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Given the ongoing somewhat ferocious
scrutiny regarding the safety of the many diverse therapies within Complementary
Medicine Aromatherapy, Nutrition, Herbal Medicine to name
a few, one would think that patients were dropping like flies, succumbing
to the dangers of natural medicine.
This is patently not the case. Apart from a few
very sad incidents where a person suffers diarrhoea from ingesting a vitamin
or herbal supplement, suffers from the incorrect insertion of an acupuncture
needle, or reacts to an essential oil applied neat rather than diluted,
the majority of side effects from natural medicine are neither life-threatening
nor numerous.
This is patently not the case with conventional
allopathic medicine, where, according to Lois Rogers of the Sunday
Times, 40,000 people die every year in the UK due to medical mishaps
four times more deaths than from all other types of accident, with
a further 280,000 people suffering from non-fatal drug-prescribing errors,
overdoses and infections. The results of a pilot study led by Charles
Vincent from University College London indicate that one in 14 patients
suffers some type of adverse event an error of diagnosis, an error
during the operation (i.e. removing the wrong, healthy kidney from a pensioner)
or an adverse drug reaction.
In the US, the National Academy of Sciences Institute
of Medicine has revealed that medical errors in hospitals were one of
the leading causes of death and injury in the US, with 44,000-98,000 people
dying every year, more than the number of fatalities from highway accidents,
breast cancer or AIDS. Furthermore, even more people die from mistakes
in health care settings other than hospitals, such as day-surgery, outpatient
clinics, retail pharmacies, nursing homes and home care. From medication
errors alone, more than 7,000 Americans die every year, more than those
who die from injuries in the workplace.
With this appalling record from conventional
medical treatment, one would think that the medical profession would be
embracing the use of preventive medicine and safer, less invasive treatments
used by practitioners of complementary medicine.
Not on your life! As reported in the January
2000 issue of Townsend Letter for Doctors and Patients, the physician
Dr Robert Sinaiko, MD, allergy specialist in practise for some 30 years
has been placed on probation for 5 years by the Medical Board of California
and will have his licence to practice revoked unless he admits
that the disorders he treats, including chronic fatigue syndrome, multiple
chemical sensitivity and candidiasis, dont exist! Read the full
details of this case on the website www.treatmentchoice.com. Shades of
George Orwells 1984 or what??
Then read June Butlins article Chronic
Fatigue Syndrome and NADH (43 references) and judge whether you consider
that chronic fatigue syndrome exists or not. How astonishing that supposedly
learned American physicians who govern the practice of medicine can conclude
that tens of thousands of people whose lives have been made a misery from
chronic fatigue are simply making it up or malingering.
With more people visiting alternative practitioners
than conventional physicians (see Wagner et al, Research Updates
this issue, page 38), reporting moderate effectiveness and few side effects
from substances such as St Johns Wort, is it any wonder that many
people prefer natural medicines rather than fairly powerful drugs (antidepressants)
or harmful treatments (electroconvulsive therapy) recommended for depression?
Disappointingly, despite the huge volume of literature
documenting the importance of nutrition in the prevention and treatment
of cancer (see also www.positivehealth.com), in a recent survey in the
Netherlands, only 13% of the cancer patients were following a cancer diet.
(See Van Dam in Cancer Research Updates, page 39.)
Most doctors know very little about the clinical
use of or the research evidence regarding nutrition and cancer. Worse,
medical practitioners are not allowed to treat cancer with diet; they
must follow best practice guidelines; treatments usually include
a combination of surgery, radiotherapy and/or chemotherapy.
I cannot envisage a more appalling situation,
with people being kept alive longer, but in usually worse health from
the drugs and toxic medical treatments they receive from the medical profession,
and doctors being forbidden to use safer, preventive and less invasive
treatments.
Perhaps the answer will have to come from patients
themselves, lobbying their parliamentary representatives to put natural
medicines at the heart of the health care system.
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