcebook further explains that Dr.
David Eisenberg of Harvard School of Medicine and Ronald Kessler of the
Survey Research Center found that alternative therapies are as popular
as ever, and as of 1990 sixty-one million Americans used alternative
therapies while twenty-two million Americans saw an alternative medicine
provider for certain medical conditions. According to this same survey
there were 425 million visits to alternative medicine providers and 388
million visits to biomedicine providers. In 1990 alternative medicine in
the United States represented a $13.7 billion dollar business with
out-of-pocket expenditures by the patient being $10.3 billion while all
conventional hospital expenditures were $12.8 billion and physicians
charges were $23.5 billion (Cook 10). A majority of people seeking
alternative medical therapies are those with chronic illnesses who
believe that biomedicine does not have the effective treatments targeted
for their conditions. One reason for this is that conventional medicine
gives patients standardized treatments (typically drugs or surgery or
both) and advice as to whether the patient fits into a number of broadly
defined symptomatic categories and the treatment is "physician
centered." The physician becomes the authority and usually the
patients’ needs are not addressed which encourages patients to become
passive (Cook 10). Alternative medicine sees each patient as unique and
an individual and treatment creates elaborate procedures for identifying
individual suitability and sensitivity to that treatment. Multiple
treatments are judged and the patient is responsible in the healing
process. In biomedicine it appears that high-tech diagnostic and
therapeutic procedures can be quite attractive to physicians. Based on
the physician’s confidence in this high technology, alternative
low-tech therapies may be considered ineffective. And once in place,
established therapies can take precedence over new or alternative
therapies (Cook 10).
The AMA has also tried to take steps to
safeguard biomedicine by eliminating certain aspects of alternative
therapies. In 1963 the AMA formed a Committee on Quackery that worked to
find ways to cut off chiropractors from their patient base. The
principal means of achieving this goal was by making it unethical for a
medical physician to associate with an "unscientific
practitioner" as the AMA labeled the chiropractors. The
chiropractors were considered an "unscientific cult" by the
1966 resolution of the AMA’s House of Delegates. In the August 1987
Wilk et al. v. the American Medical Association decision, the United
States Court of Appeals held that the AMA violated the Sherman Act by
"conducting an illegal boycott in restraint of trade directed at
chiropractors..." (Wilk 2). The AMA had used former Principle 3 of
the AMA’s Principles of Medical Ethics which provided: "A
physician should practice a method of healing founded on a scientific
basis; and he should not voluntarily associate with anyone who violates
this principle" (Wilk 2). The district court further found AMA’s
purpose was to:
Prevent medical physicians from
referring patients to chiropractors and from accepting referrals
from chiropractors, so as to prevent chiropractors from obtaining
access to hospital diagnostic services and membership on hospital
medical staffs, to prevent medical physicians from teaching at
chiropractic colleges or engaging in any joint research, and to
prevent any cooperation between the two groups in the delivery of
health care services (Wilk 3).
The district court further held that it
is "ethical for a medical physician to professionally associate
with chiropractors, if the physician believes that the association is in
his patient’s best interest" (Wilk 3). This type of behavior by
the elite of medicine indicates that, rather than working with all forms
of medicine for the betterment of the patient, they were first and
foremost interested in gaining power and control of the medical
industry. Is it any wonder then, that there are no alternative therapies
recommended for the simplest of health challenges to the very
complicated challenges such as cancer?
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.