Alternative Medicine

Alternative Medicine

Alternative Medicine

Alternative Medicine

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Overview

The most complete resource of its kind on alternative medicine• Herbal remedies, dietary supplements, and alternative therapiesTheir specific usesWhich ones really work (and which ones don’t)What to watch out for• Christian versus non-Christian approaches to holistic health• Clinically proven treatments versus unproven or quack treatments• Truths and fallacies about supernatural healing• Ancient medical lore: the historical, cultural, and scientific facts• And much, much moreAlternative Medicine is the first comprehensive guidebook to nontraditional medicine written from a distinctively Christian perspective. Keeping pace with the latest developments and research in alternative medicine, this thoroughly revised edition combines the most current information with an easy-to-use format. University lecturer and researcher Dónal O’Mathúna, PhD, and national medical authority Walt Larimore, MD, provide detailed and balanced answers to your most pressing questions about alternative medicine—and to other questions you wouldn’t have thought to ask.Also includesTwo alphabetical reference sections:Alternative therapiesHerbal remedies, vitamins, and dietary supplementsA description of each therapy and remedy, an analysis of claims, results of actual studies, cautions, recommendations, and further resourcesHandy cross-references linking health problems with various alternative therapies and herbal remedies reviewed in the book

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780310861003
Publisher: Zondervan
Publication date: 05/11/2010
Sold by: HarperCollins Publishing
Format: eBook
Pages: 512
Sales rank: 562,090
File size: 3 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Dónal O’Mathúna, PhD, has degrees in pharmacy, medicinal chemistry, and theology (focused on bioethics). He is a lecturer in healthcare ethics in the School of Nursing at Dublin City University, Ireland. Dr. O’Mathúna’s long-time interest in alternative medicine has led to many publications in professional journals and the general media. He lives in Dunboyne, Co. Meath, Ireland.

Walt Larimore, MD, has been called "one of the best known family physicians in America" and has been listed in the Best Doctors in America, The Guide to America’s Top Family Doctors, and Who’s Who in Medicine and Healthcare, Who's Who in America, and the International Health Professionals of the Year. He is also a best-selling author who has written, co-written, or edited thirty books. He writing has been recognized with a number of national awards, including a Christianity Today Book of the Year award, a Retailers Choice book award, three Silver Medallion Book Awards, three Gold Medallion Book Award nominations, and three Christy Award nominations. He and his wife, Barb, have two grown children, two grandchildren, and live in Colorado Springs area with their tabby, Jack. His website is www.DrWalt.com and his Morning Glory, Evening Grace devotions can be found at www.Devotional.DrWalt.com.

Read an Excerpt

Alternative Medicine

The Christian Handbook
By Donal O'Mathuna Walt Larimore

Zondervan

Copyright © 2001 Zondervan
All right reserved.

ISBN: 0-310-23584-7


Chapter One

Alternative Medicine: The Issues

Physicians practicing conventional Western medicine at times see alternative medicine as unproven, worthless, perhaps even dangerous, steeped only in anecdotal case histories. Some view the alternative therapist as being naïve at best, a charlatan at worst.

A provider of alternative medicine may see conventional physicians as so focused on a disease or body part that they have no humanity, no compassion, and lack concern for the whole person. The conventional physician has been called a money-loving individual, in bed with pharmaceutical companies, who is out to take the life savings of the ill and infirm.

A truly accurate picture of both sides is a lot more complicated. But you need to understand the benefits and the dangers of alternative medicine before you make any serious mistakes.

What Is an Alternative Therapy?

The simplest definition of an alternative therapy is any therapy that is not accepted by the dominant medical establishment in a given culture. While the definition of alternative medicine can vary, there are some general characteristics and principles that most agree on.

Alternative therapies are those approaches to healing that physicians and hospitals in the United States are unlikely to provide for their patients. The dominant medical establishment tends to look with disfavor (or disgust) on certain therapies and labels them "alternatives." Alternative medicine claims to have been pushed aside by practitioners of conventional medicine for reasons of political or financial gain.

