Difference between revisions of "Complementary Alternative Medicine"

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-Coordinate CAM activity with National Cancer Institute  
 
-Coordinate CAM activity with National Cancer Institute  
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Alternative Medicine Foundation
 
Alternative Medicine Foundation

Revision as of 05:54, 24 October 2016

Complementary and Alternative Medicine

Introduction

Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM) and its new iteration of Integrative Medicine (IM), refer to therapies and treatment modalities that are outside of conventional Western medicine. They have less scientific evidence than Western medicine but have a long tradition of treatment in different cultures and societies. There has been a growing popularity of CAM therapies amongst patients, who often seek them out when they feel Western medicine hasn’t fully addressed their needs. They are often used for chronic illnesses or to alleviate the adverse effect of mainstream treatments. The usage of CAM is growing; the latest survey by the National Center Complementary and Integrative Medicine showed almost 34% of adults and about 12% of children used some form of CAM therapy.[1] CAM therapies also represent a growing marketshare; CAM therapies represent 1.1% of total health care expenditures, and 9.2% of all out-of-pocket spending.[2] About 59 million Americans spend $30.2 billion a year for CAM treatments.[2]

Lately there has also been a growing acceptance of CAM therapies by Western medicine. Long dismissed because of inconsistent evidence on efficacy, CAM began to see an expanding acceptance by mainstream providers in the late 1990s. Western physicians view CAM therapies as ways to reduce the need for medications, and alleviate some of the side effects of conventional treatment. They feel they can reduce the disease burden and provide more comprehensive coverage. There has also been a gradual shift in medicine away from treating just diseases and focusing more on treating the patient as a whole. Better health outcomes and higher quality care result when the emotional, physical, and mental needs of the patient are addressed in conjunction with the disease process. There has also been an acceptance by mainstream medicine that there are some disease processes such as chronic pain, which aren’t treated very effectively by conventional care that CAM can help mitigate. CAM therapies have begun to be viewed as another tool to be used in treating a patient’s total disease burden. Many hospitals offer CAM therapies as another consult service that can be used by the patient. 80% of hospitals and healthcare services now offer some sort of Integrative medicine services. [3] In this modern era of EHRs and better communication, the growing popularity of CAM represents an important need that must be addressed. Inpatient CAM services have the benefit of using an enterprise-wide EHR, but face problems in standardized documentation since there are limited EHR modules that address their needs while still being understandable to providers. Outpatient CAM services have an even more difficult task. There is less of a requirement for CAM services to upgrade to EHRs and achieve Meaningful Use, so many CAM providers write manual notes that use their own specialized language. Coordination of care amongst different therapies plans then become entirely dependent on the patient. This is further complicated if the patient acquires herbal supplements on their own without even consulting a CAM provider. There is a potential for severe adverse effects due to limited communication and coordination between outside CAM providers and the patient’s principal conventional provider. Although some CAM practices are relatively benign and low risk, proper documentation is essential for any high quality care plan. Integrating CAM practices into the greater framework of mainstream medicine will allow for evidence gathering, and generate a best practice treatment guide on which therapies are most effective for which diseases. There is thus an integral need for more appropriate, standardized documentation of CAM therapies for all patient care.

CAM Definitions

Complementary and alternative medicine is an umbrella term for various health care practices which are considered to be outside of traditional “Western” allopathic medicine. There are several definitions of CAM. “Complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) is a broad domain of healing resources that encompasses all health systems, modalities, and practices and their accompanying theories and beliefs, other than those intrinsic to the politically dominant health system of a particular society or culture in a given historical period”[4] “CAM includes complex and longstanding fields of study, such as acupuncture, Ayruvedic medicine, and homoeopathy, but can also be as straightforward as taking a specific dietary supplement to lower blood pressure or blood lipid concentrations”[5] If and when a treatment method previously considered "unproven therapy" is proven to be safe and effective, it may be adopted into conventional health care and may cease to be viewed as "alternative". The term CAM is being largely replaced with Integrative medicine, which focuses on integrating CAM practices into a greater framework within mainstream medicine.

