What Will Happen To Alternative Medicine?
Though some therapies will become mainstream, most will go the
way of snake oil and orgone booths
by LEON JAROFF
Ginseng, ginkgo biloba and homeopathic potions have become as
American as apple pie, but will anyone still be taking them in
2025? Advocates of alternative medicine, buoyed--and
enriched--by the $30 billion Americans spend annually on
unconventional therapies, confidently predict that herbal
remedies and homeopathic potions will not only flourish in the
coming decades but will also take their rightful place alongside
vaccines, antibiotics, gene therapy and the other tools of
modern medicine.
Baloney. "Alternative medicine" is merely a politically correct
term for what used to be called quackery. Any alternative
therapy that can be proved valid will swiftly be incorporated
into mainstream medicine. Any "medicine" that is based on myth,
irrationality and deception will eventually be rejected. "Once
the public finds out what homeopathy is," predicts Dr. John
Renner, head of the National Council for Reliable Health
Information, "once they find out that chlorophyll is necessary
for plant life but not human life, they're going to turn on
these alternative groups."
Public disenchantment with homeopathy, for example, will grow
when consumers of homeopathic potions finally wise up to the fact
that in many cases they are paying big bucks for a highly diluted
mixture that is essentially pure water, and that homeopathy is
based on primitive and false 19th century beliefs.
When patients discover that their "therapeutic touch"
practitioner has not been manipulating their "human energy
field"--a nonexistent entity--but merely making useless hand
motions in the vicinity of their bodies, they will reject
mysticism and move toward more rational therapy. And when herbal
medicine devotees become aware that any useful ingredient in
their unregulated leaves, stem and root mixtures can be isolated
and made available as regulated drugs, labeled with full
information about content and proper dosage, they will begin
making fewer trips to the health-food store.
Cost is also an issue. Managed-care providers, eager to cash in
on the alternative boom, are luring subscribers by offering to
cover some of these dubious treatments. But most consumers of
alternate products use conventional medicine too, and when it
becomes evident that the alternatives are not cost effective and
at best produce only a placebo effect, the HMOs will drop them in
a heartbeat. Says William Jarvis, a professor of public health at
California's Loma Linda University: "Useless procedures don't add
to the outcome, just to the overhead."
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