Practitioners of alternative medicine generally stress their holistic approach to health care-treating the body, the mind, and the spirit-relying on noninvasive "natural" methods of healing with an emphasis on prevention of disease. Although conventional medicine can be holistic as well, medical physicians frequently do not stress that fact.

Some alternative therapies refer to the spirit in ways that are alien to Christianity. Unless you understand the roots of a particular therapy, you may find yourself involved in a practice with a theology dangerously different from what Jesus taught or what he would have us follow.

Much in alternative medicine has little quality scientific evidence to support its assertions of healing. However, as we shall show, some therapies have excellent scientific support, yet are not utilized by many conventional Western physicians. Other therapies, with proper testing, might gain proof of the value claimed. Without such proof, no one, not even the experts in alternative medicine, knows for certain whether the untested, unproven alternative therapies actually have healed anyone or not. All we know is that patients relate how they were helped, or how they entered long-term remission, or were cured after using some unproven alternative therapy.

Before you embark on any path that takes you into the world of alternative medicine, even if it's just to buy an herbal remedy that's being recommended by a friend, you need to investigate the realities of alternative medicine-the costs and the risks you might face as well as the benefits.

Our purpose in this book is to point out the benefits, explain the risks, anticipate your questions, and provide objective answers. We will show how conventional medicine has evolved over the centuries, how what we commonly call "alternative therapies" have come to exist, and the background for the various therapies and remedies. And we'll look at what the use of alternative therapies could mean for a Christian.

In part 4 we discuss each of the most popular alternative therapies available today in North America. This section lists not only what exists but also gives the origins, effectiveness, and any reasons for caution and concern. We also give you detailed information on herbal remedies, vitamins, and dietary supplements, since these are used as a form of self-help available without much direction in health food stores, most drugstores, many supermarkets, and even on the Internet. Here, too, you'll be able to read our recommendations along with any cautions and concerns.

Conventional Medicine Takes an Interest in Alternative Medicine

As more research is done, we believe that conventional medicine and alternative medicine will increasingly be used together. Some alternative therapy specialists recognize the potential of a holistic approach in contemporary conventional medicine and work in tandem with medical physicians to give high quality care. And many conventional medicine practitioners recognize that one or more alternative therapies might benefit their patients when used in tandem with surgery and pharmaceuticals.

Increasing numbers of doctors, nurses, and other health care professionals are incorporating the best of both approaches into what is called "integrative medicine." Professional continuing medical education (CME) courses also are providing information on alternative medicine. In fact, some of the most popular CME courses for doctors, nurses, and pharmacists focus specifically on alternative medicine. Pharmacies are increasingly making alternative remedies available, although natural or health food stores, the Internet, and mail-order companies still account for most of these sales. According to a 1994 study, homeopathic preparations were being stocked by 69 percent of chain drugstores and by 3,000 independent pharmacies, accounting for annual sales at the time of about $100 million.

Interest Grows Among Christians

Interest among Christians appears to mirror-and sometimes exceed-this general trend. Christian radio stations carry advertisements for herbal remedies and nutritional supplements even more commonly than the secular media. Specific "Christian" alternative therapies are promoted. One entrepreneur claimed to have figured out the recipe for manna and alleged it would protect people from all forms of illness, just as the original manna protected the Israelites in the wilderness. Another is the "Genesis 1:29 Diet" based on God's declaration that "I give you every seed-bearing plant on the face of the whole earth and every tree that has fruit with seed in it. They will be yours for food." Believers in this diet teach that people will be most healthy when eating a vegetarian diet.

Some Christians claim to have found particular ways to cure or alleviate cancer. One prominent Christian author has written about the benefits he experienced from an alternative cancer therapy available only in Europe. We frequently hear his case mentioned to encourage Christian involvement in alternative medicine. Research studies on prayer and religious faith have been published in mainstream medical journals. Although some of what is called "prayer" is very different from the prayer described in the Bible, some Christians now claim the power of prayer is supported by scientific research.

