Re: Alternative medicine
corjulo said:
Give me the scientific method over folklore any day. I'm curious what others think
I think you are underinformed and that the article, well, how many people died in a small plane today? (and yes, they are related, if you think about it).
WorldWide (not just US) there are scores of scientific studies underway in the areas of "alternative" medicine. Curiously, "alternative" medicine is only an alternative for the last 100 years or so. TCM has a few thousand years worth of case history to back it up. The Eclectics performed scientific studies on herbal claims (and refuted quite a bit of them) before the "new fangled medicine" of today began to do so.
Here in the states, research is being undertaken in combinatorial therapy (complementary & traditional) by Cornell Medical Center, Lehman College (CUNY) in conjunction with the NIH, Beth Israel Medical Center, the Weil Center in Arizona, and many others. If you want studies, PM me and I'll send you more reading material than you really want to deal with. I'll also send you scary reading material on the stuff you prefer, and why being a doctor prescribing multiple Rxs is scary, tricky, and something not to be done at home off road <^; If you knew what some of the chemicals being developed today did to cells in vitro, you may be leary of what they are doing in vivo... since there is no way to know all the possible permutations and combinations. This is especially true in the age of genetic manipulation, a field I am, regretfully, all too familiar with.
Not all "Alternative Medicine" is evil, bad, or even to be disregarded. In the HepC field, use of Japanese medicine is helpful to people going through the Interferon-ribavirin therapy, and in some cases the Japanese meds alone are just as effective as the drugs in chronic non-responders (which is most HepC patienst, unfortunately). Here in NYC we have a TCM practioner who has a large cohort of HepC patients ... they couldn't tolerate the Western Treatment of Choice, or they have no faith in it (not without reason, unfortunately).
In addition, indigenous medicine may well be the best available in countries where people are not going to be paying $10 usd for a purple pill, as $10 USD would be more money than they'd see in a lifetime. That's only tangentially related, but the fact that the study of Epidemiology has its roots in European Herbalism during the time of the plague has some merit.
Also while you may not feel comfortable giving lily of the valley to someone having a heart attack, taking digitoxin as prescribed is basically the same thing. While you yourself may not have a need for periwinkle medically, some cancer treatments are based off this herb. Please note that a qualified herbal practitioner is as educated and in some cases, more educated, than your regular internist. Please note that I wrote "qualified". In fact, my IM is a qualified ethnobotanist/herbalist as well as a medical director at our clinic. Quite frankly, i feel much safer in her hands than in someone who is not fully versed in all of the available routes out there.... especially as I seem to have won the Pharmaceutical Allergy Tendency award.
There are bad medicine stories for every type of therapy. there are people getting suckered all the time out of their concern for their loved ones, not nec. by non-western medical docs either.
It might be advisable not to throw out the Baby with the Bath water.