NATURAL AND CONVENTIONAL MEDICINE HEALTH AND SOCIAL CARE ESSAYThe practice of naturopathy as a discipline is also becoming more and more regulated and consolidated with the creation of p PT2 1400w
NATURAL AND CONVENTIONAL MEDICINE HEALTH AND SOCIAL CARE ESSAYThe practice of naturopathy as a discipline is also becoming more and more regulated and consolidated with the creation of p PT2 1400w
NATURAL AND CONVENTIONAL MEDICINE HEALTH AND SOCIAL CARE ESSAY
PT2 1400w
The practice of naturopathy as a discipline is also becoming more and more regulated and consolidated with the creation of professional associations such as the American Naturopathic Association. More so, various schools have been accredited to teach naturopathy such as the Bastyr University, National College of Natural Medicine and the Broucher Institute of Naturopathic Medicine. More mainstream medical schools are now tackling or offering alternative medicine. Examples of such schools are Harvard, Columbia, Georgetown and Duke (Barney, 1998).
Many conventional medical practitioners critique the usage of natural medicine. According to Ernst (2003), alternative medicine is largely opinion-based. Practitioners tend to give inconsistent and different prescriptions for the same diseases or medical conditions. For example, he cites how “100 different complementary therapies were recommended for asthma, while systemic reviews failed to back up a single treatment for this indication” (p. 1134). Ernst was also disappointed at the scarcity of systematically gathered evidence. Yet, he is not against alternative medicine per se. He advocated for a more objective and scientific usage of alternative medicine.
Why the Shift towards Natural Medicine?
Overly-commercialized Conventional Medicine
Weil (1998) tells how the commercialization of orthodox medicine is discouraging patients to continue seeking conventional treatments. He characterizes how mainstream medicine continues to become more expensive and technology-reliant. He tells how the popularity of health maintenance organizations (HMOs) has gravely affected the health care system. HMOs, he claims, want doctors to see as many patients as possible for the purpose of profit. Sadly, doctors spend less time with their patients which translate to less detailed medical and family histories, thus affecting the quality of diagnosis and treatment. In contrast, naturopathic consultations involves long and thorough interview with patients. Interviews look at medical and family histories, patient lifestyle, emotional health, and other physical features.