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Nontraditional
Medical Practices
:
A resurgence of interest developed in the 1990s in medical treatments
not fully accepted by conventional medicine or biomedicine, which
requires stringent scientific proof of safety and effectiveness
before accepting a treatment. Such evidence is lacking for many
approaches used in the medical systems and treatments known as alternative
medicine in the United States. In Europe, these same approaches
often are called complementary medicine. Growing public interest
in nontraditional treatments led the NIH to open the National Center
for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (formerly the Office
of Alternative Medicine) in 1992, which encourages research on alternative
medicine. The number of Americans using an alternative therapy rose
from 33 percent in 1990 to more than 42 percent in 1997.
Alternative
medicine emphasizes improving the quality of life for people with
chronic illness; disease prevention; and treatments for conditions
that conventional medicine cannot adequately control, such as arthritis,
chronic pain, allergies, cancer, heart disease, and depression.
A cornerstone of alternative medicine is the idea that the mind
influences the health of the body.
Alternative
medical systems include chiropractic, holistic medicine, and homeopathy.
Chiropractors treat disease with spinal manipulation, massage, diet,
and many other techniques. Holistic healers emphasize treatment
of the whole person, including body, mind, emotions, spirit, and
interactions with the family and environment. Homeopathic healers
use substances that cause the very symptoms being treated. When
treating a headache or nausea, for example, homeopathic healers
administer herbs that in large doses cause headache or nausea. But
they use very small doses that cause the patient no discomfort.
Specific
alternative medical treatments include aromatherapy, inhaling oils
from aromatic plants; massage techniques, including Rolfing and
reflexology; biofeedback; iridology, in which the eye is used to
diagnose certain diseases; and acupuncture. Some approaches, including
chiropractic manipulation and acupuncture, have gained greater acceptance
in conventional medicine. Some conventional biomedical studies have
concluded that chiropractic manipulation is effective for low-back
pain. A 1997 NIH report gave acupuncture limited endorsement for
certain medical uses.
Organizations
that educate the public about health fraud and quackery expressed
concern about growing interest in some alternative medicine treatments.
They emphasized the importance of receiving a conventional medical
diagnosis, and exploring standard treatment options, before turning
to alternative medicine.
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