NIH Begins Evaluation of Alternative Medicine Treatments

In 1992, the National Institutes of Health began an evaluation of alternative medical treatments, establishing the Office of Alternative Medicine (since renamed The National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine). It has made grants available to a number of prominent universities and major medical centers to encourage both research and teaching of alternative medicine. In response, many medical schools and nursing schools have added courses in alternative therapies.

At least eight new journals devoted to alternative medicine were launched in the late 1990s, with their primary audience being physicians and other health care professionals. Well-established professional journals increasingly publish articles about alternative medicine. Some have even devoted entire issues to the topic, such as the November 1998 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.

Even medical insurance and managed-care companies have started to pay for some alternative therapies. In fact, by the end of 1998 an estimated 58 percent of major health maintenance organizations (HMOs) were covering some types of alternative medicine.

(Continues...)



Excerpted from Alternative Medicine by Donal O'Mathuna Walt Larimore Copyright © 2001 by Zondervan. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents


Foreword     9
Acknowledgments     11
Note from the Authors     13
Evaluating Alternative Medicine
Pursuing Alternative Medicine     19
Evidence-Based Health and Healing     35
Faith-Based Health and Healing     53
Alternative Medicine and Children     77
The Gurus: Fraud, Quackery, or Wisdom?     87
Healthy Lifestyles     105
Alternative Therapies
How to Use the Rest of This Book     117
Reviews of Therapies     125
Acupressure     126
Acupuncture     129
Applied Kinesiology     132
Aromatherapy     134
Ayurvedic Medicine     137
Biofeedback     140
Breathing Techniques     142
Chelation Therapy     145
Chiropractic     148
Christian Therapies     152
Colonics     162
Craniosacral Therapy     165
Diet and Nutrition     167
Diets and Dieting     178
Energy Medicine     191
Folk Medicine     196
Herbal Medicine     198
Homeopathy     206
Hypnosis     210
Iridology     218
Light Therapy     220
Magnet Therapy     223
Massage Therapy     227
Meditation     230
Naturopathic Medicine     233
Prayer for Healing     236
Progressive Muscle Relaxation     246
Qigong     248
Reflexology     250
Reiki     253
Shamanism     256
Tai Chi     258
Therapeutic Touch     260
Traditional Chinese Medicine     264
Visualization or Guided Imagery     268
Yoga     271
Herbal Remedies, Vitamins, and Dietary Supplements
Reviews of Remedies     277
Aloe     284
Androstenedione     286
Antioxidants     289
Bach Flower Remedies     293
Bee Products     296
Bilberry     298
Black Cohosh     300
Capsaicin     303
Cascara     305
Chamomile     306
Chaparral     309
Chondroitin Sulfate     311
Chromium     314
Coenzyme Q[subscript 10]     317
Comfrey      320
Cranberry     322
Creatine     324
DHEA     328
Dong Quai     331
Echinacea     333
Elderberry     336
Ephedra     338
Evening Primrose     341
Feverfew     344
Garlic     346
Ginger     351
Ginkgo Biloba     354
Ginseng     358
Glucosamine     362
Goldenseal     365
Grape Seed Extract     367
Green Tea     370
Guarana     373
Hawthom     375
Horny Goat Weed     377
Horse Chestnut     379
Kava     381
Licorice     384
Lutein     386
Mangosteen     389
Marijuana     391
Megavitamin Therapy     400
Melatonin     403
Milk Thistle     406
MSM     409
Noni Juice     411
Nopal     414
Omega Fatty Acids     416
Peppermint     420
Probiotics     422
Psyllium     425
Red Yeast Rice      427
SAM-e     431
Saw Palmetto     434
Selenium     437
Senna     441
Shark Cartilage     444
Soy     447
St. John's Wort     451
Tea Tree Oil     455
Valerian     457
Vitamin C     460
Vitamin E     464
Wild Yam     468
Willow Bark     470
Witch Hazel     473
Zinc     475
Effectiveness of Therapies: Listed by Disease or Symptom     480
Scripture Index     491
Subject Index     495
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