:Q: What do you call Alternative Medicine that survives double-blind laboratory tests?A: Regular Medicine.|leftThe terms
alternative medicine,
complementary medicine,
integrative medicine, holistic medicine,
natural medicine,
unorthodox medicine,
fringe medicine,
unconventional medicine, and
new age medicine are used interchangeably as having the same meaning and are almost synonymous in most contexts. For example, the department of the
United States National Institutes of Health studying alternative medicine is currently named the
National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health (NCCIH), but it was established as the Office of Alternative Medicine (OAM) and then renamed the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM) before now. Therapies are often
framed as "natural" or "holistic", implicitly and intentionally suggesting that conventional medicine is "artificial" and "narrow in scope". Loose terminology may also be used to suggest meaning that a dichotomy exists when it does not (such as the use of the expressions
Western medicineand
Eastern medicine to suggest a cultural difference between the Asian east and the European west, rather than that the difference is between
evidence-based medicine and treatments that do not work).
Cancer Research UK, and the US
Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the latter of which states that "
Complementary medicine is used in addition to standard treatments" whereas "
Alternative medicine is used instead of standard treatments." For example,
acupuncture (piercing the body with needles to influence the flow of energy) might be believed to increase the effectiveness or "complement" science-based medicine when used at the same time.
Stanford University,
UCLA,
UC San Francisco and
Northwestern University. In contrast, other medical practitioners are unconvinced by these practices. For example,
surgical oncologist,
David Gorski has described integrative medicine as an attempt to bring pseudoscience into academic
science-based medicine Robert Todd Carroll described integrative medicine as "a synonym for 'alternative' medicine that, at its worst, integrates sense with nonsense. At its best, integrative medicine supports both consensus treatments of science-based medicine and treatments that the science, while promising perhaps, does not justify"
Rose Shapiro has criticized the field of alternative medicine for
rebranding the same practices as integrative medicine. The 2019
World Health Organization (WHO)
Global Report on Traditional and Complementary Medicine states that the terms complementary and alternative medicine "refer to a broad set of health care practices that are not part of that country's own traditional or conventional medicine and are not fully integrated into the dominant health care system. They are used interchangeably with traditional medicine in some countries." The Integrative Medicine Exam by the
American Board of Physician Specialties includes the following subjects:
Manual Therapies,
Biofield Therapies,
Acupuncture, Movement Therapies, Expressive Arts,
Traditional Chinese Medicine,
Ayurveda,
Indigenous Medical Systems,
Homeopathic Medicine,
Naturopathic Medicine,
Osteopathic Medicine,
Chiropractic, and Functional Medicine. It is a
rebranding of
complementary and alternative medicine (CAM), and as such is
pseudoscientific, and has been described as a form of quackery. Functional medicine was created by Jeffrey Bland, who founded The Institute for Functional Medicine (IFM), which is based in the US state of
Washington, in the early 1990s as part of one of his companies, HealthComm. IFM, which promotes functional medicine, became a registered non-profit in 2001.
Mark Hyman became an IFM board member and prominent promoter. Gorski says FM's vagueness is a deliberate tactic that makes functional medicine difficult to challenge. In an analysis for the
Office for Science and Society at McGill University, Jonathan Jarry writes "Test enough people and you get a lot of false positives, which generate anxiety, more invasive tests, and sometimes unnecessary treatments." Proponents of functional medicine oppose established medical knowledge and reject its models, instead adopting a model of disease based on the notion of "antecedents", "triggers", and "mediators". These are meant to correspond to the underlying causes of health issues, the immediate causes, and the particular characteristics of a person's illness. A functional medicine practitioner devises a "matrix" from these factors to serve as the basis for treatment. Treatments, practices, and concepts are generally not supported by
medical evidence. In the 1990s, integrative medicine started to be marketed by a new term, "functional medicine". FM practitioners claim to diagnose and treat conditions that have been found by research studies not to exist, such as
adrenal fatigue and numerous imbalances in body chemistry. For instance, contrary to scientific evidence,
Joe Pizzorno, a major figure in FM, claimed that 25% of people in the United States have
heavy metal poisoning and need to undergo
detoxification. Detox has been also called "mass delusion". In 2014, the
American Academy of Family Physicians withdrew
course credits for functional medicine courses, having identified some of its treatments as "harmful and dangerous". Many TM practices are based on "holistic" approaches to disease and health, versus the scientific evidence-based methods in conventional medicine. The 2019 WHO report defines traditional medicine as "the sum total of the knowledge, skill and practices based on the theories, beliefs and experiences
indigenous to different cultures, whether explicable or not, used in the maintenance of health as well as in the prevention, diagnosis, improvement or treatment of physical and mental illness."
Challenges in defining alternative medicine Prominent members of the science a notion later echoed by
Paul Offit: "The truth is there's no such thing as conventional or alternative or complementary or integrative or holistic medicine. There's only medicine that works and medicine that doesn't. And the best way to sort it out is by carefully evaluating scientific studies—not by visiting Internet chat rooms, reading magazine articles, or talking to friends.", an alternative medicine supplement == Types ==