Complementary

Occurs when therapy is used in addition to mainstream medicine

Alternative

Occurs when therapy is used in place of mainstream medicine

Integrative Medicine

Refers to the use of complementary and alternative medicine practices for which there is some high-quality scientific evidence of safety and effectiveness used in conjunction with mainstream medicine

“Integrative medicine makes use of appropriate therapies, both conventional and alternative…that takes account of the individual as a   
unique and whole person, taking into account body mind and spirit”.[6]

Categories of CAM

Alternative medicine /Whole body medicine:Medical systems based upon different medicinal theories with traditional roots in indigenous cultures and societies. They are entirely separate and complete medical systems based on alternate theories of disease that evolved from earlier approaches to treatment than the modern scientific approach.

Some systems such as Traditional Chinese or Ayruvedic Medicine have been in practice for more than 5000 years

Examples

Traditional Chinese Medicine

Homeopathy

Ayruvedic Mecidine

Native American Healing practices

Mind Body Interventions: Treatment modalities based on the idea that the mind has the capacity to affect the body. Many of the techniques focus on reducing stress and promoting relaxation. Some systems such as cognitive behavioral therapy and support groups were previously classified as CAM, and are now considered mainstream

Examples

Yoga

Meditation

Hypnosis

Aromatherapy

“Creative therapy” – Techniques which use music, art, writing, dance

Biologically Based Therapies:Treatment method based on natural substances such as vitamins, nutrition and herbs. Dietary supplements and better nutrition represent some of the earliest attempts at maintaining better health through well-being.

Examples

Dietary supplements

-Minerals

-Probiotics

-Fish Oil

Vitamins

Herbology

Manipulative and Body Based Methods:Treatment system based on effective utilization of movement, physical exercises, and musculoskeletal manipulation to promote a full range of motion, improve physical functioning, and reduce pain. The main symptoms targeted by these modalities are chronic neck and back pain, arthritis, and other joint pains.

Examples

Chiropractic therapy

Massage

Osteopathy

Energy Therapies Treatment system based on manipulation of energy fields that are either detectable or not proven to be measurable. The practice stems from the belief that there are positive and negative energy forces within the human body that can be balanced, and subtle manipulation can affect the patient’s emotional, physical and mental well being. The two main types are Biofield and Bioelectromagnetic


Biofield: Therapies based on the idea that the human body is imbued with inherent energy fields that infiltrate and surround it. Manipulation of the biofield occurs through touch, pressure, or extrinsically manipulating the body and its energy field.

Examples

Reiki

Qi-Gong

Therapeutic Touch


Bioelectromagnetic field: Energy fields are manipulated using unconventional usage of electromagnetic field

Examples

Pulsed fields

Magnet therapy

AC/DC field manipulation

Monochromatic radiation

CAM organizations

National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM)

-Now: Complementary and Integrative Medicine

-Federal agency for CAM scientific research


Office of Cancer Complementary and Alternative Medicine (OCCAM)

-Established 1998

-Coordinate CAM activity with National Cancer Institute


Alternative Medicine Foundation

References

  1. Clarke, TC. Et al. Trends in the use of complementary health approaches in adults: United States, 2002-2012. National health statistics reports; no 79. Hyattsville, MD: National Center for Healthcare statistics, 2015. https://nccih.nih.gov/research/statistics/NHIS/2012
  2. 2.0 2.1 “National Health Care Expenditures Data for US, 2007”. US Department of Health and Human Services. CMS website. Accessed on Oct. 22 2016 << https://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-systems/Statistics-Trends-and-reports/NationalHealthExpendData/index.html>>
  3. SIMUS Survey, State of Integrative Medicine in the U.S. CIMex Health, 2009. <www.nccam.nih.gov>
  4. O’Connor BB, Calabrese C, Cardeña E, Eisenberg D, Fincher J, Hufford DJ, Jonas WB, Kaptchuk T, Martin SC, Scott AW, Zhang X (Panel on Definition and Description, CAM Research Methodology Conference, April 1995). (1997). "Defining and describing complementary and alternative medicine.". Alternative Therapies. 3 (2): 49–57.
  5. Kamerow D. (2007). "Wham, bam, thank you CAM.". Brit Med J. 335: 647. doi:10.1136/bmj.39349.437442.43
  6. Lemley, Brad. “What is Integrative Medicine?" DrWeil News. Accessed 10-20-2016 << http://www.drweil.com/health-wellness/balanced-living/meet-dr-weil/what-is-integrative-medicine/>>